Credit Union Central of Canada (CUCC) announced the recipients of the 2017 National Credit Union Awards Program on May 10. The National Credit Union Awards highlight fresh and effective programs that emphasize local economic initiatives, innovative solutions that improve the effectiveness of the credit union, and the ambitions of tomorrow’s young leaders.

Among the winners were two members of the Canadian CED Network: Assiniboine Credit Union in Manitoba and Vancity Credit Union in British Columbia.

Assiniboine Credit UnionAssiniboine Credit Union

Assiniboine Credit Union won the Social Responsibility Award for their Eco-Excellence Program which achieved positive environmental results, as well as growth for the credit union. The Social Responsibility Award award recognizes the leadership, innovation and advancement that credit unions are demonstrating in their social and environmental performance. Celebrating the ways credit unions are leading in defining strategic approaches to social responsibility that will encourage and inspire the system as a whole.

Sara Rusak, Manager, Business Integration at Assiniboine Credit Union, also received the Young Leaders Award. The Award helps identify the best and brightest young employees, motivate them, and publicize their accomplishments to inspire others. In creating this Award, CCUA’s Board of Directors helps national leaders demonstrate strong support for young leadership. 

Vancity Credit UnionVancity

Vancity won the Community Economic Development Award for their Refugee Settlement Assistance Program developed in close partnership with Immigrant Services Society of BC and other settlement service groups. Together, they created a scalable and sharable program comprising outreach activities, product developments, process enhancements, educational reports, and tools. The Community Economic Development Award recognizes and honours the outstanding contribution credit unions make to the economic development of the communities they serve. Since its inception, this prestigious award has focused national attention on the leadership role credit unions play in inspiring others to shape promising futures within their communities.

Vancity also won the first-ever Learning Leader Award for the strategic development, instructional design, delivery, and evaluation of training for over 2,000 employees for the recent renewal of their core banking system. The Learning Leader Award acknowledges the role that skilled employees play in the success of their credit union, and the leader who ensures that employees are as prepared as possible to serve the needs of their members. Ongoing development of credit union employees is critical at a time when multiple factors are reshaping or industry and our workforce.

Source: National Credit Union Awards

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People-shadows-silhouettes-mysteryEconoUs2017 is open to everyone.

I wanted to say this first and foremost, in case you think by my attempt at a click-bait title that we wish to exclude anyone. Each of the partner organizations, as you can see by their mission statements, work with inclusivity and shared prosperity as guiding principles. We also understand, as a collective, that the conversations that need to happen, and that will be happening at EconoUs2017, need to include a large and diverse group of people and should encourage participation from everyone. If we work together collaboratively, just imagine the social innovation possible through our cumulative strength!

The list below (in no particular order and by no means exhaustive) captures some of the characteristics of people who have attended the national community economic development (CED) conference in the past. If you see yourself in some of the following, jump into the conversation.

10 Signs That You Are Someone Who Should Attend EconoUs2017

  1. You try to shop with your values, perhaps by favouring fair trade or organic products, or by shopping at social enterprises or co-operatives.
  2. You are concerned about climate change and like to imagine an economy that operates in balance with the environment
  3. You’re encouraged by recent conversations about reconciliation and want to build new systems that don’t leave people poor because of systemic racism.
  4. You would like to see democratic principles to be applied beyond politics, into other areas of life, such as the economy or the workplace
  5. Your work focuses on strategies for inclusion, poverty reduction, diversity, community resilience, and/or environmental sustainability
  6. You have invested in a CED investment fund or a community bond, you’re a member of a community investment co-operative, or you hold a bank account at a credit union.
  7. You’re a member of a local food or grocery co-op, a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture), a credit union, or a carshare.
  8. You support or volunteer for local community organizations and/or events.
  9. You engage in research to evaluate the social impact of community programs and/or government policy.
  10. You want to develop your own community initiative, social enterprise, collaborative project, etc.

​Register for EconoUs2017 today!


Partner Mission Statements

The Canadian CED Network engages with people, ideas and actions to build local economies that strengthen communities and benefit everyone.

Thrive acts as a steward connecting local resources and people in communities to build a sustainable, resilient and inclusive economy where no one is left behind.

Momentum partners with people living on low incomes to increase prosperity, and inspires the development of local economies with opportunities for all.

Calgary Economic Development collaborates to advance opportunities in achieving economic success, embracing shared prosperity and building a strong community for Calgary.

The Calgary Regional Partnership invents, incubates, and works together to achieve a healthy environment, enriched communities, sustainable infrastructure, and a prosperous economy.

REAP educates and encourages Calgarians to choose local businesses that are committed to people and the planet as well as profits.

The Institute for Community Prosperity connects learning, research and change leadership to build community and strengthen the common good.


Matthew ThompsonMatthew Thompson is Communications Manager with the Canadian CED Network (CCEDNet). He has worked with CCEDNet since 2007 in a variety of capacities including research and knowledge mobilization, event organizing, and the coordination of the national internship program, CreateAction. Matthew also co-authored Assembling Understandings: Findings from the Canadian Social Economy Research Partnerships, 2005-2011 a thematic summary of close to 400 research products on the Social Economy in Canada.

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  • Business owners gather at an elegant Montreal event center to celebrate the 20th anniversary of a large-scale economic partnership. The former chief of Quebec’s largest bank is the guest of honor.
  • Sidewalks bustle with people walking in and out of homes, offices, bank, pharmacy, workout studio and coffee shop at Montreal’s Technopole Angus— a development that already sports 56 business with 2500 employees and will eventually encompass a million-square-feet of real estate.
  • Morning-shift workers unload barrels of paper onto conveyor belts emptying into giant shredding machines on the shop floor of Recyclage Vanier, a Quebec City firm specializing in secure disposal of confidential documents.
  • A line snakes down the street for a matinee at the Cinema Beaubien, an art deco moviehouse in a quiet Montreal neighborhood. Taxis line up across the street waiting for customers who will soon be getting out of the early show.
  • Leonard Cohen’s gravelly voice rings through the taproom at La Barberie Brewery, located near Quebec City’s business district. Their Belgian-style saisons and bestselling blackberry blanc beers are enjoyed throughout the province. A few blocks away, an 18th century monastery inside Quebec City’s historic walls has recently opened its doors as a hotel and spa.
A More Equitable Economy Exists Right Next Door

(By Wally Gobetz under a Creative Commons license)

Welcome to everyday life in Quebec—Canada’s 2nd largest province with 8.2 million people. Yet these scenes of economic activity are different in a notable way from similar ones occurring throughout North America.

Each enterprise involves a cooperative or non-profit organization—which together make up 8-10 percent of the province’s GDP.  More than 7000 of these “social economy” enterprises ring up $17 billion in annual sales and hold $40 billion in assets (Canadian dollars). They account for about 215,000 jobs across Quebec.

Quebec’s social economy (also translated as “solidarity economy”) extends far beyond the province’s two major cities, and includes manufacturing, agricultural cooperatives, daycare centers, homecare services, affordable housing, social service initiatives, food coops, ecotourism, arts programs, public markets, media and funeral homes. The capital that fuels all this economic activity comes from union pension funds, non-profit loan funds, credit unions, government investment and philanthropy.

“We always say the social economy is simply the formalization of the commons. It’s social ownership, the goal of which is a sustainable, democratic economy with a market—instead of a market economy,” explains Nancy Neamtan, co-founder of Chantier de l’Economie Sociale, a network of social economy organizations whose anniversary banquet is described above. “Our mission is building a broader vision of what the economy actually is.”

“When Chantier started out, a lot of people said it wouldn’t work. We had unions, women’s organizations, green groups, and many thought it was too diverse,” Neamtan says. “But it does work.” Evidence for her assertion is visible all around—Chantier’s office is tucked into a six story building that takes up most of a city block, all of which is filled with social economy organizations.

Not all of these social businesses are new—some of the credit unions, cooperatives and union pension funds go back a hundred years. “But they were largely invisible to many people until the name social economy became popular,” Neamtan adds.

Quebec’s social economy ranges from a video game creator’s cooperative to a social integration program for Haitian immigrants to a coop grocery in a remote town on the Gaspe peninsula to a network of 8000 home healthcare workers, half of whom were on welfare before being trained for the field. Here are more examples showing the range of these enterprises:

Groupe ParadoxeChantier de l’Economie Sociale’s 20th Anniversary celebration was staged in a renovated church run by Groupe Paradoxe, which teaches at-risk young people job skills in the booming audio-visual presentation, events and meetings industries.

Desjardins GroupThe banker honored for his work at Chantier’s banquet was former president of the Desjardins credit union, founded in 1900 and today the province’s largest financial institution.

The Nitaskinam Cooperative: Also on hand at the banquet was Nitaskinam, an Inuit-run cooperative which designs clothing inspired by art of the Atikamekw people, which has doubled from three to six members in its first year. “The social economy is our traditional economic model and fits with our values,” explains co-founder Karine Awashish, who is also an economic development official of this tribal nation. “I see good opportunities for us to create new social economy jobs in forestry, health services, tourism, arts festivals and youth projects.”

UTILE Student Housing Cooperative: One of the youngest entrepreneurs at the banquet, Laurent Levesque, helped launch a student housing development organization with other activists involved in the headline-grabbing 2012 Quebec Student Strike, collaborating with Chantier de l’économie Trust.  “Students pay 70-80 percent more in rent on average,” he explained, “which creates an inflationary spiral” that hurts not just them, but their low-income neighbors. With start-up capital from the Concordia Student Union and further funding from social economy partners like Desjardins and the province of Quebec, UTILE is set to break ground on apartments for 160 students.

Technopole AngusIt’s no coincidence that that the Desjardins credit union has a branch in the new Technopole Angus sustainable urban village, which brings opportunities to a working class neighborhood that was rocked when the Canadian Pacific Railway shuttered its machine shops in 1992. A number of historic brick structures were repurposed, and new eco-friendly buildings constructed, with more planned for the project’s phase II.  The community will eventually include 500 affordable housing units, 450,000 square-feet of office space, 20 local shops, four public squares, a bike-pedestrian main street and a one-acre urban farm growing organic produce.

Recylage VanierA non-profit organization started 30 years ago by two out-of-work men who realized the recycling industry could benefit the disadvantaged as well as the earth, Recylage Vanier offers training for people struggling to find work because of low job skills, recent immigration, substance abuse, mental illness, disability, or other challenges. Jobseekers arrive here for a 24-week program that emphasizes work readiness and life skills as well as on-the-job experience.  Most are long-term unemployed, who have been sent by the Quebec employment bureau and social service groups.

“They have to get along with a boss, get along with colleagues, master simple tasks and then take on new ones with more responsibility, all the way up to driving a forklift,” says Nicolas Reeves, one of Vanier’s managers.  For the final four weeks, they split their time between the recycling plant and job hunting with the help of staff counselors. About 85 percent of graduates find work, and 10 percent seek further education, according to Reeves. Recylage Vanier faces stiff competition from two private companies in the field, so clients who value the organization’s mission are important to their success—including the province of Quebec, which provides about half their business.

Cinema BeaubienThis is non-profit neighborhood moviehouse explicitly proclaims its mission to “defend the primacy of persons and labor over capital in the distribution of its surpluses and incomes.”  The cinema’s importance as a community gathering spot can be witnessed in the long lines at the ticket booth, where patrons merrily chat with one another rather than staring at their phones. Taxis wait across the streets to whisk moviegoers to their next destination, about half of which are from the Taxi Coop Montreal.  (In Quebec City, all taxi drivers belong to a cooperative.)

La Barberie Cooperative MicrobreweryOperating as a worker cooperative for the past 20 years explains the success of this brewery and brewpub, says general manager Jean-Francois Genest, who joined La Barberie three years ago after running his family’s bookstore and later converting another bookstore into a cooperative. “The coop is a good plan to keep a place going. Sharing the profits means you attract the best workers. For our part, we try to make their jobs as interesting as possible, offer more holidays and higher pay.” Emilie DuMais, who’s tended bar here for eight years, notes, “You have much more ambition working for yourself than working for someone else.”

Le Monastere des AugustinesA convent dating back to 1700s in the heart of Quebec City’s walled city has just opened as an elegantly renovated hotel, spa, museum and conference center. It is organized as a non-profit in accordance with the social mission of nuns still living there to promote holistic health and spiritual renewal. Besides tourists, spa patrons and participants in corporate meetings, guests also include activist groups holding retreats and health care workers seeking a reprieve from the stress of their jobs.

RISQIn 1997 Chantier created RISQ (Reseau d’Investissement Social du Quebec), which has invested $25 million in technical aid and capital for social economy businesses, resulting in: 1786 new jobs, 5,119 jobs maintained and job training for 1527 marginalized workers across Quebec, according to their calculations. RISQ financial analyst Nathalie Villemure, who worked for many years in private banking, notes that they see fewer defaults than commercial lenders. “These people have a cause bigger than themselves, so they work harder and we help them find solutions.”

FiducieIn 2007 Chantier launched Fiducie, a $50 million “patient capital” (or slow money) fund that provides long term, non-guaranteed loans of $50,000-1.5 million to promising cooperatives and non-profits with less than 200 employees. “We don’t expect to see anything in repayment for 15 years,” says General Manager Jacques Charest. Thirty million of the investment came from union pension funds with the rest from the federal and provincial governments.

What We Can Learn from Quebec’s Social Economy

While Quebec possesses a distinct culture and history, the emergence of a strong social economy across the province provides practical lessons for other places.

  • Recognize the Social Economy When You See It
    Cooperatives and non-profit initiatives already exist throughout the US and most other countries, so the first step is seeing, naming and claiming the social economy as part of the commons we all share.
  • Look Widely for Inspiration & Ideas
    Neamtan points out that the American tradition of community organizing was a big influence on their early work, especially community development corporations (CDCs) that arose to tackle problems of disinvestment in urban neighborhoods. The Dudley Street Initiative, which transformed a low-income community in the Roxbury district of Boston, was a particular inspiration for her. The proliferation of cooperatives in the Basque and Catalonian regions of Spain provided another model for bottom-up economic development.
  • Seek Solidarity
    Social economy initiatives benefit from the longstanding sense of solidarity in Quebec, where French speakers were discriminated against and their local economy dominated by English-speaking Canadians, Americans and English. A analogous situation can be found among racial and social minorities, and in rural and deindustrialized regions where economic power is wielded from outside.
  • Tap the Power of Government
    Government agencies have been a partners and funders in many projects through the years. Social economy initiatives often arose even when conservative politicians were slashing government programs to provide a more humane alternative to strictly market-oriented development. Legislation passed by the left-center Parti Quebecois in 1997 gave the social economy movement a big boost by offering local governments more leeway in supporting community and cooperative efforts to create jobs and promote entrepreneurship.
  • Partner with Unions
    “The labor movement boosted the social economy by making the choice in the 1980s not to just negotiate contracts but to create jobs and support civic enterprises,” explains Neamtan, which led to the creation of the landmark Quebec Solidarity Fund, an $11-billion-dollar pension fund, of which 65 percent is invested in small- and medium-sized Quebec-owned businesses.
  • Partner with Faith Organizations
    Historically, the Catholic church controlled many aspects of life in the province, and priests enthusiastically promoted cooperatives and non-profit institutions as models of the church’s social teaching. By the end of the 20th century when the church’s influence waned in the face of increasing secularization, social economy organizations found numerous opportunities to set up shop in closed churches and convents. The church remains an ally, Neamtan notes, “especially now that Pope Francis talks all the time about the Solidarity Economy.”

Originally published by Blue Mountain Center Commons


Jay Walljasper Jay Walljasper is the author of The Great Neighborhood Book (2007), All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons (2011), How to Design Our World for Happiness (2013) and America’s Walking Renaissance (2016). He is Urban Writer-in-Residence at Augsburg College in Minneapolis and Senior Fellow at Project for Public Spaces.

Editor of Utne Reader magazine for 15 years, Jay was also contributing editor at National Geographic Traveler, executive editor at Netherlands-based Ode magazine and travel editor at Better Homes & Gardens. Utne Reader was nominated for the National Magazine Award in the General Excellence category three times during his years as editor. He has been quoted on current issues in the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times and NPR.

*The opinions expressed in blog posts are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of CCEDNet

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The Canadian Alternative Investment Foundation (CAIF) is pleased to announce a Call for Letters of Inquiry in 2017.

CAIF builds on CAIC’s (Canadian Alternative Investment Cooperative’s) three decades of experience as a social lender. We recognize that it takes more than capital (debt) to strengthen the charitable sector. There is also a need for expertise and capacity building grants to ensure that debt is used for the maximum benefit of the borrower.

Very few organizations will qualify for CAIF grants because the first criteria in assessing grant requests is determining whether debt financing is likely to play a role in the successful completion of the project being proposed. This grant is not a grant for ongoing program support or for the sole purpose of writing a social enterprise business plan. It is meant to enhance an organization’s ability to effectively use debt. Any applications not meeting this requirement will not be considered.

Deadline for Submission: Friday, June 9, 2017

The foundation will provide grants in the $5,000 to $15,000 range in three granting streams:

Stream I: Project Feasibility Study

This stream provides a preliminary level of support meant to help charitable organizations scope out need and do some analysis around it to better understand the issues and potential solutions.

Stream II: Business Plan Development

Once you have completed the feasibility study and decided that the project is viable and that financing is required the next logical step is a business plan. This will allow your organization to move from the theoretical to the practical in how they will meet their objectives and reach their goals. In order to access a Business Plan Development grant you must demonstrate that you have completed a Feasibility study (financed by CAIF or otherwise).

Stream III: Capacity Building

Grants would be made available to assist in the execution of a project. Grants would be directed towards retaining/hiring Project Management expertise and/or Financial Expertise.

Learn more about CAIF’s Capacity Building/Technical Assistance Grants

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Greg MacleodWith heavy hearts we received the news yesterday of the passing of one of Canada’s great champions of community economic development, Father Greg MacLeod. Working in the context of declining fish stocks and coal mining closures in Nova Scotia, MacLeod, like many acorss Canada and in the United States, followed in the footsteps of the Antigonish Movement pioneers. Like Father J.J. Tompkins before him, he sought to build economic resiliency and self-reliance for Nova Scotians through adult education.

Ordained by the Catholic Church in 1961 MacLeod became a lifelong educator teaching first at Xavier Junior College in Sydney, Nova Scotia and later founding the Tompkins Institute at Cape Breton University. It was through the Tompkins Institute that he helped found New Dawn Enterprises in Sydney, Nova Scotia, in 1976, now the oldest Community Development Corporation in Canada and a founding member of the Canadian CED Network. New Dawn has since grown to employ 175 people, servicing 600 Cape Bretoners each day through its companies and projects. In 1989 he also helped found the BCA Group (Banking Community Assets), a CED Investment Fund in Cape Breton which has brought together over $2 million in investment capital for local business development.

“I believe in the market, but it has to be locally owned and controlled. The problem with the global economy is that it is controlled by absentee owners, that is why we emphasize locally controlled markets and what I call ‘place-based development’.”
                                                               – from A Method of Transforming the World with Dr. Greg MacLeod

The video below, produced by MacLeod, explores the outstanding success and potential of Community Development Corporations and was originally aired by Community-Minded TV in Spokane, Washington.

Other tributes to Father Greg MacLeod:

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Last week CCEDNet Manitoba provided the City of Winnipeg with their Budget 2018 submission. This submission reflects CCEDNet Manitoba’s over 100 members’ policy priorities.

The central recommendation is a call for a comprehensive Winnipeg poverty reduction strategy, with the following recommendations being well situated within such a strategy.

“Poverty is a critical issue that affects all of us. Some demographics are over-represented among those living in poverty and face many barriers to full social inclusion as a result. This includes women, LGBTQ2S communities, seniors, lone-parent families, Indigenous people, newcomers, and persons with disabilities. The over-representation of Indigenous people among those living in poverty is a lasting legacy of colonization. The City of Winnipeg can be a real leader in reconciliation by making the link between poverty reduction and reconciliation.

“The City of Winnipeg must join other jurisdictions who have taken a leadership role in poverty reduction through comprehensive poverty reduction strategies that address the multiple and inter-related causes of poverty and social exclusion. Many of these municipal strategies include targets and timelines to make government accountable, to create an incentive to follow through with actions, and to provide a basis from which progress can be measured.”

Read CCEDNet Manitoba’s Budget 2018 submission

Recommendations

Creating a comprehensive poverty reduction strategy

  • Partner with community-based organizations and key stakeholders to create and implement a comprehensive poverty reduction strategy with targets and timelines.

Resourcing the Winnipeg Food Council

  • Invest $69,000 for the coordination of the Winnipeg Food Council as recommended by the public service in its report “Towards a Winnipeg Food Policy Council.”

Supporting the development of social and affordable housing

  • Continue to fund the Housing Rehabilitation and Investment Reserve or subsequent relevant budget reserve and develop a regular and transparent process for reviewing and adjusting its size to ensure it adequately meets housing needs in Winnipeg.
  • Adopt inclusionary zoning to increase the number of affordable housing units in all housing developments.
  • Establish a policy for all surplus land disposals that ensures non-profit and cooperative housing providers are prioritized for receiving surplus land for the purpose of creating affordable housing.
  • Permit E&IPH housing projects to retain their “Residential” classification.
  • Regulate the conversion of rental stock to condominiums when vacancy rates fall below 4%

Resourcing Neighbourhood Renewal Corporations to contribute to the implementation of OurWinnipeg

  • Contribute core funding to Winnipeg’s Neighbourhood Renewal Corporations to help achieve the goals in OurWinnipeg.

Implementing a social purchasing policy

  • Implement a procurement strategy that takes into account the added economic, social and environmental value of purchasing.
  • This procurement strategy should target social enterprises that are creating jobs for people facing barriers to employment.

Implementing a Living Wage policy

  • Partner with community stakeholders to develop and adopt a Living Wage Policy for municipal employees and contracted services.
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EconoUs2017: Innovating for Shared ProsperityThe Early Bird Gets the Worm

Do you hear the Canada geese honking overhead? Registration for EconoUs2017 is now open and these birds don’t want to miss out. Only, instead of a worm, what the early bird gets is $100 off their registration…geese in v formationthat’s a 20% discount! And if you’re a member of the Canadian CED Network you can take advantage of the buffet deal…an additional $100 off!

Don’t miss out; join the flock and we will all fly so much further than we could on our own!

Register at econous.ca/registration

For Too Long, the Economy Has Been About ‘ME’

Despite the political rhetoric of austerity, we live in a time of unparalleled prosperity. This prosperity has made some very rich while others are unfairly left out. And while our society fetishizes the new wealthy entrepreneurs of today how familiar are we with the humble innovators that are looking first and foremost to generate shared prosperity, particularly with and for those who are most consistently left out of the economy? At EconoUs2017 you’ll get to meet these leaders and learn about the strategies being employed to build strong, inclusive community economies that put people and planet first. EconoUs2017 will help illustrate that the economy can be by and for ‘US’.

Why Should You Attend THIS Conference?

Food for Thought
Food for Thought
 
Beakerhead photo taken by Trevor Lalonde
Beakerhead (photo by Trevor Lalonde)

Okay, so maybe you’re experiencing conference fatigue. Or maybe you need to be extra strategic with the budget you have for conferences (I did mention that prosperity is not currently shared fairly, didn’t I?). Here’s a shortlist of 3 reasons why I think EconoUs2017 should be on your list of conferences to attend this year:

Calgary is home to burgeoning innovation

While EconoUs2017 will be exploring innovations from across Canada we will be putting a particular spotlight on Calgary and Alberta.

  • Come early for the chance to take one of four tours (two in Calgary and two in the nearby communities of Olds and Cochrane)
  • Food for Thought will give you the chance to taste Calgary’s finest ingredients while mingling with local chefs and farmers
  • Many of the workshops will highlight exciting initiatives and developments in the province around topics like creating and connecting local businesses, renewable energy, community ownership, labour market integration of newcomers, policy development, CED investment, social purchasing, and so much more!
  • On Thursday you’ll again get the chance to embark on local tours, whether discovering local breweries or connecting with two other exciting events taking place in Calgary at the same time: TechStock and Beakerhead

Make connections with people dedicated to transforming the economy

The delegates that come out to the national community economic development conference are those that have an undying passion to foster thriving communities, create good jobs, and do business differently. The connections you make here will help inspire your own work and may even develop into impactful partnerships. We’ve made sure that the program has lots of networking breaks built in to allow you the time you need to deepen the connections you’ll make through the other program activities. To get a sense of who’ll be there, take a look at the organizations represented at last year’s conference.

Chief Robert Joseph
Chief Robert Joseph
Shaun Loney
Shaun Loney

The conversations we’ll be having, need to happen.

Ideas are nice, but if we don’t engage with them through dialogue and an exploration of how theory can be put into practice we risk just replicating the old ideas we wish to change. Our keynote speakers, Chief Robert Joseph and Shaun Loney, will start EconoUs2017 with one of the most imperative conversations we need to have in this country: understanding the economic underpinnings of reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. We’ll also be looking at issues related to climate change, precarious work, economic disparity, etc. While these can be daunting challenges to confront, EconoUs2017 will tackle them with the spirit of hope and a lens to practical solutions moving forward.

And when the conference is over, the conversations won’t stop. On our last day we’ll be dedicating much of our time collaborating on actionable ideas that participants have through a design and peer coaching process using the talent that’s in the room. There will also be opportunities for continued engagement with the collaborative partners hosting the conference in Calgary

Have any question about the conference? Please don’t hesitate to contact me at mthompson at ccednet-rcdec.ca.


Matthew ThompsonMatthew Thompson is a Communications Manager with the Canadian CED Network (CCEDNet). He has worked with CCEDNet since 2007 in a variety of capacities including research and knowledge mobilization, event organizing, and the coordination of the national internship program, CreateAction. Matthew also co-authored Assembling Understandings: Findings from the Canadian Social Economy Research Partnerships, 2005-2011 a thematic summary of close to 400 research products on the Social Economy in Canada.

*The opinions expressed in blog posts are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of CCEDNet

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SFU Community Economic Development: Accepting applicationsApplications are now open for the 2017/18 Certificate Program for Community Economic Development. The next program runs from October 2017 to May 2018. There are only 28 spots available, so apply today.

Are you action-oriented and community-focused? Do you want to be part of an active and supportive network of professionals and entrepreneurs working to build inclusive and sustainable local economies? SFU’s Certificate Program for Community Economic Development is the place for you.

Every year, we have a wide mix of students from across the province: community builders, social workers, social entrepreneurs, community economic developers and other movers and shakers of all different stripes.

That’s one of the things that makes this program so successful, the diversity of people coming together to collaborate on making positive change in their communities. 

The program involves 2 one-week residencies in Vancouver, with the rest of the program delivered in a live, interactive, online classroom.

Our courses

Here are few of the courses you will study over the year. Find a full list of courses here.

Indigenomics: This course examines place-based values while honouring the powerful thinking of Indigenous wisdom in the context of local economics, relationship building and humanity.

Locanomics: Looking at over 50 case studies, this course outlines a framework for building a local living economy.

Making Change Happen: This course uses both theory and practice to explore strategies for affecting change in your communities.

Social Innovation, Entrepreneurship & Enterprise: By digging deep and learning about the innovators and entrepreneurs in your communities, this course explores the roles of entrepreneurship and social innovation in the transition to a new economy.

Our instructors

Our instructors are accomplished practitioners with a passion for change and community development. They have substantial experience in their respective fields, with exceptional ratings from students who have completed our program. Our instructor’s include one of the world’s leading experts on community economics, successful entrepreneurs, and dynamic leaders of the new economy in British Columbia. Read more about our instructors here.

Is this program for you?

Your attitude and experience matter most. You have a bias towards action. You are both community and results oriented.

Formally, we look for 3 years experience and an undergraduate degree. If you don’t have an undergraduate degree, we look at a combination of your lifelong learning and work experiences to admit you. Some of our most accomplished graduates do not have an undergraduate degree.

If you are interested in finding out more about the program, contact ced_info at sfu.ca.

Join SFU’s Certificate Program for Community Economic Development and start building a sustainable local economy today.

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The 2017 Election for CCEDNet’s Board of Directors is now open and will close on May 19th.

Six candidates are running for four seats on the Board.

Presented below in random order are our six candidates running in the 2017 CCEDNet Board elections.


Wendy Keats     Salisbury, New Brunswick

Wendy KeatsWendy Keats is a co-founder and the Executive Director of the Co-operative Enterprise Council of New Brunswick, a leading CED agency in the province. Prior to this, she spent 18 years as a private CED consultant and trainer working with nearly 200 community groups in organizational development, strategic planning, governance, project management, and many other development areas. Wendy is a certified mediator and served as a senior faculty member of UPEI’s Centre for Conflict Studies for more than a decade.  She provides training and mediation services to all levels of government, business and the community. Wendy sits on numerous boards and committees related to CED and has a special passion for youth engagement and renewable energy. She lives completely off-the-grid in the woods of Salisbury, tending her gardens and relaxing on the river whenever the hectic world of CED allows it.

Carol Madsen     Vancouver, British Columbia

Carol MadsenCarol Madsen has been on the Canadian CED Network board since 2005. She has been teaching in Simon Fraser University’s Centre for Sustainable Community Development for nine years and has taught at Concordia’s School of Community Public Affairs and UBC’s School of Social Work. Previously she was the Manager of Pathways Information Centre, a CED project of Tradeworks Training Society located in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, the regional representative for the Canadian CED Technical Assistance Program for British Columbia and the Director of Bridging the Divides, a participatory action research CED project that took place in two rural communities in BC.  She has been involved in CED, social justice and international development work for more than 25 years and it passionate about creating a more equitable Canadian society for all.


François Hastir     Thunder Bay, Ontario

François HastirCaptivated by the co-operative movement and social enterprises, François became actively involved on many boards of directors including Fondation pour l’éducation à la coopération et à la mutualité, Table de concertation en développement coopératif et mutualiste de Montréal-Laval, Caisse populaire Desjardins Centre-est de la métropole and Fédération Québécoise des coopératives en milieu scolaire (FQCMS). He has also lent a hand to many social enterprises and cooperatives as a consultant in strategic planning and for the development of policies and of by-laws and procedures.

François Hastir holds a Bachelor’s degree in communications and politics and a training in law. After having held the office of regional manager for Northern Ontario at the Conseil de la coopération de l’Ontario, he is now acting executive director for the Association des francophones du Nord-Ouest de l’Ontario. He is also a member of the Co-operatives and mutuals Canada board of directors.


Kaye Grant     Winnipeg, Manitoba

Kaye GrantBased in Winnipeg, Kaye is the key Consultant with Reconnaissance Management Consulting Group Inc. Kaye is also the Communications Manager for the Canadian Worker Co-operative Federation (CWCF), a national, bilingual grassroots membership organization that supports the growth and development of worker co-operatives. Kaye has worked for over 20 years within the non-profit/social enterprise sector in a number of roles. Kaye’s experience in working with the non-profit sector and local community groups enables her to maintain working relationships within the community. Kaye sits on the Bike Winnipeg Board as Co-chair and the Manitoba Co-op Association Board as the CWCF representative. Kaye has been an active member of CCEDNet in Manitoba for nine years and has regularly presented at The Gathering event in Manitoba. Kaye has a passion towards poverty alleviation and has focused her work with organizations that contribute to this mandate.


Derek Pachal     Winnipeg, Manitoba

Derek PachalDerek Pachal has been active with CCEDNet since its inception in 1999 and has contributed locally serving on the CCEDNet-Manitoba Advisory Committee and the Annual Gathering Organizing Committee. As an enterprise development consultant, Derek currently works as a portfolio manager for the Jubilee Fund providing loan guarantees for non-profit organizations, social enterprises and co-ops. Derek has worked in urban, rural, northern and Aboriginal communities and volunteers on several local committees related to CED. Derek has a lifelong passion for social justice and the empowerment of marginalized individuals and communities.


Diana Jedig     St. Thomas, Ontario

Diana JedigDiana Jedig joined the Community Futures Program in 1988, first as a General Manager at the Brantford CFDC, and since 1994 as the Executive Director of the provincial association working with all 61 CFDCs in Ontario. She holds Bachelor of Commerce and MBA degrees and is a Certified Association Executive.  Diana serves as a resource person to the Community Futures Network of Canada Board and as the Past President with the Canadian Community Economic Development Network,  where she has made numerous connections with others dedicated to supporting rural entrepreneurs and their communities.


Current Board members whose term is ending at the 2017 AGM are: Carol Madsen, Derek Pachal, Diana Jedig, and Wendy Keats. 

This year, the Board election process is using OpenSTV for a ranked choice vote according to the Scottish STV model.  We hope you enjoy fairer voting system.

How to Vote

All CCEDNet members in good standing are eligible to vote.  To vote, visit /en/election/3 and log into your CCEDNet account. Once you’ve logged in, you’ll see the link for the 2017 Board Elections / Élections 2017 au Conseil d’administration. If you encounter any issues please contact us at info at ccednet-rcdec.ca or call 1-877-202-2268.

Don’t Forget to Register for the AGM

Election results will be announced at CCEDNet’s 2017 Annual General Meeting, which will be held entirely online on June 7th. CCEDNet members who would like to participate must confirm their attendance by registering before June 5th.


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Community Sola, your panels, your neighbours panelsThis summer, we’re sending teams of dedicated volunteers out to over 25 communities in Alberta to raise awareness about renewable energy, and to make the case that Alberta has the capacity to ensure “Solar 4 All.”

But what do we mean when we say we want solar for all? And why is it important?

The short of it is that while the “sun shines on everyone” (especially Albertans!), we don’t all have the same ability to tap into solar power and to reap the rewards. As Alberta moves to phase-out coal and introduce more renewables onto its grid, we have a unique opportunity to change not just how our power is generated, but also how it is owned and who and how many get to benefit. If we get it right, we’ll not only gain renewable energy, but also a more resilient and democratic economy.

A renewable energy program that fosters growth in small-scale and community-owned large-scale renewable energy will maximize the benefits of Alberta’s electricity grid transition for everyone.

Attaining those maximum benefits, however, means seeing our electricity system a bit differently. For most of us, energy is an essential good we pay for, but whether or not the power comes from a big coal plant, a wind turbine or a solar panel, or whether the profits go to a multinational company or a local provider isn’t something we question.

Similarly, food is also an essential good we pay for, but we tend to have a more holistic and nuanced understanding of it than we do about electricity. We buy the vast majority of our calories from grocers, but many of us produce some of our own food through gardening. We also know that there is a qualitative difference between a diet geared solely towards calories – 100% pixie sticks! – and one based around nourishment, health, and enjoyment with family, friends and community. The tremendous popularity of Farmer’s Markets in the province indicates that many of us also value purchasing our food locally, and developing relationships with those that produce it. Lastly, many of us understand that access to food – whether due to chronic or temporary poverty, or in times of crisis or disaster – is a problem for many Albertans, and one that we need to work together to overcome.

In other words, while we need calories, we understand that food is more than that – it’s about personal and ecosystem health. It’s about socializing, sharing and learning. Sometimes it’s about supporting the small guys and gals who work hard to produce our food locally, or the people that are unable to access adequate food. It can also be about producing it on our own, if we choose.

Just the same, we need to think about Alberta’s renewable transition as more than just green electrons. While utility-scale renewable energy generation will be a critical part of a sustainable grid, renewables owned and operated by individuals, small businesses and communities, First Nations and Métis settlements can serve an important and prominent role in meeting the province’s energy needs, while offering distinct additional benefits as well.                                               

WHY SOLAR?

Alberta has high natural potential for solar. Calgary is the sunniest major city in Canada – as sunny as Miami, Florida. And a solar system in Edmonton, the third sunniest major city in the country, produces the same amount of energy as a system in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

But just as critically, it’s sunny everywhere in Alberta, so solar PV systems are suitable across the province. While Alberta’s best wind resources are concentrated in a few generally rural areas, the entire province has high potential for solar PV, includes urban areas. This means that most Albertans have a quality natural solar resource in close proximity, so communities and individuals could benefit from an on-site or nearby solar installation.

Because of its natural potential across the province, solar power creates an opportunity for everyone – individuals, neighbourhoods, First Nations/Métis communities, schools, farmer’s associations, municipal districts and other organizations – to lower their power bills, or even make income, while producing their own power and achieving energy sovereignty. Moreover, the fuel cost of solar is zero and maintenance costs are minimal, so solar PV systems can produce ongoing price stability for consumers.

Community-scale solar can also act as a vehicle for unrealized investment demand for renewable energy. For example, a share in Nelson, British Columbia’s solar garden – where ratepayers invest in panels as part of an installation owned by the municipal utility – costs $927 or less. The majority of Albertans don’t have the means to install a full system outright, even if they’d like to put some of their available savings into renewables. Investing in a solar farm jointly with neighbours is a way someone with a little money can strengthen their sense of community and shared purpose, while generating a return on investment. A community solar farm is the energy equivalent of the Oliver community garden in Edmonton, or the Varsity community garden in Calgary.

Solar also provides us a unique opportunity to create educational and community-building experiences. Solar tends to be highly visible in communities and the more contact people have with renewable energy, the more likely they are to approve of it, want it, and want to learn more about it. Once installed, community energy assets become a tool for energy education, built right into the very fabric of a community.Solar. A bright idea for Alberta - Sign the petition today.

WHY FOR ALL?   

Some people might say, “Why do we need special policies to make solar available to all Albertans? It is already is available to anyone that wants to put a system up on their roof.”

True, there is no legal restriction preventing an Alberta homeowner from installing solar on their property, or a First Nation from installing a large solar farm,  if they follow certain rules. But, there’s a big difference between making something legal and creating a system that truly allows everyone to participate in a way that reflects our values of democracy and choice. The fact is, many Albertans don’t have the up-front money for a solar PV system, and many Albertans do not have the ability to install solar on their roof – either because they are apartment dwellers, or because they have an unsuitable roof. Indeed, most people find navigating the financial and regulatory system necessary to install solar PV quite daunting. Alberta’s Micro-Generation Regulation, the rules that enable homeowners to install Solar PV systems, creates some barriers itself.  For example, the regulation does not allow the home or building owner to produce more energy than they consume per year: “the proposed production from a micro-generation unit cannot exceed a micro-generator’s annual electricity needs.” 

So, despite the natural potential for all Albertans to tap into the benefits of solar power, there are many social and economic barriers to access for several segments of the population.

The main barriers Albertans face in procuring their electricity from self-produced solar PV are:

  1. Lack of access to the market and electricity grid (renters, condo-owners, or homeowners with unsuitable roofs, but also system size limits, and a lower price paid to homeowners than utilities at peak demand)
  2. Lack of technical capacity and start-up support (including navigating a complex of regulations)
  3. Lack of access to low-cost  financing and better project economics (including available financing vehicles)

At the large scale, the current model – where power production is left to the open market – is really only open to those with easy access to large amounts of capital and/or the ability to make a detailed assessment of financial risk. Such a model not only limits the number of solar producers, but it fails to consider the multiple benefits a community ownership model of solar generation provides.

So while it is true that the “sun shines on everyone”, it is also true that we don’t all have the same ability to tap into that sun, and harness its energy. This means there is room for the Government to better enable solar by offering better access, capacity, and financing to Albertans who face barriers and prioritizing large scale solar projects that are fully or partially owned by communities, municipalities, farmer associations, First Nations and/or Métis Settlements. This is why we’re asking that the provincial government direct some  of its climate leadership ambitions – policy, staff capacity, and some funding from the upcoming carbon levy – towards making solar accessible to everyone.

COMMUNITY SOLAR IS HERE AND GROWING!

Municipalities and coops are already leading the way in Alberta. The Town of Devon, for example, has a publicly owned Solar PV system mounted on the roof of its community centre that meets all of the facility’s energy needs. Starland County provided extensive technical support and capital subsidies to their “solar pioneers” – farmers who agreed to install arrays on their properties – in order to help them achieve a ten year payback. The Town of Banff provides residents and businesses with a seven year production-based subsidy for their solar PV installations, paid out of the rents utilities pay for right of ways. And finally, the Alberta Solar Co-op will allow individuals to invest RRSPs and TFSAs in a 2MW community-owned solar farm. These are just a few examples of the potential for distributed ownership of solar assets. But we need hundreds of more examples.

Solar power is a unique opportunity for everyone to benefit from Alberta’s transition towards a low-carbon economy. We need to make room for more Devons, more Banffs, more Alberta Solar Co-ops, and more Starland Counties.

Written by Emilia Kennedy and originally published by Greenpeace Canada on June 13, 2016


Emilia KennedyEmilia Kennedy is an Advisor in Cross-Ministry Governance with the Alberta Climate Change Office. At the time this article was written, Emilia was a Government Relations and Policy Coordinator with Greenpeace. Emilia has a PhD in Human Geography from the University of British Columbia, where she studied climate and energy policy. In her academic and civic work she has always been interested in how categorization and spatial language (re)define the contours of the possible. 

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Kirsten BernasAfter 8 years at CCEDNet, Kirsten Bernas, our Policy and Research Manager in Manitoba is moving on to a new opportunity with member organization, West Central Women’s Resource Centre (WCWRC).

Kirsten has been a dedicated and passionate advocate for social change and community economic development while at CCEDNet. She has added capacity to multiple coalitions, including Make Poverty History Manitoba, Right to Housing, and the EIA Advocates Network. In that work, she both brought our Network to crucial social policy campaigns and centered a commitment to ending poverty in our community economic development work. She has been committed to member-leadership, both by relying on guidance from members for strategic direction and working to build capacity in our sector around public policy advocacy. Her contributions to research have been valuable, with The View From Here playing a prominent role in poverty reduction advocacy, as well as other reports including an assessment of the impact of work integration social enterprises, and the need for labour market intermediaries.

Her new work as Director of Housing at WCWRC will keep her at the forefront of affordable housing advocacy while also bringing her much closer to communities and individuals directly facing the challenges of housing insecurity.

Our staff team and Board of Directors offer our thanks for her years of service and wish her well as she takes on this new challenge.

For information or communication about CCEDNet’s Manitoba public policy work, please contact Regional Director, Sarah Leeson-Klym at sleesonklym at ccednet-rcdec.ca or 204-943-0547.

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Good Jobs + Good Business = Better Community

Good Jobs + Good Business = Better Community, Action PlanOn March 23, 2017 the Victoria City Council adopted the “Good Jobs + Good Business = Better Community” Action Plan developed by the Mayor’s Task Force on Social Enterprise and Social Procurement. The adoption comes with the amendment that the plan include “recent immigrants” as a strategic group of focus.

Using an ecosystem-based approach to community economic development, the action plan focuses to a large degree on efforts to get the unemployed, underemployed and marginalized into employment. The plan identifies three sets of recommendations that will strengthen the City’s procurement practices to maximize community benefit as well as support small business and social enterprise sectors.

The three recommendations include:

  • Social Procurement: purchases should be leveraged to improve the economic, social and environmental well-being of the community
  • Social Enterprise Development: strengthen and grow businesses already doing business with community benefit in mind and grow the social enterprise sector
  • Leading Economic Change: make the mainstream economy more inclusive to ensure there is always an opportunity for everyone to prosper

Each recommendation has a set of actions and tasks to be implemented over the next five years to achieve prescribed outcomes. Leads and supports in the community to help achieve these outcomes are noted and include the City of Victoria, local organizations, agencies and business. Next steps will include City staff developing a Social Procurement Framework and work plan for Council’s consideration.

Read the “Good Jobs + Good Business = Better Community” Action Plan 

About the Task Force

The Task Force on Social Enterprise and Social Procurement was a recommendation of the Mayor’s Task Force on Economic Development and Prosperity, which with input from the community, developed the City’s economic action plan, Making Victoria: Unleashing Potential in 2015. The economic action plan identifies six engines to drive economic prosperity, generate jobs and raise household incomes. One engine that encompasses the rest is entrepreneurship and social enterprise.

Source: The City of Victoria

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