Our new website is packed with great features like:

  • Online registration for events
  • RSS feeds
  • Online donation and membership registration
  • Event listings/job postings
  • Media Room
  • Newly built toolbox
  • Document manager
  • Expanded regional pages

Please note that we are working hard to make sure the transition from our old website to this one is seamless.

Comments? Questions? Contact:

Erin Brocklebank
Communications Coordinator
ebrocklebank [at] ccednet-rcdec.ca

 

 

 
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Canada’s renowned system of health care is at a crossroads. Serious scarcities in services, disparities in health between different groups of citizens, and the prospect of a skyrocketting demand for chronic care – these factors compel a decision. But have we really only two choices? Either “public” or “private” health care? No.

There is a Third Way forward. It involves engaging in health care delivery a third stakeholder – one with untapped energy, insight, and a devotion to people – Canada’s communities. Health co-operatives, community health centres, Aboriginal Health Access Centres, and many more organizations already demonstrate how ordinary citizens can, should, and must have a far greater say in the health care they and their neighbours receive.

The 2007 Special Edition of Making Waves magazine reframes a national debate by outlining the case for a vast expansion of community-level capacity and authority in our health sector. It has been written by and for people and organizations active in the health care sector as well as CED and social economy practitioners.

Browse the complete contents in PDF by clicking here.

Making Waves is published quarterly by the Canadian Centre for Community Renewal. It is written by and for people trying to revitalize struggling communities and help marginalized groups improve their overall quality of life. It is the only periodical on CED currently published in North America, and is read by professionals and activists in this field across Canada.

 

 

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Victoria, BRITISH COLUMBIA – The Conservative government’s Speech from the Throne, delivered Tuesday evening, offers appeals to patriotism without any commitment to concrete social change in Canadian communities, says the Canadian Community Economic Development Network (CCEDNet). CCEDNet, which represents the interests of over 600 organizations working to reduce poverty, believes the measures outlined in the speech will do nothing to help the rising number of poor in Canada.

“Our government has reached a new level of cynical double-speak” says Rupert Downing, Executive Director of the Canadian Community Economic Development Network. “While claiming to be concerned about poverty and homelessness in Canada, the government has outlined steps which will only make life more difficult for those Canadians who have the least.”

Peppered with patriotic language and references to becoming the ‘Northern Star,’ the speech seems to blur the real issues. While poverty and climate change are priority issues for Canadians, the Throne Speech offers measures which would actually entrench poverty and make life worse for the people living in Canada’s poorest communities.

“This Throne Speech is one of the worst Canadians have ever seen,” says Mr. Downing. “It’s strategically written to distract Canadians from what’s really happening. Issues like poverty and climate change can’t be ignored.”

The Canadian Community Economic Development Network (CCEDNet) is a national non-governmental charitable organization established to support the work of community organizations that are creating economic opportunities and enhancing social conditions in Canada. The membership of CCEDNet is made up of hundreds of community groups, municipalities, foundations, and practitioners from every region of the country.

Community Economic Development (CED) is action by people locally to create economic opportunities and better social conditions, particularly for those who are most disadvantaged. CCEDNet’s national office is located in Victoria, BC.

 

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For more information, please contact Erin Brocklebank, Communications Coordinator, (250) 386-9980 ext.106.

 

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