At our AGM this past June, CCEDNet members passed a resolution calling on CCEDNet to urge the federal and provincial governments to enshrine the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) into law.  

According to the United Nations, UNDRIP is the most comprehensive international instrument on the rights of Indigenous peoples. It establishes a universal framework of minimum standards for the survival, dignity, and well-being of the Indigenous peoples of the world and it elaborates on existing human rights standards and fundamental freedoms as they apply to the specific situation of Indigenous peoples.  

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Call to Action #43 calls upon federal, provincial, and territorial, and municipal governments to fully adopt and implement UNDRIP as the framework for reconciliation. The report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls reaffirms this recommendation in the first of its 10 Calls to Justice. The Assembly of First Nations expressed its deep commitment to the full and effective implementation of UNDRIP in its report, Implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, in 2017. KAIROS, Amnesty International, and countless other organizations have called for the same thing, and now CCEDNet has officially added itself to these calls.  

Read the letter to PM Trudeau

Read the letter to provincial premiers

Photograph by Jason Hargrove via Creative Commons 
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IRP videoUpdated September 8, 2020

The Investment Readiness Program helps social enterprises to design, measure, and scale in order to get ready to accept investments.  If you are a:

  • Charity
  • Non-profit
  • Co-op
  • Social enterprise
  • For-profit social enterprise

You could be eligible for between $10,000 – $100,000 in non-repayable funds to grow your social enterprise project.

Several IRP partners are currently inviting social purpose organizations to apply for funding. Find out if your organization is eligible and more details on how you can apply.

For more information, visit https://irp-ppi.ca

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Image of Juan Tellez Ten days ago, Juan Tellez was charged with sedition, terrorism and crimes against public health in Bolivia.  

I first met Juan 20 years ago in the early days of CCEDNet. He hosted CCEDNet’s first national conference in Halifax, and was the first Chair of CCEDNet’s Membership Committee. I too remember the enthusiasm and passion he brought to our endeavours that this article from the New Brunswick Media Co-op describes among his students at St. Mary’s University.  

The situation in Bolivia is worrying. Reports (see links below) document a surge of human rights violations since last fall’s disputed Presidential elections. Charges of terrorism and sedition are reportedly being laid for people walking through the wrong neighbourhood and having flyers in a backpack.  

It made me wonder how Juan became a political target. In the past, one of his proudest accomplishments was bringing electricity to his rural village. Could community economic development represent a threatening political agenda to some? Is CED a political activity?  

Being a charity, in the past CCEDNet has had to be careful about political activities. Fortunately, following a 2018 court ruling (thanks Canada Without Poverty!!!), the old 10% limit on a charity’s allowed political activities was eliminated. There are still prohibited activities (we must remain non-partisan) but there are now no limits to how much of our resources we can spend on calls to action and campaigns. Which is good, because CCEDNet and some leading members have recently expanded our investment in this work.  

We’ve also become more explicit in our support for broader social justice movements. Standing up for Black Lives, the rights of First Nations, Métis and Inuit, and all people with barriers to full participation in society – this is core to CCEDNet’s vision of communities directing their own social, economic and environmental futures.  

A year ago, as part of centenary celebrations of the International Labour Organization, I wrote a blog about the historic connections between the labour movement, human rights, the co-operative and credit union movements and CED. The roots of all of these are in organizing towards greater economic democracy. Standing up for human rights. And recognizing that in fact human rights themselves are inadequate – we still need what Franklin Delano Roosevelt proposed 75 years ago: economic rights.  

Strengthening the role of government in making sure everyone has equal access to those rights can be effective, but relying entirely on government is risky. It was the failings of distant and ineffective government policy in times and places of economic dislocation that prompted community leaders to decide to take economic matters into their own hands, and embark on a co-operative and CED agenda. Communities know what’s best for themselves. Empowering communities builds resiliency (as we see in the survival rates of co-ops), makes for happier places to work, and contributes to health and well-being. Distributing democratic practice and mutuality in a plural economy (as Henry Mintzberg calls it) solves problems that are too complex for government alone.  

Since March, we’ve been reminded of the importance of labour and decent work, and we’ve seen firsthand how government can act to create a workable social safety net when it’s needed. Current references to a bold, green and equitable recovery offer the promise of a renewed vision for our frayed social contract, and a refocus on those for whom it was broken from the start.   

So to answer the question above, yes, at its best, CED is both practical and political.  Like bringing clean drinking water and green energy to First Nations. Like creating a social finance intermediary to invest in Black-led social enterprises. Or bringing electricity to a remote Bolivian village.  

Juan understood this long ago, and his courage and dedication have made him a target. If you want to help make sure he is okay send an email to to stay up to date and contribute if or when the family asks for help.  

And for the second year in a row, enjoy your Labour Day weekend, with a thought to those whose efforts and sacrifice have made it possible, and those who still today are denied their essential human rights here in Canada, too.  

More on the situation in Bolivia:

*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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Photo of John LoxleyOn July 28, the community economic development movement lost an elder.
 
Dr. John Loxley was a scholar, teacher, activist, mentor, and friend to many. His vision of a world in which sustainable, inclusive communities direct their own futures is at the core of CCEDNet’s work. And by nurturing a collective belief in this vision – among students, organizers, community members, and policy makers – John helped advance CED across Manitoba and around the world.
 
John was beloved. He is remembered as a Robin Hood economist with a genius for friendship who was happiest “explaining the ideas of progressive economics to trade union and community activists, with clarity and without condescension.
 
We asked a few people who knew John to reflect on his impact on CED, CCEDNet, and beyond.

Dr. Shauna MacKinnon remembers John for his “quiet, humble leadership,” which serves as a “good reminder that we need to have more humility and not put ourselves out there as ‘the experts’ — and to [instead] recognize the strength that other people bring.” 

Shauna also spoke about the importance of recognizing John’s foundational contributions to the world of CED. “He gave [CED] a sound theoretical framework… There’s absolutely no doubt that the person who has led CED in [Manitoba] is John Loxley. All you have to do is look at the work he did in the seventies about developing the Great Northern Plan, which is basically the theory behind CED.”
 
Blair Hamilton, Program Manager for the Co-operative Housing Federation of Canada, said that “John was an example of an organic intellectual. A guy from the working class who achieved academic and theoretical excellence but remained connected to his roots, which is rare… [He] was instrumental in building the bridge between academia and the community in Manitoba. This bridge is a defining feature of CED in Manitoba.”
 
Former CCEDNet executive director Garry Loewen echoed the importance of John’s role as a community-minded intellectual in creating the foundation for CED in Manitoba: “[John’s] biggest impact was as a thought leader. John had conceptualized CED a fair bit before we as practitioners turned into a movement of projects.”  

Garry also spoke to the vitality of John’s role as bridge-builder between the academy and the community, and how John brought the values of CED alive for thousands of students. And he explained that John’s legacy includes “the resources that got made available to the sector here in Manitoba through his work with the provincial government. A lot of the [CED] stuff that’s happening on the ground is because of the role he played in making those resources available.” 

Brendan Reimer, partner at Assiniboine Credit Union, said that “as a person, [John] was incredibly principled. He knew the kind of world he was trying to build, he knew what his values were and what he thought a just society would look like. He was incredibly determined through all aspects of his to help us get there — whether that was through his research, teaching, activism, or by going out and starting a community co-op.”

Early in his career, Brendan took a job with CCEDNet. The work was challenging and he felt in over his head. In one of his first meetings, he found himself at a table surrounded by the “intellectual and community leadership giants” of CED — John being one of them. Even though Brendan considered himself to be a “newbie student,” John consistently turned to him during the meeting to ask, “Brendan, what do you think?” To be included in this way meant a lot to Brendan, and it reflected John’s approach to “creating space for both the lived experience of the community and also people who were new” to the work. “That was how he helped build the movement.” 

According to Brendan, John “would challenge you with a smile on his face. Just with a little quip or a little smirk. And you’d get a glimpse behind the curtain, that this guy is smart as hell, eternally committed to social and economic justice, and there’s something in that smile that made you think, ‘this is the kind of guy I want to learn from.’”

Thank you, John, for a legacy of community and compassion. We extend our sincere condolences to John’s loved ones.

Learn more about John’s work:

Read tributes to John:

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Image of Zoom call with PCE Group and Min. HussenOn August 8, CCEDNet organized a meeting between members of the People-Centred Economy Group (PCE Group) and the Honourable Ahmed Hussen, Minister of Families, Children and Social Development.  The meeting was to follow up on a letter sent to the Prime Minister’s office from the PCE Group in May with recommendations for recovery and the post-COVID economy, including the implementation of the Social Innovation and Social Finance Strategy (SI/SF).  

There were two key take-aways for civil society organizations from the meeting.  The first is the importance of taking a cross-government approach when advocating for issues that span multiple departments.  Many of our sector’s policy priorities, like the implementation of the SI/SF, don’t fall neatly into just one department.  In order to build political will and momentum around the cabinet table, it is important to be talking to all Ministers involved in a particular issue, as well as their staff.  The second take-away is that there are still myths associate with investments in social enterprise, both within and outside government.  In order to advance our shared agenda, it is important for these myths to be addressed and dispelled.

CCEDNet will continue working with members and partners to advance policy priorities for an inclusive and sustainable recovery.  If you’d like to find out more, contact our Government Relations Director, Raissa Marks at r.marks at ccednet-rcdec.ca  

Read more

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Profile picture of Victor BeausoleilAt the last meeting of CCEDNet’s Board of Directors, Victor Beausoleil was selected as the new President of the Board. He takes over from Laurie Cook, who had been President since 2018.

Victor is the President + CEO of Intuit Consulting and the founder of SETSI – The Social Economy Through Social Inclusion Coalition. Victor has worked diligently in the broader equity seeking communities across Canada for the past fifteen years. As a lecturer, Victor has travelled extensively throughout Canada, the United States and Africa. Victor has been a board member of numerous foundations and organizations, including Atkinson Charitable Foundation, The Harriet Tubman Community Organization, and the Toronto Community Benefits Network. Read Victor’s full bio.

The Board extends its warm appreciation to Laurie Cook for her leadership over the last two years.

CCEDNet’s new Board Officers are:

  • Victor Beausoleil, President
  • Gail Henderson, Treasurer
  • Yvon Poirier, Secretary

Learn more about CCEDNet’s Board >>

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Canada's ParliamentThe Canadian CED Network’s Policy Council submitted a response to the federal government’s invitation for pre-budget submissions for the 2021 Federal Budget.  This year, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance called for submissions that addressed restarting the Canadian economy as it recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic

Read the full pre-budget submission

If you also submitted a brief we’d love to include it below…
Please send your pre-budget submission to Ben Losman at b.losman at ccednet-rcdec.ca.

Our Recommendations for the 2021 Federal Budget

1. Accelerate Social Innovation and Social Finance
       a.  Produce a Social Innovation and Social Finance Strategy implementing all 12 recommendations of the Co-Creation steering group.
b.  Ensure equity seeking groups play a leading role in the implementation and subsequent evolution of the SISF strategy to build on existing local capacity and strengthen the expertise of the community economic development, non-profit, and co-operative sectors.
2. Support Resilient Local Enterprises
a.  Promote local and social procurement policies.
b.  Enable employee and community-based ownership succession and buyouts.
c.  Establish a national program to grow community investment funds in each province.
3. Build Economies for All
a.  Advance the decent work agenda to support good quality jobs and workers’ rights and well- being.
b.  Improve the efficacy of Labour Market and Workforce Development dollars to reach vulnerable groups seeking workplace skills and training, and ensure that an increased percentage of LMTA funding is directed at vulnerable groups.
c.  Accelerate the timeline of the Universal Broadband Fund, and use it to encourage community-owned broadband.

Read the full pre-budget submission

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The Common Approach to Impact Measurement is looking for 12 people to sit on its inaugural Governance Group. 

The Governance Group is a key vehicle for community ownership of the Common Approach. For the Common Approach to be successful in establishing a flexible standard of impact measurement in Canada for the benefit of social-purpose organizations and others, it is important that there is an active and engaged community of folks overseeing the evolution and refinement of the standard. Successful standards are the community behind them. 

This is an exciting time to join the Common Approach, and the new Governance Group is a great way to get involved. First-term members will:

  • Draw on good governance experience of fiscal oversight, ethics, and risk management
  • Develop the Strategic Planning Framework for the Common Approach
  • Oversee the adoption strategy and identify pathways for engagement with other stakeholders and social purpose organizations across Canada
  • Provide oversight of the four standards that include: The Common Foundations, Common Form, the Common Framework, and the Common Impact Data Standard
  • Support partner and funding development to ensure that the Common Approach can meet its potential

The Common Approach will hold a Q & A webinar on Tuesday, September 8 at 2:00 pm ET to answer any and all questions you might have about the governance model and the call. 

Interested, or know someone who might be? To apply, send a resumé and a letter that expresses your interest in the Governance Group for the Common Approach to Impact Measurement to Joanna Reynolds: joanna (at) socialinnovation.ca

Applications are due September 11, 2020.

Read the full call for nominations

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Photo of Roger Peters CCEDNet member Roger Peters is an engineer and policy analyst with over 40 years experience in co-operatives, clean energy, and local economic development. He is a founding member of the Ottawa Renewable Energy and CoEnergy Ontario Co-operatives.

The virtual shut down of the World’s economies as a result of COVID-19 has exposed their fragility and accentuated their inequality. Our current reliance on conventional business models is not working. As we re-build, we should not bail out large corporations, but rather create more resilient and equitable local economies. 

COVID-19 has also shown us how much we rely on the supply of goods and services from outside our community.  The world economy has become precarious too – products we buy usually contain parts made in many different countries. This may have been more efficient for corporations in pre-COVID 19 times, but it is not resilient enough in a world that will see more pandemics and changing climate. Local communities need to have more say in what is made in their economy and how the rewards are shared. Municipalities must be able to influence local job creation and ownership through their procurement and urban development policies.

Worker or employee co-operatives have existed for many years and have been shown to be more resilient than conventional businesses in times of crisis.  The reason for this is that in a worker co-operative everyone has a financial stake in the enterprise, shares in its success, and equitably manages its failures. It is rooted in the community. In a conventional business, employees are an expense and profits for investors are paramount. 

The time is also right for rebuilding a more democratic business model. Many small business owners may not want or be able to restart their businesses after COVID 19. Many baby boomers who own businesses are ready to retire (the so called “silver tsunami”). There is a real interest and opportunity to save these companies by selling them to those who work for them. Many Canadians are also wanting to have more say in their work lives. 

Preston Model InfographicCities are taking control of their economies

Cities around the world have started to see local procurement and worker co-operatives as keys to more permanent and equitable economic development, taking things into their own hands rather than relying on outside investment to provide jobs. 

Two cities on opposite sides of the Atlantic were the first to see local procurement and employee cooperatives as keys to their economic future – Cleveland, Ohio in the United States and Preston, Lancashire in the United Kingdom

In 2008, the City of Cleveland joined with several other local “anchor” institutions (including the Cleveland Foundation, the Cleveland Clinic, University Hospitals, and Case Western Reserve University) to found the Evergreen Cooperative Initiative to create living-wage jobs in six low-income neighborhoods. The initiative focuses on building a local economy from the ground up rather than a trickle-down strategy from outside investment. 

The anchor institutions agreed to use their significant procurement power to purchase more goods and services locally. This both keeps money in the community and builds secure good quality local jobs. The Evergreen Co-operative Initiative supports new employee owned worker co-operatives and acquires and converts conventional business into worker co-ops that can provide the goods and services required by the anchors.  Evergreen Co-operatives now employ more than 250 people at three core businesses: an industrial laundry, an urban greenhouse, and an energy-efficiency contractor. A Fund for Employee Ownership has been set up to help acquire businesses that wish to convert to a worker co-operative and to help to develop new co-ops – particularly small businesses owned by “baby boomers” wishing to retire. 

Over in Preston, UK, the local council was faced with a dilemma when a large development project in the centre of the city fell through in 2011. Following Cleveland’s example, they persuaded the local university and other anchor institutions to begin procuring goods and services from local sources. Using what is now called “the Preston Model” in just 5 years Preston has become the most improved city in the UK according to the Good Growth Index. 

They also set up The Preston Co-operative Development Network (PCDN) to develop and support local employee owned enterprises which was modelled on the very successful support network for employee owned producer co-operatives in Mondragon, Spain. 
Rather than acquiring business like Evergreen, the PDCN assists conventional business convert to independent employee co-operatives and helps to establish new ones to fill the gaps in anchor institution procurement needs. Like Mondragon, the network includes several key support functions – education (training of potential co-op employees), R&D (to identify new opportunities), and financial (to finance co-op conversion and development).  

Other cities are following Cleveland’s and Preston’s lead.  

Promoting and supporting local procurement and employee ownership through the Cleveland and Preston models are key elements of what is known as Community Wealth Building.  This new model of democratic economic development seeks to give local institutions and citizens more control over their economy and workplaces and keep more of the generated wealth in the community. This means supporting, for example, municipal ownership of services, social procurement strategies, land trusts for affordable housing, worker co-operatives, credit unions, and local training and apprenticeships. As well as using direct support, some cities are requiring that new developments meet certain targets for community wealth building through Community Benefit Agreements

The term social procurement refers to procurement from social enterprises, which are defined as those that have an embedded mission to achieve social, cultural or environmental aims and use at least 50% of profits to further this mission. Cities are beginning to incorporate social procurement into their overall procurement strategies.

Legislation Supporting Employee Ownership

Several EU countries, including Spain, Italy and France have “right to own” legislation which gives employees the first opportunity to buy out a company when the current owner wishes to sell or has to sell because of financial problems. Italy also has a comprehensive legal structure for employee owned enterprises that allows for multi-stakeholder membership drawn from two or more “stakeholder” members including consumers, producers, investors, and community supporters. This allows multi-stakeholder co-operative enterprises (also known as solidarity co-ops) to take on a much wider range of businesses, and allow all citizens to participate in a democratic economy. 

Quebec has led the way in North America creating a comprehensive structure for multi-stakeholder co-operatives through the Quebec Co-operatives Act which includes worker co-operatives, worker shareholder co-operatives, and solidarity or multi-stakeholder co-operatives consisting of employee, user/customers, or “supporters”.  

Through the advocacy of the Illinois Coalition for Cooperative Advancement, in 2019 the State of Illinois passed the Limited Worker Co-operative Association Act. This creates a new structure for employee owned and multi-stakeholder co-operatives in which employees own greater than 51% of the shares. It creates more visibility and financing options for worker co-operatives.

Community Financing of Employee Ownership 

Millions of people around the world have retirement savings invested in conventional financial institutions and stock markets. There is a real desire for these savings to be invested in more specific green and community ventures as long as people still obtain a reasonable return. With the multi-stakeholder co-operative legal structures described above, this huge pool of capital could help to finance employee ownership of new businesses and start-ups. 

Local Investing YYC is a Calgary based co-operative that pools member capital and invests it on their behalf in local enterprises in Alberta and Western Canada. The Ottawa Renewable Energy Cooperative (OREC) is a renewable energy co-operative in Ontario that uses member capital to purchase or build medium scale solar power systems, and sells this power to the grid or to building owners under long term contracts. OREC already has over $8 million of assets. In 2019, OREC set up CoEnergy Ontario Co-operative – a multi-stakeholder co-operative to finance energy retrofit and other clean energy projects. CoEnergy has two classes of members – community members who invest and consumer members who use the co-op’s services. 

Investment shares in both Local Investing YYC and OREC/CoEnergy are RRSP and TFASA eligible so that members can simply transfer retirement funds from their existing RRSP as well as add each year.

While neither Local Investing YYC or OREC/CoEnergy currently invest in employee owned enterprises or include employee members, the model could easily embrace this. It would open the flood gates for ordinary citizens to finance the building of a more resilient local economy. 

Political Support for Employee and Community Ownership is Growing

Cooperatives Unleashed Report CoverIn 2017, the United Kingdom Labour Party commissioned a report to look at “Alternative Models of Ownership” reviewing the options to support worker co-operatives, municipal led economic development, and local public ownership. The New Economics Foundation prepared “Co-operatives Unleashed” for Labour proposing several policies that would increase employee ownership as well as community wealth building in the UK, including using the Preston Model and “right to own” legislation. 

In the United States, the New Economy Coalition through their Pathways to a Peoples Economy Project have laid out a series of policies such as “right to own” that would support and ramp up worker ownership. The Democracy Collaborative has started an initiative called Fifty by Fifty whose goal is to catalyze a movement with the knowledge, resources, and skills to grow the number of employee owners in the U.S. 

In Canada, the NDP’s Charlie Angus has proposed policies that would give workers the legal right of first refusal to purchase a closing business and restructure it as a worker co-operative, as well as harmonize worker co-operative legislation regulation across provinces.

The Canadian Worker Co-operatives Federation is proposing four actions that would help multi-stakeholder co-operatives lead the way in rebuilding the economy post COVID-19 – a long term patient capital fund to support the development of new co-ops; technical assistance to small and medium scale businesses convert to worker co-operatives; emergency relief for existing co-operatives; and promotional and marketing strategies.

Buy Social Canada is proposing that as part of a post COVID 19 rebuilding strategy, social enterprises be eligible for all business support initiatives, and that local small businesses and social enterprise value criteria on all government procurement. 

A Plan for Rebuilding Resilient and Equitable Local Economies

All this activity and experience around the world gives us the ingredients for a major rebuilding plan after COVID 19 – a strategy that gives municipalities the tools and policies they need to rebuild their local economies and community wealth:

Short Term Measures:

  1. Provide financial support to municipal governments to adopt a “Preston Model” approach to local economic development, including the resources to create a local or regional Co-operative Development Network that would develop and support local employee owned enterprises with education and training of potential co-op employees, R&D to identify new opportunities, and finance of co-op conversion and development.   
  2. Provide financial and technical assistance and tax incentives to companies wanting to transition to a worker co-operative as they rebuild. 
  3. Provide financial and other incentives to large anchor institutions that procure goods and services from local employee owned businesses, and reform procurement rules accordingly. Promote local production and sourcing through labelling and other means.
  4. Require all government financed projects to include a Community Benefits Agreement signed with the contractor and the local community that includes the procurement of goods and services from employee owned businesses and social enterprises, as well training/financing to achieve this goal. 
  5. Provide tax credits or other incentives to encourage investment of citizen capital in employee owned or multi-stakeholder co-operatives.

Legislative Changes:

  1. Create new legislation, or modify the existing Cooperative Corporations Acts, to provide a harmonized legal structure for multi-stakeholder worker co-operatives across Canada – a structure that provides these co-operatives with the flexibility to include community investment and customer members, and full access to all of services and assistance currently available to other corporations. *
  2. Create “Right to Own” Legislation that would provide employees of companies that are going out of business, or owners wanting to sell, the right of first refusal to purchase the company as a worker co-operative, and negotiate and finance a buy-out fair to all parties.*

* These two legislative changes could be incorporated into a new Employee Ownership Act. 

*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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Innovative Manitoba Social Enterprises are Scaling Up with New Financial Support

Over winter and spring 2020, a collaborative mix of partners (including foundations, charities, co-operatives, businesses and economic development organizations) came together to bring new resources to Manitoba social purpose enterprises building their capacity for social impact and possible new investment. Hosted by The Winnipeg Foundation and the Canadian Community Economic Development Network (CCEDNet) – Manitoba, the group evaluated 39 applications in the first round of available funding and is pleased to announce $405,737.50 of support to 13 social purpose organizations in Manitoba. 

This new funding is part of the Government of Canada’s Investment Readiness Program (IRP). The social enterprises involved create important opportunities for Indigenous communities, create meaningful jobs, strengthen the charitable and non-profit sector, and address social and environmental challenges. These organizations often face challenges unique to their innovative blend of business practice and social impact. As a result of these new funds, organizations will be better prepared to stabilize or scale up their work and potentially receive investment, including through the Government of Canada’s developing Social Finance Fund. 

Organizations supported include:

  • $40,000 – Aboriginal Chamber of Commerce
  • $30,000 – Aulneau Renewal Centre
  • $13,000 – BUILD Inc. (Building Urban Industries for Local Development)
  • $32,000 – Clan Mothers Enterprises
  • $26,000 – Clan Mothers Healing Village
  • $14,600 – End Homelessness Winnipeg
  • $30,000 – Green Action Centre Inc. (Compost Winnipeg)
  • $12,000 – Level IT Up
  • $40,000 – Mitik 299 Corp
  • $47,000 – North End Community Renewal Corporation
  • $49,600 – Purpose Construction
  • $34,000 – Social Enterprise Centre
  • $37,537.50 – Wahbung Abinoonjiiag

“Manitoba has a long history of innovation in the social sector. The IRP represents an opportunity to further support innovation in organizations we know will address our communities’ needs” noted Alan Goddard, director of Endow Manitoba, an initiative of The Winnipeg Foundation. 

“Social enterprises are incredible vehicles for social impact and they’re doing important work, especially during this challenging period of pandemic response. These groups can help to build resilient, inclusive, sustainable communities and this new support will be invaluable as they grow their impact” says Sarah Leeson-Klym, Regional Networks Director for CCEDNet.

Social purpose organizations strengthen local economies while giving back and creating more resilient and sustainable communities. The IRP creates and advances new earned revenue possibilities for the critical role charities, non-profits, and cooperatives play, especially during this challenging time. For these reasons, the IRP has a key role to play in pandemic recovery and also in moving Canada towards the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. They promote prosperity while protecting people and our planet.

For more information about the IRP, visit the national website at irp-ppi.ca. Applications for the second and final round of funding for the IRP will be accepted starting September 8, 2020 until October 9, 2020.

For more information on the Manitoba local fund or second round, please contact:

Frank Atnikov, Social Enterprise Program Manager, CCEDNet Manitoba

f.atnikov (at) ccednet-rcdec.ca, 204-943-0547 x 205

(Alternate contact: Sarah Leeson-Klym, sleesonklym (at) ccednet-rcdec.ca, 204-943-0547 x 202)

About The Winnipeg Foundation: The Winnipeg Foundation connects donors from all walks of life with local charitable organizations that help our city flourish for all. The Foundation is an endowment-based organization which means gifts received are pooled and invested. The income generated provides a stable source of support for our community For Good. Forever. Established in 1921, The Winnipeg Foundation is Canada’s first community foundation. Endow Manitoba is an initiative of The Winnipeg Foundation that works with the province’s 56 community foundations to increase their impact and advance the movement. Learn more about them at www.wpgfdn.org.

About CCEDNet: A national association connecting people and ideas for action to build local economies that strengthen communities and benefit everyone. In Manitoba, the Network is focused on building strength, knowledge, connection, and power in community organizations and social economy enterprises. Social Enterprise Manitoba is an initiative of CCEDNet Manitoba.

About the Program: Community Foundations of Canada (CFC) is a partner in the Investment Readiness Program (IRP) which helps deliver capital from the Government of Canada to social purpose organizations preparing to successfully participate in the social finance market. For more information about the IRP, visit the national website at irp-ppi.ca.

  

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The federal government’s role as backstop during the COVID-19 pandemic doesn’t end with the first wave of reopening—Canada needs to step up with more investments to ensure a just, equitable and sustainable recovery, says the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) in the 25th year of its Alternative Federal Budget project. 

Cover of the AFB documentAmong the key issues in the Alternative Federal Budget (AFB) Recovery Plan requiring immediate action: implement universal public child care so people can get back to work, reform employment insurance, strengthen safeguards for public health, decarbonize the economy, and tackle the gender, racial, and income inequality that COVID-19 has further exposed. 

AFB proposals specific to community economic development (CED) include:

  • the complete decarbonization of the Canadian economy and a just transition toward sustainable, progressive, and democratic economic systems
  • the development of long-term reconstruction projects that achieve the most social and redistributive impact — projects that incorporate community benefits clauses and social, environmental, equity, diversity, and inclusion criteria
  • the allocation of $3 billion to expanding/ supporting new nonprofit community initiatives that reduce social and economic inequities, with a focus on racial and gender equality, decolonization, and alternatives to policing and incarceration. This funding will include:
    • capacity-building support for Black community organizations and funds to improve access to essential food supports for Black Canadians
    • funds that support collaboration among nonprofit sector members, specifically by covering staffing and operating costs 
  • the promotion of local and social procurement, including through Community Benefit Agreements, that address racial, gender, and other inequalities in the labour market.
  • the facilitation of employee- and community-based ownership succession and buyouts of struggling businesses

The AFB Recovery Plan also outlines concrete steps, with attached funding, necessary to address Indigenous reconciliation, and paves the way for improvements in health care, long- term care, racial justice, and poverty reduction.

“COVID-19 has opened the public eye to the capacity of the government to help regular people, not just the banks and corporate Canada, in times of crisis. We should be using the same approach to ensure that everyone—especially the most disadvantaged and marginalized— have the supports they need to recover,” said CCPA Senior Economist David Macdonald.  

Read the Alternative Federal Budget Recovery Plan 2020

 

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Raissa Marks

We are pleased to welcome Raissa Marks aboard the CCEDNet team, as our new Government Relations Director. Raissa will be leading our policy and advocacy work and will be key in building relationships with Ministers, MPs, senators, and civil servants in Ottawa to advance the CED community’s shared policy goals.

Policy and advocacy have always been important parts of CCEDNet’s work. In fact, when the organization was incorporated in 1999, one of the first things that brought the national network together was a series of five regional meetings culminating in a National Policy Forum, which resulted in our first ever national policy framework.

Times have changed since then, but policy remains an important weave in the fabric of CCEDNet. Over the past couple of months, we have seen tremendous growth in our capacity to deliver on policy and advocacy work, thanks to the leadership of five of our members – CEDEC (Community Economic Development and Employability Corporation) in Quebec, Quint Development Corporation in Saskatoon, SEED Winnipeg Inc., Momentum Community Economic Development Society in Calgary, and PARO Centre for Women’s Enterprise in Thunder Bay – whose commitment and financial contributions have enabled us to hire Raissa for this work.

You may have already noticed the increase in our capacity, with the invitation to participate in the development of our 2020 national policy priorities that went out to CCEDNet members a few weeks ago.

There will be many other opportunities for members to engage with this work over the coming months.  Watch for regular updates on our advocacy work with the federal government, capacity-building workshops and resources to help you up your advocacy game, and, possibly, regional policy workshops and a national day of CED policy action!

A bit of background about Raissa…She comes to us from the environmental NGO sector, having worked for the New Brunswick Environmental Network for the past 14 years, most recently serving as their Executive Director.  She is excited to be with CCEDNet and, in addition to the policy and advocacy work, to help break down the silos between the CED world and the environmental movement.  She has recently moved to Montreal with her family, and looks forward to train-rides back and forth to Ottawa once in-person meetings become a thing again!  

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