Service CanadaEmployment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) is currently accepting proposals from organizations interested in receiving financial assistance from the Skills Link program.

Project activities can be provincial or territorial or local in scope. Activities must be confined to one province or territory.

The Skills Link program is a component of the Government of Canada’s Youth Employment Strategy (YES). Through funding for organizations, the Skills Link program helps youth overcome barriers to employment, develop a broad range of skills and knowledge in order to participate in the current and future labour market and to promote education and skills as being key to labour market participation. These barriers include, but are not limited to, challenges faced by recent immigrant youth, youth with disabilities, single parent youth, youth who have not completed high school, Indigenous youth, and youth living in rural or remote areas.

Apply for Skills Link funding now

Deadline: August 12, 2016 at 11:59 p.m. Pacific Time

There are 2 (two) streams for this Call for Proposals.

When possible, submit only one proposal (per stream) and that can include multiple activities in the same province or territory.

Stream One will prioritize and will award additional points to projects that focus on the following program priorities highlighted by this Call for Proposals:

  • Projects that target green jobs
  • Projects that incorporate Essential Skills
  • Projects that target female at–risk youth
  • Projects that target Indigenous youth
  • Projects that fill high demand labour market needs that are currently met through the use of Temporary Foreign Workers
  • Applicants that leverage a minimum of 20% of funding from other sources
  • Projects that facilitate youth mobility to access employment opportunities

Stream Two will focus on projects that demonstrate Social Innovation, more specifically, but not exclusively:

  • Testing innovative approaches
  • Social enterprise

Please note that Stream Two proposals can include some or all components of Stream One, however, Stream Two projects will be set apart by the Social Innovation Component included in the project that is utilized to reach the expected results of the Skills Link program.

Source: Service Canada

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Home Sweet HomeHome Sweet Home, a local foods grocery store turned economic development project, is travelling the province this month, teaching rural communities how to build their local food economies. Between now and July 27, the Home Sweet Home Field School will be visiting Revelstoke, Burns Lake, Terrace, Hazelton and Telkwa, delivering free workshops on a range of food-business related topics, from business development to local policy.

Home Sweet Home was started by Diandra Oliver and Laura Sapergia in Prince George 3 years ago as a small grocery store, specializing in local food products at an accessible price. As they grew into a successful business, they found their customers wanted more than locally-produced groceries, they were also looking for advice.

“We were surprised by how many people would ask us questions about how they could start their own local food business,” says Oliver. “Some people wanted to know what grew well in our community and what they could sell. Others were interested in how they could develop value-added food products into a market ready item. Our storefront quickly evolved into a community space where people could support a local economic initiative and gain skills and knowledge to be more active in that economy themselves.”

In response, the Home Sweet Home duo began to expand their vision from one successful grocery store to an economic development project supporting local food businesses and their communities, to strengthen the local food sector.

“Home Sweet Home is an incredibly successful example of the potential of the local food economy in rural British Columbia,” says Sapergia. “What communities lack is knowledge. People want to know what works or what is legal and food safe or how to connect with customers. Communities want to know how they can encourage more local food producers. We want to help find solutions.”

Sapergia and Oliver launched the Home Sweet Home Field School and with some seed funding from SFU’s Community Economic Development Program’s annual Social Innovation Challenge, are touring the Interior and Northern B.C.

“Diandra pitched the Home Sweet Home Field School for our annual Social Innovation Challenge,” says SFU CED Program Director, Nicole Chaland. “Her passion is infectious, her vision for how to create sustainable and strong economies in the North is well reasoned and she has proven her capability with Home Sweet Home. We are thrilled to support her and her business partner to do this work.”

All Home Sweet Home Field School workshops are FREE and everyone is welcome to register online at www.beawesomeitseasy.com

Wednesday, July 20th at Burns Lake
Thursday, July 21st at Terrace
Monday, July 25th at Hazelton
Tuesday, July 26th at Hazelton
Wednesday, July 27th at Telkwa

Media Contact:

Diandra Oliver
ohsweetie at gmail.com
250-562-0988

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'Reading and relaxing' by Will Ockenden If you’re like Canadian CED Network Executive Director, Michael Toye, you have a pile of books on the side of your desk (see image below right) to remind you of how much you would like to read, if ever you get enough time. Many of us see the few weeks of summer vacation we may have as the prime opportunity to set high expectations for the reading we’d like to accomplish.

Building on last year’s blog post, we again asked staff and board members what they were planning on reading this summer, both vocationally and ‘vacationally’.

Below is what we have compiled and it provides a great window into the personalities and interests of those involved in the daily operations of CCEDNet and those involved in providing the oversight and vision building of CCEDNet’s work.

But more than that, we hope you might be intrigued by some of the titles below, and we hope you’ll share what you’re reading.  

Share your summer reading suggestions with us on Facebook or Twitter.

Click on the names below or scroll down to read the suggestions.


Sarah Lesson-Klym

Truth and Reconciliation Commission
by The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada

This body of work is essential reading for all Canadians, but particularly those of us who work in fields where we are often working alongside or on behalf of Indigenous peoples. It will be a hard look at our collective history, but will provide context, evidence, and motivation for how we can build a new and better relationship with Indigenous communities that supports equity and an economy that is for all of us, forever.

Deepening Community
by Paul Born

This is a newer piece from the leader of Tamarack, and I’m looking forward to learning more about his understanding of community in a modern, global age and how we can deepen our sense of this key component of our work. I’m especially interested in his first pillar of deep community, focusing on how sharing our stories. I’m hoping to see ways to share diverse stories and build a more rich, nuanced, and truthful understanding of my own community.

Pilgrim at Tinker Creek
by Annie Dillard

This is technically called fiction, but more of a rumination on the way we are rooted in our place and landscape. I’ve read it many times before and want to revisit it because she pulls us towards a slower, calmer observation of the world around us. This slowed down way of life is appealing while the world seems to spin ever faster around me.

More about Sarah Leeson-Klym top ^

Laurie Cook

Why David Sometimes Wins

Why David Sometimes Wins
by Marshall Ganz

It’s about leadership, organization and strategy in the California Farm Worker’s Movement in the 60’s.  Marshall Ganz is currently a professor of sociology at Harvard, but he used to be right in there as an organizer in the 60’s. One of the best books I’ve ever read about organizing.  Excellent balance of theory, practice and story.

More about Laurie Cook top ^

Yvon Poirier 

The life and times of Raúl Prebisch
by Edgar J. Dosman

This biography of this Argentinian economist, prepared by a Canadian is quite interesting about the history of development and in the world. He was the founder of UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development), some 40 years ago.  In explained well that the traditional economics theory of comparative advantage (countries specialise on what they do best and then export these goods to import from others) is a flawed theory and that for countries in the periphery, they lose out. Like Argentina which was specialised on producing beef to sell to the UK. And there was little manufacturing.

Raúl Prebisch was a leader in economic development theory and international economic policy, an institution builder, and an international diplomat. The Life and Times of Raúl Prebisch provides the first book-length account of his life and work, a story cast against the backdrop of Latin America, the Cold War, the rise of the United Nations, and the struggle for equity between first and third worlds.

More about Yvon Poirier top ^

Frank Atnikov

The End of Fundraising: Raise More Money by Selling Your Impact 
by Jason Saul 

Why does it cost nonprofits on average $20 to raise $100, while it costs companies only $4? Simply put: Nonprofits have no leverage. No one has to make a donation. And since most donors have no direct stake in the organizations they support, they make donations out of the goodness of their hearts. If donors feel like writing a check, they will. If they don’t, they won’t. The End of Fundraising turns fundraising on its head, teaching nonprofits how to stop begging for charity and start selling impact. For the first time, nonprofits have economic power. We live in a new era where consumers, businesses, investors, employees, and service providers attach real economic value to social outcomes. An era where yesterday’s “feel good” issues—education, the environment, health care, the arts, and animal rights—now have direct economic consequences and opportunities. Nonprofits now have leverage. To use this leverage, nonprofits must learn how to “sell” their impact to a new set of stakeholders.

The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing: Violate Them at Your Own Risk
by by Al Ries (Author), Jack Trout 

Ries and Trout, authors of some of the most popular titles in marketing published during the last decade ( Marketing Warfare , LJ 10/15/85; Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind , Warner, 1987; and Bottom-Up Marketing , McGraw, 1989), continue the same breezy style, with lots of anecdotes and insider views of contemporary marketing strategy. The premise behind this book is that in order for marketing strategies to work, they must be in tune with some quintessential force in the marketplace. Just as the laws of physics define the workings of the universe, so do successful marketing programs conform to the “22 Laws.” Each law is presented with illustrations of how it works based on actual companies and their marketing strategies. For example, the “Law of Focus” states that the most powerful concept in marketing is “owning” a word in the prospect’s mind, such as Crest’s owning cavities and Nordstrom’s owning service. The book is fun to read, contains solid information, and should be acquired by all public and business school libraries. It will be requested by readers of the authors’ earlier titles.

The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared
by Jonas Jonasson, Rod Bradbury (Translator)

It all starts on the one-hundredth birthday of Allan Karlsson. Sitting quietly in his room in an old people’s home, he is waiting for the party he-never-wanted-anyway to begin. The Mayor is going to be there. The press is going to be there. But, as it turns out, Allan is not… Slowly but surely Allan climbs out of his bedroom window, into the flowerbed (in his slippers) and makes his getaway. And so begins his picaresque and unlikely journey involving criminals, several murders, a suitcase full of cash, and incompetent police. As his escapades unfold, we learn something of Allan’s earlier life in which – remarkably – he helped to make the atom bomb, became friends with American presidents, Russian tyrants, and Chinese leaders, and was a participant behind the scenes in many key events of the twentieth century. Already a huge bestseller across Europe, The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared is a fun and feel-good book for all ages. 

More about Frank Atnikov top ^

Wendy Keats

Renewable Energy:  Power for a Sustainable Future
by Godfrey Boyle

The provision of sustainable energy supplies for an expanding and increasingly productive world is one of the major issues facing civilisation today. Renewable Energy examines both the practical and economic potential of the renewable energy sources to meet this challenge. The underlying physical and technological principles behind deriving power from direct solar (solar thermal and photovoltaics), indirect solar (biomass, hydro, wind and wave) and non-solar (tidal and geothermal) energy sources are explained, within the context of their environmental impacts, their economics and their future prospects. Together with its companion volume, Energy Systems and Sustainability, this book provides both perspective and detail on the relative merits and state of progress of technologies for utilizing the various ‘renewables’.

The Illegal
by Lawrence Hill

All Keita has ever wanted to do is to run. Running means respect and wealth at home. His native Zantoroland, a fictionalized country whose tyrants are eerily familiar, turns out the fastest marathoners on earth. But after his journalist father is killed for his outspoken political views, Keita must flee to the wealthy nation of Freedom State—a country engaged in a crackdown on all undocumented people.

There, Keita becomes a part of the new underground. He learns what it means to live as an illegal: surfacing to earn cash prizes by running local races and assessing whether the people he meets will be kind or turn him in. As the authorities seek to arrest Keita, he strives to elude capture and ransom his sister, who has been kidnapped.

Off Grid East Coast
Magazine

This new magazine showcases real people in Atlantic Canada doing real things to reduce their carbon footprint.  It tells stories about innovation community-led initiatives and has articles about everything from solar to biomass, micro hydro,  tiny houses, permaculture, edible wild food and much more!

There, Keita becomes a part of the new underground. He learns what it means to live as an illegal: surfacing to earn cash prizes by running local races and assessing whether the people he meets will be kind or turn him in. As the authorities seek to arrest Keita, he strives to elude capture and ransom his sister, who has been kidnapped.

More about Wendy Keats top ^

Marianne Jurzyniec

Seed Sovereignty, Food Security: Women in the Vanguard of the Fight against GMOs and Corporate AgricultureSeed Sovereignty, Food Security: Women in the Vanguard of the Fight against GMOs and Corporate Agriculture
by Vandana Shiva

It isn’t easy to navigate and participate in the complex world that is our food systems in an ethical and sustainable way. Each year I try to read at least one book that sheds some light on this area. This year I’ve chosen Seed Sovereignty, Food Security a collection of work from women around the world writing about the movement to change the current, industrial paradigm of how we grow our food. As seed keepers and food producers, as scientists, activists, and scholars, they are dedicated to renewing a food system that is better aligned with ecological processes as well as human health and global social justice.

The End of Protest: A New Playbook for Revolution
by Micah White

Having felt the same frustrations watching social movements mobilize large sectors of our society but with minimal change made me add this book to my summer reading list. Micah White, co-creator of Occupy Wall Street, believes our current approach to activism is itself in need of a revolution and offers new scenarios for how to approach social change.

More about Marianne Jurzyniec top ^

Tom Jakop

Promoting Global Justice and Citizens' Engagement in a Time of Uncertainty - Youth ReportPromoting Global Justice and Citizens’ Engagement in a Time of Uncertainty – Youth Report
by Challenging the Crises 

The EU member states have been badly affected by the 2008 economic crisis, with some countries finding it particularly challenging to respond and recover. In times of austerity it is easy to focus on the crisis at home and not consider wider global issues. To investigate whether this is the case among young people in the most indebted EU countries, the Challenging the Crisis partners conducted research to assess their level of engagement with issues of global citizenship and global justice.

This report outlines the views of young people, aged 15 – 34 from Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Spain and Slovenia, on international development, and their understanding of related concepts and issues. The aim of the research is to assess whether global solidarity and development aid are priorities for European youth in a time of economic and political crisis and high unemployment.

Social Inclusion and Young People Social Inclusion and Young People  (EXCLUDING youth : a threat to our future)
by YouthForum.org

This report will examine the social situation of youth and assess the quality of social policies and social protection and services available to young people. It will demonstrate gaps in the current functioning of welfare systems in Europe that need to be addressed. It will show that the European social model has to adapt to a changed social and economic context, to guarantee investment in the young generation through education, creation of quality jobs, social protection, healthcare and housing support. This has to happen not only to ensure the respect of social rights of young people today, but also to safeguard the well-being of European society, both for today and for tomorrow.

More about Tom Jakop top ^

Michael Toye

Truth and Reconciliation Commission
by The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada

We are all treaty people.  Reconciliation is essential if we hope to move towards right relationships.  This will no doubt be a tough read, but we have to take responsibility for what the Canadian government did in the name of Canadians, before we can really move forward. 

Profound Changes in Economics Have Made Left vs. Right Debates Irrelevant
by Eric Beinhocker

The headline of this article is a bit misleading; I doubt that left vs right debates will become irrelevant.  But its key argument — that orthodox economics is finally moving towards methods that are a better reflection of reality — offers huge opportunities for community economic development.  An interdisciplinary approach that draws on complex systems studies and network theory, and jettisons many damaging and unrealistic assumptions is much more aligned with the community level innovation that CCEDNet members have been leading for decades.  Hurry up, new economics.  

Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging
by Sebastian Junger

I heard an interview with Sebastian Junger on the radio, and it struck me that the stories in this book are moving testimony on the power of community.  If we can better understand the evolutionary psychology behind our social and communal instincts, we’ll have a much better foundation and design premise for community economic development

More about Michael Toye top ^

Matthew Thompson

Year of the Flood
by Margaret Atwood

I loved reading Oryx and Crake and have been meaning to read this second book in the MaddAddam trilogy. I have all the more reason to do so now that I understand that HBO is producing a TV series based on the books directed by Darren Aronofsky. In this speculative fiction series Atwood explores a dystopic future reeling from the consequences (climate change, disease epidemics, addictions, mass marginalization, etc.) of short-sighted science as employed by globalized economics.  

After Occupy: Economic Democracy for the 21st CenturyAfter Occupy: Economic Democracy for the 21st Century
by Tom Malleson

Anyone who claims that the Occupy movement has failed to make a significant impact hasn’t been paying attenetion to the political language of today. Without Occupy I don’t think we would be seeing the rogue popularity of Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump in the current United States presidential election, both of whom have been very deliberate in their appeal to the working class (in a country whose politicans have long denied class as a major issue). I have had Malleson’s book on my ‘to read list’ ever since I attended a workshop of his at the Peoples Social Forum in Ottawa last year. In this book he argues that we need to not just focus on extending democratic principles in our political arenas but in our economic lives as well, principally through collective ownership and shared decision making. 

More about Matthew Thompson top ^
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right to housingCanada has not had a national housing plan since the mid-1990s. In the intervening years, the housing market has all but been restructured. We’ve all heard about the condo bubbles in Toronto and Vancouver, and the $1- million, 800-square-foot single detached houses in Vancouver. Young adults can’t afford mortgages — at least without major backing from their parents — making home ownership the intergenerational privilege of a shrinking middle class.

Stories of mini-mansions, teardowns and the middle-class squeeze are only part of the housing story, however. What the scandalous stories of million- dollar shacks in Vancouver miss is the pressure on rental housing. Renters are feeling the pinch differently, depending on the area and apartment type they live in, but they are all feeling it. In Winnipeg, rental rates have gone up by an overall average of more than 3.5 per cent in both 2014 and 2015, outpacing inflation. This upward pressure means more people are paying more than the affordability guideline of 30 per cent of their income on rent.

For people who have a very low income, the situation is perilous. For one thing, until this year, the easing of vacancy rates we’ve seen in Winnipeg in the past couple of years was largely happening at the high end of the market, rather than the lower. Vacancy rates vary by neighbourhood, but units renting at less than $500 a month (a rare find, and one the quality of which might be questionable at best) have tended to have low vacancy rates, making these units tough to come by. Even as vacancies have eased for some apartment types, affordability is evaporating.

Keep in mind $500 is in the “affordability zone” for around 13 per cent of Winnipeg households (2010 census data). Yet the average rent for a bachelor apartment in the core area is $589, with some differences between core area neighbourhoods ($431 in Lord Selkirk versus $600 in Centennial, according to a Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. report in 2015). This is the average rent for a bachelor. The hard, if obvious, truth is most people living on low incomes end up paying more of their overall income — a lot more.

That’s where housing advocates, including non-profit housing providers of affordable and social housing, come in — or should come in. But the truth is, providers of non-profit housing are pinched, too. At affordable rates, these providers are not covering costs, and many are coming to the end of operating agreements that date back to before the 1990s. The result has been increased pressure to phase out rent-geared-to-income units in favour of affordable units that are no longer affordable to people with no other options. In addition, housing providers report frequent and expensive apartment turnovers, making their operating costs high. Tenants struggling to pay rent and put food on the table, unsurprisingly, can require on-site social supports. Where the work of social services ends, non-profit providers — often their on-site managers and caretakers — find their work unwittingly begins. Any de facto social work and emergency services is an added cost.

Despite the pinch of housing providers, in the past 20 or so years where the federal government has ignored housing (as best it could, anyway), provinces and housing advocates have filled the void. For their part, advocates across the country have managed to create a network of ground- level analysts and providers who can explain supply issues and affordability issues as they affect housing accessibility and cost. Likewise, they can speak to the interconnected social and housing needs of a specific population, such as low-income, indigenous, newcomer and seniors. Manitoba advocate group Right to Housing has examined, among other things, the effects of taxation and incentives on supply across the housing continuum.

These advocate groups, which include the Canadian Housing and Renewal Association on a national level, have called on the federal government to save us a seat at the table for discussions about a new national housing strategy. Federal and provincial governments have taken the important first step to formulate a strategy to address the new reality in Canada and advocacy groups want to be part of that process.


Tyler PearceTyler Pearce is chairwoman of Right to Housing’s federal working group. Find out more about right to housing at righttohousing.ca.

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House of CommonsThe House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance has launched its pre-budget consultation process, and is inviting the participation of Canadians. A report on the consultations will be tabled in the House of Commons in December 2016. The suggestions made by Canadians, and the report on the pre-budget consultations prepared by the Committee, will be considered by the Minister of Finance as the 2017 federal budget is developed.

CCEDNet’s National Policy Council will be preparing recommendations based on our policy priorities.  Last year’s recommendations can be found here

Visit the study’s webpage to submit a brief or to make a request to appear before the Committee. 

The deadline for written submissions to the Committee is no later than Friday, 5 August 2016 at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. Submissions should be no longer than 2,000 words, including an executive summary. Submissions exceeding this limit will not be considered by the Committee. Following translation, the submissions will be circulated to Committee members and posted on the Committee’s website.

The focus of written submissions to the Committee and appearances in fall 2016 should be the following:

  1. What federal measures would help Canadians generally – and such specific groups as the unemployed, Indigenous peoples, those with a disability and seniors – maximize, in the manner of their choosing, their contributions to the country’s economic growth?
    • For example, what measures in relation to education and training, labour mobility, workplace accommodation, labour market information and personal taxes would be most helpful in supporting the country’s economic growth?
  1. What federal actions would assist Canada’s businesses – in all regions and sectors – meet their expansion, innovation and prosperity goals, and thereby contribute to economic growth in the country?
    • For example, what actions in relation to support for entrepreneurs, internal and international trade and investment, regional development agencies, taxation and business financing would help businesses maximize their contribution to Canada’s economic growth?
  1. What federal measures would ensure that urban, rural and remote communities throughout Canada enable residents to make their desired contribution to the country’s economic growth and businesses to expand, prosper and serve domestic and international customers in order to contribute to growth?
    • For example, what measures in relation to broadband and other types of infrastructure, arts, recreation, tourism and climate change adaptation would help communities to support residents and businesses as they seek to take advantage of opportunities and contribute to the nation’s economic growth?

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lets talk housing

On June 28, the federal government announced its long awaited consultation process on the development of a National Housing Strategy. The government is looking for your input now. CCEDNet members have been calling for the development of a national housing strategy for many years.

The consultation will take place in two phases.  The first phase will involve establishing high level outcomes and objectives for a National Housing Strategy.  The second phase will consult with Canadians on specific policy recommendations and innovations in a number of thematic areas along the housing spectrum. 

For more information on the first phase, and to submit ideas on the high level outcomes, visit the government’s official consultation website:  www.letstalkhousing.ca

The input of housing advocacy groups will be very important in these consultations, as explained in this blog by CCEDNet member Right to Housing.  The Canadian Housing and Renewal Association has repurposed its Housing4All webpage to share background materials, reports, and previous CHRA interventions to help inform input. The website also provides a questionnaire seeking feedback on a range of policy questions related to the scope of the National Housing Strategy. 

Provide your input! 

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Carol Anne HiltonCarol Anne Hilton on the concept she invented to pull Canada into a better future.

Carol Anne Hilton wants Canadians to add a new word to their dictionary: Indigenomics.

Definition: The practice of bringing an Indigenous perspective to economic and social development.

Hilton, who is of Nuu-chah-nulth heritage, launched the word four years ago as a Twitter hashtag: #Indigenomics.

Canada, says Hilton, needs a new language to move toward reconciliation. It’s a language she speaks to the federal government after being appointed advisor to the finance minister. She speaks it as CEO of her company Transformation, which helps First Nations with economic and social development. She’s also director of the B.C. First Nations Health Society, a member of the World Fisheries Trust chair of the Victoria Community Micro-Lending Society, and teaches a class on Indigenomics at Simon Fraser University. And she’s authoring a book, Indigenomics: A Global Power Shift.

The Tyee interviewed Hilton on the patio of a café in Sidney, not far from her home in Victoria. Here is what she had to say…

On why it’s time for Indigenomics:

“The legal precedents that First Nations have set over even the past 20 years — with those milestones we have inserted ourselves into the reality of the Canadian economy.

“Canada’s government hasn’t necessarily caught up with that. Canadians don’t have the language that says ‘I understand what free, prior and informed consent is, I understand what consultation is, I understand what a referral system is.’

“That’s where a new language needs to be built from. Canadians need to understand how and why First Nations are important within the regional and national economies. I believe that Indigenomics is a conscious claim to the modern expression of what is an Indigenous economy.

“I’m Nuu-chah-nulth from west coast of Vancouver Island and we have a concept hish yuk ish tsa wak, meaning everything is one and interconnected.

“So when we develop forestry companies or we develop projects we look at it from that worldview of everything as one or interconnected.

“So how do you make decisions from that point? Indigenomics looks at building sustainability and looks at long-term ecological alignment with our values. Those values – respect, sustainability or being careful with resources — that worldview isn’t something that’s just Nuu-chah-nulth.

“So you take that concept of hish yuk ish tsa wak and you will find the same concept said in a different way in all these different Indigenous communities.

“I think that mainstream economics needs to bring in that perspective because it’s largely been absent. The development of the Canadian economy has been based on the establishment of acts to be able to access resources that required the removal of First Nations from the land they used as their resource base.

“But now the access to resources has shifted considerably and Canada really needs to be able to identify: what is our relationship with First Nations now?

“The impacts that Canadian First Nations are building through business can now be measured.

Understanding First Nations values, worldview, stories and relevance to the Canadian economy — that’s really where Indigenomics’ role is within Canada. So I think the time is right.”

On being the daughter of residential school survivors:

“My parents went to residential school, my grandparents went to residential school. Being the first generation out, I feel very much connected to building a reality that places indigenous people in a positive place. In a place around wholeness, around well-being, around community development and then removing those social symptoms like poverty and those kinds of aspects. That’s really what I focus on me myself and within the work that I do.

“I focused on business and economic development and was able to build some companies and good presence within First Nations communities with corporations and with government.”

On Twitter as conversation changer and creative catalyst:

“Four years ago I started a Twitter account, and I became really aware the content that I was most interested in was around Indigenous topics, business, economic development, economy.

“And then I started tweeting stories and scanning what I saw as relevant to Canadian identity and understanding our relationship to First Nations people. What were the stories being told in the media? Were they fear-based or sensationalized or uncertain? Did they create an environment that furthered racism?

“So then that’s where I put Indigenous and economics together to create Indigenomics. I created a thread of thought that not only followed the stories but inserted indigenous thinking and inserted what was important from a First Nations view.”

On teaching Indigenomics at SFU:

“I think I’ve been teaching Indigenomics at SFU for three years now. What I find really exciting about teaching in the Community Economic Development program is that it’s for mainstream change-makers who want to identify that not only is there a way to do economic development differently, but it needs to be inclusive. I think Indigenomics acts as a platform for building understanding.

“Out of the Twitter threads I was able to take information apart and look from a First Nations perspective at economic development or business projects [and use that as a basis for teaching]. If a project was going ahead or not going ahead what was the origin of the conflict and how do you view that from a First Nation worldview?”

On why Indigenomics is key to reconciliation:

“I heard a South African speak up in Clayoquot Sound a number of years ago and he talked about economic apartheid. After apartheid ended in South Africa what we ended up with was that concept of economic apartheid.

“And very much the reserve system of Canada is economic apartheid. We exist within these small isolated places that do not have the means within that land base or resource base to be able to create economies.

“For example, the Nuu-chah-nulth people took Canada to court because they live on little tiny reserves here in B.C. and the size of those reserves were intended because we were supposed to be able to access the resources from the water — from the sea.

“But the Fisheries Act and all the licensing systems then prevented us from doing that. So we were no longer able to access our traditional economy.

“The United Nations declaration on the rights of Indigenous peoples talks about our right to continue as people, to continue with our identity, our education, our language, build our own economies today.

“So economic reconciliation is that ability to create what is required for us today in 2016 and going forward.”

On how her company Transformation uses Indigenomics:

“We look at social and economic development as parallel processes. Nations need to be able to build business structures but they also need to create social outcomes.

“So those social outcomes are often expressed as social symptoms — like high suicide or high poverty. But that ability to shift and create positive social outcomes has to be linked to economic development.

“And economic development has to be linked to social identity. They have to be interconnected.

“There’s an area in the Nass Valley in B.C. called the Nisga’a area. They were one of the first modern day treaties. In that area there’s four villages of the Nisga’a tribal council.

“We did a lengthy prosperity project. And what we looked at was aligning their governing system and their business system with the four villages and looking at how members identified with that going forward.

“So what did prosperity mean from a Nisga’a perspective? How did this system align to create business outcomes? How were members seeing themselves in their own future of prosperity?”

On what she is advising the federal finance minister:

“I think that there’s a lot of room for the government to engage with First Nations on a nation-to-nation perspective around unfolding budgets.

“First Nations are coming to the table hungry. Very much like communities like Attawapiskat. There is a need to invest to build solid business and economic structures that are inclusive to Canadian First Nations and lets them participate, and be recognized. These structures need to be built on the foundation of our role in the history of the development and the continuation of Canada.

“There’s this concept that if you don’t have First Nations at the table you’re at a strategic disadvantage.

“Having that strategic advantage of recognizing the value and role of First Nations — I think Canada, with this new government, is just at the point of being able to do that. I don’t necessarily think they’re able to do that as fast as everyone would like. But I think my role on the economic growth council can support that.”

On why Indigenomic thinkers might say no to a project traditional economists embrace:

“Some big projects largely disrupt our ability to go into the future with our identity and practices and beliefs intact.

“You look at the Lelu Island [conflict over whether to build an LNG plant in the Skeena River estuary]. Indigenous people opposing the project are saying the number one priority is fish habitat. You can give us $2 billion instead of $1 billion and the answer will still be “no.” Fish is more important than money.

“It’s not just ‘no’ because we don’t feel like it or ‘no’ like, ‘eh, I don’t like that person or that company.’ It’s actually a ‘no’ that’s founded in reality and identity.”

On where to get started learning about Indigenomics:

“Be engaged with the Indigenomics discussion online. Right now, one of the biggest issues is the Truth and Reconciliation recommendations. Know what those say and why they are important.”

On the moving beyond colonization:

“My work is really about shifting our modern reality as First Nations people. Coming from 150 plus years of colonization and shifting that to building a positive, healthy, whole reality. That’s what I see as important in our communities and that’s what I focus on at Transformation. Transforming governance, administration, business and building structures to support our relevance and wholeness in 2016.

“According to Canadian history, we are not supposed to be here as First Nations people. We were supposed to have been exterminated through policy or complete removal.

“But the fact that there’s a blossoming, evolving First Nation population within Canada speaks to the need to build a relationship that’s nation to nation.” 

Written by Megan Devlin and originally published by TheTyee.ca on June 3, 2016

ECONOUS2016 Opening Day 2, Lunch Ouverture Jour 2, Dîner


Megan DevlinMegan Devlin is a freelance multimedia journalist and student at the UBC Graduate School of Journalism. She conducted this interview while completing a practicum at the The Tyee. Follow her on Twitter here.

 

  

  

 

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SENOFor over 20 years, PARO has been a launch pad for starting and growing businesses in Northern Ontario. PARO’s clientele are diverse: each program is tailored to the needs of women including Francophone women, youth, people with disabilities, low-income individuals and new Canadians. PARO has developed a complex but accessible infrastructure to bring together different organizations to leverage funds for Entrepreneurs in Northern Ontario.

Recently, PARO has partnered with a dynamic collaboration of purpose-driven agents of change (including the Thunder Bay CEDC, Northwestern Ontario Innovation Centre, Sault St. Marie Innovation Centre, and Nordik Institute, along with various other contributing community partners and funders) to ignite motivation inspired by social development.

Social Enterprise Northern Ontario (SENO) is the result of pioneering innovation champions. By taking smart risks and turning challenges into opportunities for social growth, the SENO Committee’s CoStarter for Change revolutionizes multifaceted and diverse co-working models of business development. These models catalyze systems-changing social good through entrepreneurial activism.

Social Enterprise for Northern Ontario (SENO) CoStarter for Change supports the development of early-stage, high-growth social enterprises in Northern Ontario by offering social entrepreneurs access to capital, educational and support programs, workspace, and other services to help launch and grow their non-profit and for-profit ventures.

In 2013, Ontario launched the Social Enterprise Strategy. The Social Enterprise Demonstration Fund (SEDF) is one of the key commitments to that strategy, supporting 11 social finance projects throughout the province. $4 million contribution that has leveraged $6 million in private investment. Social Enterprise Northern Ontario (SENO), a collaboration led byPARO Centre for Women’s Enterprise is one on the successful social finance projects, receiving $250,000.00 for two years.

In clinging to a philosophy of social, economic and environmental Innovation, SENO inspires community drive through multidisciplinary approaches to learning, creating and EXCELerating in social entrepreneurship. SENO CoStarter for Change provides several routes of access to key facets of business development including:

  • SE training and business plan development
  • Mentorship
  • Cutting edge technology
  • One-on-one coaching
  • Advisory support from all partners
  • Workspace
  • Networking opportunities 

Program Overview

The social enterprise or social entrepreneur wishes to ignite social change through the creation of a for-profit or not-for-profit business. By developing a business idea rooted in addressing issues that matter to people and the planet, entrepreneurs develop these ideas into viable initiatives that sustain economic development and pioneer social innovation.

Eligible applicants must be a legal entity with the authority to enter into a legal agreement. In the case of partnerships of any type, eligible applicants must hold appropriate individual legal documentation for receiving and repaying funds.

It is imperative that successful applicants (at least one person, if the social enterprise is a partnership) must be available full time for 12 weeks to participate in the program after the application has been approved. Successful applicants are required to participate in the program to develop and operate their social enterprise. The program involves weekly workshops/training sessions, consistent communication with a mentor/advisor, participation in peer-to-peer events, and setting and meeting milestones for each social enterprise.

Please fill out the form below to demonstrate your intent to apply for SENO CoStarter for Change. Once we receive your form of intent, you will be contacted in order to continue your application process.

If you are interested in applying for the SENO CoStarter for Change program, please download the Application package, the Required criteria and milestones toolkit and the Self-assessment toolkit!

For more information about the program and application process, please contact Zach Falldien, Program Assistant, at 705-949-2301 ext. 4812 or falldien at algomau.ca.

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GSEF2016More than 2,000 persons from around the globe are expected at the Palais des congrès de Montréal (Canada) this coming September 7 to 9 to take part in the Global Social Economy Forum – GSEF2016. This third edition, organized jointly by the Ville de Montréal and the Chantier de l’économie sociale, will focus on the theme Local Governments and Social Solidarity Economy (SSE) Stakeholders: Allies for the Intelligent and Sustainable Development of Cities.

Programming for the three days will highlight more than 90 social economy initiatives from more than 35 countries around the globe. These initiatives will be presented in the form of workshops and working groups grouped under four themes: Enterprise and Job Creation, Social Cohesion, Quality of Life and Living Environment, and Governance.

“Cooperation between local governments and social economy enterprises has continued to rise over the past years and undoubtedly contributes to the intelligent and sustainable development of cities. Montreal is proud to host this Forum that will play a concrete role in positioning the social economy as a driver of fair and sustainable economic development,” stated Denis Coderre, Mayor of Montreal.

“All over the world, the Quebec social economy model generates interest, particularly with regard to the collaboration between civil society and public authorities and the co-construction of public policy. Far from being alone, Quebec is part of a growing international movement in favour of a more equitable and sustainable economy where the social economy plays a major role. The GSEF2016 will undoubtedly be a space for discussions and reflections that will enable participants to learn the best practices at home and abroad,” added the executive director of the Chantier de l’économie sociale, Jean-Martin Aussant.

More information on GSEF2016

Site visits to better understand the Québec reality

Participants will also be able to take part in approximately twenty of the Forum’s side events to learn more about social economy businesses in Montreal and Québec working in various sectors. In addition to showcasing Québec’s social economy, these site visits will serve as excellent networking and dialogue opportunities with the principal players in these initiatives.

Opening plenary: institutional and political commitment for SSE

The Forum’s opening plenary will take place on September 7, 2016 at 9 am, and introduce the GSEF co-chairs, the Honourable Park Won-soon, Mayor of Seoul, and Rev. Kyong Yong Song, President of the Seoul Social Economy Network, as well as the co-organizers of the GSEF2016, the Honourable Denis Coderre, Mayor of Montreal and Jean-Martin Aussant, Executive Director of the Chantier de l’économie sociale. This plenary will be followed by a special session at 10:30 am, during which all the mayors from every continent expected at the GSEF2016 will show their commitment to SSE as a lever for more equitable and sustainable development.

In addition, several cities have already confirmed their participation to the Forum including: Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Bamako (Mali), Bilbao (Spain), Dakar (Senegal), Gothenburg (Sweden), Lille (France), Madrid (Spain) Mondragon (France), Paris (France), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Seoul (South Korea), Turin (Italy), Vancouver (Canada) and Yaoundé (Cameroon).

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Building a diversified and inclusive local economy

Community Economic Development Opportunities in AlbertaA coalition of Community Economic Development (CED) experts, practitioners, and organizations collaborated to create a brief on CED opportunities in Alberta. The recommendations in this brief highlight opportunities to strengthen and diversify Alberta’s economy, while making it more sustainable and inclusive.

The Government of Alberta is committed to investing in job creation, economic diversification, renewable energy, and being the best place to start and grow a small business. The Government is uniquely poised to support CED in the province, which can boost its current economic development strategy at the benefit of all Albertans. To this end, the coalition recommends that the Government of Alberta pursue the following three strategies:

  1. Investing in a Community and Co-op Business Secretariat to support local business development, social enterprise, and co-operatives; 
  2. Supporting the creation of community-owned renewable energy projects by providing technical, regulatory, and financial support; and
  3. Promoting local investment opportunities by creating a market exemption and enabling the Alberta Investor Tax Credit to facilitate CED investment, similar to the Nova Scotia and New Brunswick CEDIF models.

Download the Community Economic Development Opportunities in Alberta brief

Please review and discuss this brief with your team and caucus. We invite you to come visit the collaborating organizations and see CED in action, including the wide variety of innovative examples shared in this brief. We welcome your questions, feedback, and involvement as we work to implement these recommendations across Alberta.

The brief was prepared and submitted on behalf of:

The Alberta Community & Co-operative Association
Athabasca University
BALTA
The Canadian CED Network
The Canadian Worker Coop Federation
Edmonton Community Foundation
Edmonton Mennonite Centre for Newcomers
Momentum
REAP (Respect for the Earth and All People)
Social Enterprise Fund
Thrive

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Partner for Change: UnLock Job Opportunities for Youth

Virgin Mobile RE*GenerationCall for Expressions of Interest to be a Virgin Mobile RE*Generation Partner

Does your organization help at-risk or homeless youth find and keep jobs? Do you accomplish this by providing youth with the skills and experience employers are looking for as well as the support and connections to available job opportunities?

Virgin Mobile RE*Generation is looking to identify and invest in innovative and entrepreneurial youth employment initiatives so as many youth as possible have a meaningful income and a long-term career pathway. Your organization will use the investment to strengthen or scale up your current youth employment initiative.

Open to charities, non-profits, and social enterprises operating in Canada.

Deadline is July 12, 2016

Complete the online Expression of Interest

How can Virgin Mobile RE*Generation investment funding be used?

Possible uses by your organization of a RE*Generation investment may include the following:

  • Strengthening or growing a job skills training curriculum and programming (i.e. vocational job skills for a particular industry or type of job; professional/soft skills training such as teamwork, conflict resolution, problem solving, customer service).
  • Expanding or enhancing an employment-driven social enterprise that provides hands-on paid employment experience for youth in a full service revenue generating business.
  • Development and strengthening of employer and industry partnerships and connections that results in:
    • increased sourcing of qualified candidates for available jobs by employers from your initiative ; and/or
    • increased job matching and/or placements; and/or
    • improved support to youth and employers during the hiring and on-boarding to a job.
  • Increasing or strengthening support for youth to overcome possible barriers and challenges to participating in your employment initiative (case management, counseling, stipends/subsidies for transportation, food, special clothing/equipment, counseling, services and supports referrals).
  • Growing or strengthening an innovative model or approach that helps youth connect to employment by addressing barriers or gaps in current labour market systems and practices.

Learn more at www.virginmobile.ca/regen or by emailing regeneration at virginmobile.ca

SOURCE: Virgin Mobile

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Social Enterprises Create Pride through Decent WorkSocial enterprises fill an important gap in Manitoba’s economy for those struggling to enter the workforce. The provincial government has seen the value of investing in social enterprises through funding training and procuring housing retrofit services. This in combination with financing from the Manitoba Hydro Pay As You Save (PAYS) program is producing great results. For instance, 194 people are employed in the six social enterprises involved in this study.

Over the past decade, a strong network of social enterprises has grown in Manitoba to help individuals develop the employment and life skills they need to enter and participate in the paid workforce. Social enterprises use a business model to promote positive social or cultural benefits including poverty reduction, fostering environmental sustainability, or other beneficial outcomes.

Social enterprises have emerged to create pathways into the workforce for those who face barriers such as lack of education, racism, histories of involvements with gangs or other involvement with the justice system, and lack of work experience. As one worker describes:

I was having a hard time finding employment because of my criminal history and whatnot. I just applied and got in and it was quite surprising to me to say the least. I spent so many years not being able to get employed, and then coming to a program like this and they accept you for who you are.

The unemployment rate amongst Aboriginal adults age 15 and over was 14.3 percent, more than six percentage points higher than the rest of the inner-city population (8.1 percent) (Lezubski and Silver 2015: 26). The mainstream route from school to work — graduating high school at age 18, attending a post-secondary institution, and finding a good job — is fraught with roadblocks for young people who experience the intergenerational impacts of colonization. Without a high school education, it can be challenging to find any job, undoubtedly a decent job.

The reverse side of this challenge is that Manitoba has a tremendous underutilized pool of young workers who are a potential springboard for future growth. Manitoba also has a vibrant and growing social enterprise sector that could play an important role in bringing these workers into the workforce if it is given sufficient resources.

Manitoba Housing and Community Development allocated $5 million in the 2015/16 capital and renovations budget to provide business opportunities to social enterprises. This procurement is needed to upgrade public housing and do needed energy retrofits. This creates a triple bottom line of this public spending resulting in a needed service of housing repair, job creation and electrical and water conservation.

In order to understand the qualitative impacts on the workers in Manitoba’s burgeoning social enterprise sector, we spoke to 51 workers in seven social enterprises that focus on job training and employment for people with barriers to employment in the home renovation and basic construction sector. We spoke with 26 percent of this portion of the social enterprise workforce.

Thank you to the participants in the study for sharing their perspectives and experiences. The themes emerging from the qualitative research depict that social enterprises provide trainees and employees with needed skills in a holistic fashion, from life skills, to budgeting, to accessing identification and driver’s licensing, to workplace health and safety knowledge, to construction skills, and employment search skills. Recognizing the whole person in each employee or trainee, social enterprises use a holistic approach.

This is a program where they make a complete person you know. They get you to learn all this trade but life skills, management and all theses skills that you need.

Participants spoke about the positive workplace culture and team environment created in social enterprises. Some participants who had worked in private businesses found the workplace culture different and challenging. When discussing their futures, a segment of participants wished for the opportunity to apprentice in the trade of their choosing.

The pride that comes from working hard and having a decent job, and the benefits that result from it shines through in this study. Participants told us they look forward to brighter futures for themselves and their families. These workers carry forward the virtuous cycle created by their involvement in social enterprise to their families and as leaders in the community.

Manitoba has a successful and growing social enterprise sector that has helped to integrate some of these workers. It is nonetheless still dependent on government support. The support of Manitoba Housing and Community Development, other crown corporations, and government in providing contracts to keep these social enterprises vibrant is essential to meeting community economic development and sustainability goals.

Download the Creating Pride Through Decent Work report

Originally published by Policy Fix on May 25, 2016


Josh BrandonJosh Brandon is a Community Animator at the Social Planning Council of Winnipeg, co-editor of Poor Housing: A Silent Crisis and Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Manitoba Research Associate. He is also the former Housing Researcher at the CCPA-Manitoba. He has education in sociology and anthropology and experience in several social justice and environmental organizations as a researcher and community organizer.
 

Molly McCracken joined the CCPA as the Manitoba director in spring 2013, however has been involved in social Molly McCrackenjustice policy research for over a decade. She worked in inner-city Winnipeg facilitating an outreach program with street-involved women and later as Executive Director of an inner-city neighbourhood renewal corporation. Molly has been involved as an author, research manager and advisor in a number of areas: Aboriginal education, low income housing, inner-city neighbourhood renewal, the economic benefits of child care and Community Economic Development.She holds a Master’s degree in Public Policy and Administration from Carlton University, has worked in government as an analyst and serves on the board of several not-for-profit community-based organizations.

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