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Place Value - A Fresh Approach to Economic Development in the West

2:00pm to 3:00pm Eastern Time

This webinar will feature some of Community Builders' own research, which examines the factors that attract entrepreneurs and an educated workforce to communities in Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. As the country climbs out of the recession, communities are seeking new approaches to economic development that will give them a competitive advantage in today’s economy.

Looking forward, communities need to be creative about attracting businesses and workers. It is becoming clear that the traditional economic development approach of attracting one major industry through business incentives, long-range tax cuts, or land offerings is not effective in creating a diverse or sustainable local economy. Our results indicate that creating a strong and resilient local economy is tied to creating a great community where people want to live. Join us to learn more!

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Speakers

Clark Anderson directs the Sonoran Institute’s Colorado Program, which helps local partners align community planning, economic development and natural resource management goals. A native of Eagle County, Colorado, Clark’s work is inspired by a passion for the people and communities of the West.

Alison Berry is a research analyst at the Sonoran Institute focusing on economics and renewable energy.

Legal 101 - Co-op Legal Basics

2:00pm to 4:00pm
212 - 1737 West 3rd Ave

Preparation is more affordable than fixing things later. That is why we recommend that a good legal strategy is to get informed about what to look out for and what common pitfalls your co-op should avoid.

Avoiding Pitfalls, Planning for Potentials

Preparation is more affordable than fixing things later. That is why we recommend that the best legal strategy is to get informed about what to look out for and what common pitfalls your co-op should avoid. 

This workshop is an excellent introduction for co-op directors and managers into the common legal affairs facing co-ops. You’ll learn:

  • what you need to know about the legal framework in which your co-op operates
  • ways that you can minimize your risks
  • where to find additional legal resources

The workshop will be led by a lawyer with experience working with co-operatives, and will enable you as a director or manager of a co-operative to build an understanding of common challenges and ways to work around them.

An important note

While this workshop will be led by a legal professional, it is intended to be an introduction and overview of common legal issues and ways for co-ops to plan so that they don’t become problems. If your co-op needs specific legal advice, the BCCA can help connect you to a lawyer who may be able to help.

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Attend in-person or via teleconference.

If you can't make it to the workshop in person, BCCA training sessions are available by webinar or teleconference. We'll make it happen.

Social Finance Connects: Canadians & Socially Responsible Investment

Noon to 1pm Eastern Time

This webinar will build on the most recent Canadian statistics from the 2012 Canadian Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) Review and emerging SRI opportunitites in Canada. We will explore how consumers can positively impact society by engaging in SRI.

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About Brenda Plant

Brenda is a Partner at Ellio sustainability consultants, specializing in sustainability and responsible investment. She is also involved in the development of an affordable rental housing investment fund (for accredited investors). Brenda has an MSc in International Management from HEC Montréal, a BA in Humanities and a BSW from McGill University.

Brenda is a member of the Québec Association of Professionals in Sustainable Development (AProDD) and a signatory to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI). She is well known in university circles (sits on the Advisory Committee for HEC Montréal’s Graduate Diploma in Management and Sustainability and lectured at Desautels Faculty of Management, McGill University), in professional circles (consultant, Vice Chairperson of the Board of Directors of Capital Équitable – a fund dedicated to the development of fair trade, etc.), and in community circles (member of the Board of Directors and Impact Investment Committee of the Béati Foundation, cofounder of Cataléthique – a network of professionals working to apply CSR and sustainability principles in their practices, past member of the Board of Directors of the Responsible Investment Association of Canada (formerly SIO) and formerly Co-chairperson of Ethical Investors Group).

Recognized by Les Affaires as one of 15 women who will make change happen in Quebec, Brenda Plant is committed to investing her life energy in bettering the world. Brenda founded a public education website focusing on responsible consumption – Ethiquette, the responsible consumer network – which operated from 2005 to 2011. She relaunched Ethiquette in September 2014, this time in conjunction with the business school of the University of Quebec in Montreal (UQAM) as a public education website on responsible investment.

CommUnity Innovation Lab

Wherever you call home, and whatever your passion, the CommUnity Innovation Lab (CIL) will help you get informed, connected, and inspired so you can get busy making your community healthier, happier, and more prosperous!

As BC’s first citizen-inspired, multi-sector CIL, this exciting event combines emerging public engagement and social innovation tactics to help people from communities of all sizes reach their environmental, social, cultural, and/or economic targets.

The CIL spotlight will shine on three overarching themes with four breakout topics for each.

HEALTHY ENVIRONMENT:Environmental Protection, Climate Action, Zero Waste, Smart Growth.
HEALTHY PEOPLE:Social Resources, Food Security, Sustainable Mobility, Cultural Abundance.
HEALTHY ECONOMY:Local Economy, Resilient Economy, Clean Industry, Entrepreneurial Opportunities.

Pre-event fact-finding activities will help you prepare for your lab experience. Pre-lab workshops and tours will increase your understanding of community sustainability and, therefore, optimize lab outcomes and actions. Keynote presentations and walk-about table talks will then help prepare you for the final planning session, during which you’ll create action-maps to drive specific sustainability efforts in your home, organization, or community.

And all this for just $349 (or much less if you’re a student or senior, or from a nonprofit or community group)!

Register now

Learn more

Here’s how you can become a ‘lab partner’…

  • Share your story as a speaker or your expertise as a table talk expert. Apply here.
  • Contribute information such as topic-specific web links, PDF documents, or a poster presentation.
  • Showcase your expertise and successes as a theme or topic sponsor. Learn more here.
  • Contribute registration subsidizes for people who can’t otherwise attend this life- and community-changing event! Sign up here.

Marketing 101 - Co-op Marketing Basics

2:00pm to 4:00pm Pacific Time
212 - 1737 West 3rd Ave

Marketing is something every business needs to do, and it’s something that you can do differently as a co-op. Join other co-operators to explore ways to market the co-operative advantage that we know and love, and learn from some success stories of other co-ops that have used the way that they work to make a marketing difference.

Register here

Start Marketing the Co-op Advantage

Marketing is something every business needs to do, and it’s something that you can do differently as a co-op. Join other co-operators to explore ways to market the co-operative advantage that we know and love, and learn from some success stories of other co-ops that have used the way that they work to make a marketing difference.

Tips and Tricks

This two-hour workshop will be led by a panel of representatives from co-ops with marketing skills, and will focus on tips and tricks of the trade.

You will explore:

  • Just what the co-op advantage is, and how to use it as a key marketing strategy
  • Use of social media for co-op marketing
  • Web-based marketing
  • Member marketing
  • And more!

Attend in-person or via teleconference.
If you can't make it to the workshop in person, BCCA training sessions are available by webinar or teleconference. We'll make it happen.

Manitoba's Amalgamated Rural Region: A Step Forward?

1:00pm to 2:30pm Central Time

Free Webinar

Following several decades of losing population, more than 80 communities in Manitoba fell below the minimum requirement of 1000 people to maintain their municipality status. In 2012, the Provincial government responded by an initiative of modernizing rural municipalities, with particular interest to smaller municipalities in the southwest. The amalgamation initiative was informed by applied research that examined functional economic regions as possible local boundaries. Based on where residents live and work, new rural regional municipal amalgamations were proposed. These findings along with provincial activities and resources shaped the process, while requiring local decisions, which resulted in 47 municipal amalgamations. This presentation will provide details related to the functional economic regions and overview the amalgamation chronology.

Discussions will include how you might characterize this initiative, including for example, was this initiative a marriage of top-down and bottom-up or was it an example of a negotiated approach where two levels of government played their own roles or was it simply an imposition on local autonomy?

Register now

RSVP by December 12, 2014

Presenting is Dr. Bill Ashton; the Director of Brandon University's Rural Development Institute (RDI). Bill continues to advance research and discourse on public policy, with particular interest in policy development processes.  His career as a practitioner and researcher has taken him across Canada and elsewhere, and he is currently active with topics of immigration, welcoming communities, and economic development in rural, northern, and remote areas.  Community based projects that contribute locally and provincially to economic, social and environmental development are important touchstones in Bill’s knowledge and experience.  He strives to work toward opportunities and develop partnerships that will make a difference within many organizations at different geographic scales and contribute to sustainability.

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