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Creating Resilient Local Economies

Please note: this teleseminar is part of the Spring of Sustainability, a nine-week virtual gathering of sustainability leaders and innovators. Registration is free and gets you access to all nine weeks worth of online events. 

[ registration + more info ]

Learn about innovative models for building resilient local economies - including Transition Network's REconomy Project and Transition Colorado's Local Food Shift.

Speakers:

  • Fiona Ward: REconomy Project for the Transition Network
  • Michael Brownlee: Co-founder of Local Food Shift and Transition Colorado
  • Michelle Long: Executive Director of the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies
  • Mickki Langston: Executive Director of Mile High Business Alliance
  • Hosted by Steven Motenko
Fiona Ward leads the REconomy Project for the Transition Network, exploring how communities can transform their own economic destiny. She developed the Economic Evaluation process that some Transition towns are using to build local partnerships, quantify local market potential, create new livelihoods and enterprises, and redefine the purpose of the local economy to be one that that contributes to growth in wellbeing for all. The REconomy Project contributed to the Transition Network being awarded the European Economic and Social Committee Civil Society Prize in 2013. She also set up and ran the Transition Streets project for Transition Town Totnes, which won the Ashden Award for Behaviour Change in 2011. Both projects are now being replicated by Transition Towns around the world. Fiona's background is in running large projects in the private sector – over the last 20 years or so she has worked with companies of all shapes and sizes to define and deliver business transformation strategies. After realising that these kinds of transformations weren't generally what served the greater good (or her own!), Fiona moved from London to South Devon in 2006 just as Transition was coming into being - a fantastic piece of good timing!
 
A catalyst for food localization, Michael Brownlee is co-founder Transition Colorado, the first officially-recognized Transition Initiative in North America.The mission of this 501c3 non-profit organization is to build community resilience and self-reliance and to strengthen local economies through localizing the food supply. Michael is the architect behind the Local Food Shift campaign to localize regional food and farming systems, beginning in the Colorado Front Range, and is the editor and publisher of Thinking Like a Foodshed, a regional educational magazine. In response to the devastating September 2013 flood in Northern Colorado, his organization is currently organizing efforts to build a permanent relief fund to support local food producers in times of floods, fires and other disasters. He is also Manager of Localization Partners LLC, a company investing in local food and farming enterprises utilizing Slow Money principles and ethics.
 
Michelle Long is the executive director of the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE). Founded in 2001, BALLE is amplifying and accelerating the enormous awakening energy directed toward local economies. Seeing local, independently owned businesses as the key to solving our communities’ toughest challenges and to creating real prosperity, BALLE connects visionary local leaders so they can find inspiration and support, and promotes the most innovative business models for creating healthier, sustainable, and prosperous communities. With a growing network of 30,000 local entrepreneurs spanning 80 communities, BALLE is leveraging the collective voice of this movement to drive new investment, scale the best solutions, and harness the power of local, independently owned business to transform the communities where we work and live. Before BALLE, Michelle co-founded and was executive director of Sustainable Connections in Bellingham, Washington—one of BALLE's first member business networks. Its membership, now comprised of 700 locally owned businesses, has made Bellingham into what NPR Marketplace called the “epicenter of a new economic model.” Michelle was named one of the West Coast's "top five leading ladies of sustainability" by the Sustainable Industries Journal. A regular keynote speaker, she is also the co-author of Local First: A How-to Guide and the author of the new Building a Community of Businesses: A BALLE Business Network How-to Kit.
 
Originally hailing from Southwest Kansas' rural ranching and agriculture community, Mickki Langston has called Colorado home since 1999. Recognizing the need to reclaim our power to envision, create and share community wealth, Mickki co-founded the Mile High Business Alliance in 2007. Currently serving as Executive Director, Mickki combines her passion for healthy communities with her varied experience as a small business owner. Over time, her role at MHBA has evolved to one of advocacy on behalf of small businesses, collaboration-building with local partners, and empowerment of MHBA's small-but-mighty staff. Her leadership supports the fulfillment of the business alliance's mission to build a more resilient, connected and healthy local economy. Mickki lives in the Baker neighborhood of Denver where she gets to frequent unique local businesses, grow a few vegetables and nurture her other passions, including cooking great dinners and making homemade maraschino cherries.

Canadian CED Network 2014 Annual General Meeting

The Canadian CED Network's 2014 Annual General Meeting (AGM) will be held on May 29th at West End Commons, 641 St. Matthews Ave, Winnipeg, Manitoba and by webinar, from 12-1pm local time (2:30pm Newfoundland, 2pm Atlantic, 1pm Eastern, 12pm Central, 11am Mountain, 10am Pacific.  Verify the time where you are.)


Board Nominations and AGM Resolutions

The deadline for Board Nominations and AGM Resolutions was April 8. 
 


Board Elections

Four nominations were received for the four vacancies, so the four candidates have been declared elected by acclamation and we will not have Board elections this year.  Congratulations to Diana Jedig, Wendy Keats, Carol Madsen and Derek PachalMeet our new Directors.
 


AGM Documents

AGM Documents will be posted here as they become available. 

In terms of background materials, you can consult CCEDNet's current By laws.
 


Register Now

In conjuction with CCEDNet's AGM, CCEDNet-Manitoba will be holding it's annual spring member meeting in the morning from 9am to noon.

Please register for the AGM or the Manitoba Spring Member Meeting.

The deadline to register for the AGM by webinar is May 26.


How To Get There

The address is 641 St. Matthews Ave, Winnipeg.  Click on the map on the right for directions. 

For people attending via webinar, connection information will be emailed to all registered members prior to the AGM.  Register above!

 

 

 

Looking Back to Move Forward: The Story of the Sandhills Family Heritage Association

1pm - 2pm Eastern Time

Among the first African American organizations in the U.S.A. to undertake land conservation and community development, Sandhills FHA began as a personal quest by its founder to rediscover her cultural roots in the area. This quest inspired the return of African Americans who had lost their land during the last century because of segregation laws and other discriminatory practices.  Championing a revitalization of African American connection to the land through ownership and control, the association provides programs and services to build economic self-sufficiency and to preserve the natural and cultural resources of African American families in the region. Community members work together to list the positive attributes that could set the stage for future growth, including natural, cultural, historical and resource-based assets. It is an inclusive process that helps develop an environmental management plan and other initiatives to promote sustainable development. Download 162K PDF

Join us on Thursday, May 1, 2014, 1-2 pm ET (noon - 1 pm CT) for this Citizen-Led Sustainable Change webinar presented by Yogesh Ghore, Ammie Jenkins, Cynthia Brown and Mikki Sager. To register, click here.

Ammie Jenkins, Executive Director of the Sandhills Family Heritage Association, credits the elders of her community for the organization's success.

Evaluating Collective Impact: 6 Simple Rules

11:55am - 1pm Eastern Time

The concept of Collective Impact has captured the imagination of would-be change makers who are eager to be more than the sum of their parts. There are examples of Collective Impact efforts across North America focusing on everything from nutrition, early childhood development, homelessness, poverty and gang violence.

The dramatic expansion in the number and variety of collective impact initiatives has led to more and more people asking, “How do we evaluate collective impact efforts?” Thankfully, there are decades of work in assessing many other approaches to community change - and some promising emerging practices specifically focused on Collective Impact – upon which to build.

On May 15th join Mark Cabaj and Liz Weaver, two experienced community change practitioners, in a webinar to explore:  

• Six Simple Rules
• The Implications for Practitioners, Funders and Evaluators
• Examples of Collective Impact Evaluation in Action

Register now

Collective Impact Summit

The Collective Impact Summit (CIS) is a learning event unlike any other. It has been designed to provide you with the unique opportunity to be part of a dynamic group of practitioners who are discovering new ways to lead, engage, and transform communities by tackling our most complex issues. Join together with your peers as we advance new approaches to create large-scale change together.

Collective Impact has emerged as the most promising approach for achieving high-impact community change. In 2011, John Kania and Mark Kramer of FSG published Collective Impact in the Stanford Social Innovation Review.  It engaged us immediately because their description of Collective Impact resonated deeply and affirmed what we, at Tamarack, had discovered through our own experimenting and learning about how best to achieve deep impact and lasting change on complex community issues. 

Collective Impact differs from other collaborative approaches. It generates new solutions by reaching agreement across diverse stakeholders to address a shared community issue in a multi-faceted way using a common agenda, aligned efforts and shared measures of success.  It is an approach that goes far beyond simply offering more or better services or programs to generate lasting impact by addressing root causes. 

Collective Impact offers a proven framework to guide the implementation of initiatives aimed at system-level transformation. It requires unified effort that leverages the skills and capacities within all sectors of a community, including: non-profits, neighbourhood groups, government agencies, schools, businesses, faith communities, and community leaders.

Register now

Workshop and Case Study Schedule

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