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Co-operatives in Troubled Times: A Webinar Series

WEBINAR #1: September 16th 1:30 - 3:00 pm EDT
Co-operatives in Periods of Economic Crisis
Paul Hazen: President, National Cooperative Business Association.

What lessons can we learn from how co-operatives have helped people to weather tough times in the past? Paul Hazen will overview the history of how people have used co-ops in recessionary times. He will also discuss how co-ops in the U.S. and abroad are managing during the current economic crisis.


WEBINAR #2: September 17th 1:30 - 3:00 pm EDT
Preserving Main Streets Through Co-operatives
Howard Brodsky: Co-Founder, Chairman, and Co-CEO of CCA Global Partners.

Small family-owned businesses can and do compete with big-box stores. Howard Brodsky will review the shared services co-operative model and how it has enabled thousands of small, Main Street business owners to successfully compete against Goliath outlets like Wal-Mart and Home Depot.


WEBINAR #3: October 14th 1:30 - 3:00 pm EDT
How are Credit Unions Performing in the Current Banking Crisis?
(Moderator) Jessica Gordon Nembhard: Associate Professor, John Jay College.
(Panelists) Ronald Covey: President & CEO, St. Mary's Bank. Clifford Rosenthal:
President & CEO, National Federation of Community Development Credit Unions.

This session will be a panel discussion about how credit unions and community development credit unions are doing in this period of bank foreclosures and bailouts. The panelists will elaborate on how credit unions are working with their members to not only survive the current economic downturn; but also to build assets for themselves and their families.


WEBINAR #4:
October 21st 1:30 - 3:00 pm EDT
Housing Co-operatives in a Time of Foreclosures
Terry Lewis, Esq.: LIA Associates & Chair, Co-operative Development Foundation.
Co-operatives and Public Policy
John Holdsclaw: Director of Policy Development, NCB Capital Impact.

They will also talk about how they are working with low-income residents to access banking services and to build personal savings and asset wealth. Housing co-ops haven't experienced the same rates of foreclosure as other forms of ownership. Co-ops are a great model for providing home ownership to people of all income levels and stages of life. Terry Lewis will discuss how housing co-ops are the right model for moving foreclosed homes into stable ownership. John Holdsclaw, a School of CED at Southern NH University alumnus, has successfully advocated co-op policy issues at NCB Capital Impact for many years. He will reflect on current public policy priorities in strengthening the use of cooperatives for community economic development.

Food Secure Saskatchewan provincial conference

Food Secure Saskatchewan is planning two interactive conferences around local food security issues and challenges from farm-gate to table. The first conference will be held at the SIAST campus in Moose Jaw on October 2-3. Registration will be held at 8:00 - 8:30 Timothy Eaton's Gardens, 510 Main Street North.

This year's theme is Growing Together in Saskatchewan. A wide cross section of presenters will share their knowledge on the following topics:

* Food and health policy development
* Sustainability in food and agriculture
* Self reliance and the 100 mile diet
* Eating wild and natural.

Both conferences will be preceded by Food for Thought workshops and tours (October 1 in Moose Jaw and October 21 in LaRonge).

Moose Jaw conference timetable. Click to download this document in pdf format.

More Information can be found at Food Secure Saskatchewan.

Income Security for All Canadians: A Workshop to Explore the Potential for a Guaranteed Income Framework for Canada

Registration:

$50 regular registration
$15 low income/student registration

Purpose of this Workshop

The purpose of this workshop is to share perspectives and build understandings about approaches to Guaranteed Income. BIEN Canada believes that such sharing will aid the continued growth and mobilization of a network of individuals and organizations in Canada committed to realizing an expanded basic/guaranteed income system for Canada, and thus to realizing income security for all Canadians.

Who Should Participate?

The workshop is designed to both inform and engage participants in discussion of a variety of approaches and models for achieving Guaranteed Income and universal income security. The target audience includes "first voice" persons (those with the lived experience of poverty), academics and researchers, social justice movements, community organizations, social and economic policy analysts, and government officials and politicians.

If you are interested in an informal meeting of researchers working on guaranteed income on Thursday morning, please email Mike McCracken (mcracken[at]informetrica.com) to confirm your interest.

The Social Economy Stories Project

Author: 
MacLeoud, et al.
Date: 
2009-02-01

The Social Economy Stories Project

The blending of social and economic objectives is taking root across the world as the best means to replace dependency and exclusion with self-determination and self-sufficiency.

A CED Dating Service? Exploring the CEDTAS Initiative

Author: 
Brendan Reimer

Send us your profile, tell us what you are looking for, and we'll see if we can find the perfect match for you! Sound familiar?

All kidding aside, this is one way to describe the pilot project community leaders in Winnipeg launched three years ago. They had identified the same thing as the Canadian CED Network (CCEDNet) did when it surveyed community economic development (CED) organizations in 2002: many people active in CED feel that they lack many of the skills required to pull off all the projects that need doing.

Type: 

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