|
About
Us
Funding Partners
Mission
Why Now?
Advisory Panel
About Our Staff
The Community Economic Development Technical
Assistance Program (CEDTAP) is Canada’s largest non-profit
(non-governmental) granting agency in the field of Community Economic
Development (CED). National in scope, this bilingual program serves
all provinces and territories in Canada. CEDTAP provides grants
to Community-based Organizations (CBOs) and also promotes activities
that strengthen the CED sector as a whole. To date (September 2006),
CEDTAP has assisted over 400 CED agencies in support of leading-edge,
community development initiatives to create new, sustainable economic
development solutions in disadvantaged communities throughout Canada.
CEDTAP was founded in 1997 by The
J.W. McConnell Family Foundation and Carleton
University in response to the obvious economic and social
challenges facing many Canadians. It became, and remains, the largest
source of grants for community economic development projects in
Canada and a focal point for expert groups engaged in CED.
More than $3 million was invested to help support
close to 100 CED projects across Canada in Phase I (1997-2000) of
the CEDTAP program.
CEDTAP launched Phase II of the program in 2001
in response to the increased demand for CED project funding in communities
throughout Canada. The initial funder for this phase is The
J.W. McConnell Family Foundation, whose $5 million
investment forms the basis for a true public/private partnership
opportunity for foundations, corporations and governments alike.
On May 20, 2004, Bell Canada announced a philanthropic
gift of $1 million to Carleton University to enable CEDTAP to undertake
the management of the Bell Community Economic
Development Fund. This represents a leading-edge partnership
whereby both organizations are committing $1 million each for a
total of $2 million over the period 2004-2007 to support up to 100
Community Economic Development (CED) initiatives nation-wide.
CEDTAP is pursuing further investments from both
the private and the public sector in order to continue supporting
Community Economic Development initiatives nationwide. Please contact
the CEDTAP National Secretariat to learn more about how to become
a CEDTAP Partner.
CEDTAP's mission is to enhance the legitimacy
and effectiveness of community-based organizations engaged in community
economic development by supporting activities that will
- strengthen their capacities and
- increase the visibility, knowledge, coherence
and resources of the CED sector as a whole in cooperation with
other organizations with similar interests.
While government fiscal and monetary policies
have been successful in stimulating economic growth and cutting
deficits, many communities across Canada have been experiencing
unacceptably high levels of unemployment, poverty and social disintegration.
A variety of local authorities, community-based
networks and not-for-profit organizations have been attempting to
address the lack of adequate employment opportunities and the need
for greater social cohesion through job-creation and enterprise
development at the community level. These initiatives may range
from small neighbourhood projects to large-scale integrated economic
development strategies.
In addition to a widespread lack of financial
resources, many of these groups and activities suffer from isolation,
a lack of awareness of success stories, and limited access to professional
and technical advice in CED. CEDTAP was designed to address the
urgent need for capacity development within the sector, by supporting
technical assistance, training, documentation of experience and
replication of successful approaches.
CEDTAP's advisory panel meets twice a year to
provide strategic and policy recommendations to the program. The
current members are as follows:
Lisa Banks is Senior Director Community Affairs, at Bell Canada. Lisa is responsible for the Corporate Community Investment
portfolio. Under the 'Connected to Communities' banner, Bell's Community Investment program will support community-based charitable programs that focus
on children and youth and community economic development. Lisa joined Bell Canada in 1985, and has had a successful career with increasing responsibilities
in various departments, including Business Sales, Professional Development, Marketing Communications and the Y2K PMO. Lisa joined the Corporate Communications
and Brand team in January 2000 and was promoted to Director Communications in 2001 and Senior Director Community Affairs in March 2002. Lisa is a graduate of McMaster
University and is a Board Member of the Not-For-Profit youth career education organization, Youth In Motion, a member of the Community Economic Development Technical
Assistance Program (CEDTAP) Management Committee and the Bell University Labs Selection Committee.
Paul Born has partnered
with The Maytree Foundation to establish an Institute for community
building and leadership development in Canada, called the Tamarack
Institute for Community Engagement. Paul was the Executive Director
of the Community Opportunities Development Association (CODA) for
12 years until it merged with Lutherwood to form Lutherwood CODA
in 1998. With Lutherwood CODA he founded and was the Consulting
Director of Opportunities
2000, a region-wide initiative (83 partners) to reduce
poverty in Waterloo Region, Ontario, to the lowest level in Canada,
from 1997-2001. In addition Paul was the Consulting Director of
the Foundation for Rural Living and the founding Chair of the Canadian
Community Economic Development Network (CCEDNET). He was the founding
chair of the curriculum committee at Leadership Waterloo and holds
a Masters in Leadership from Royal Roads University. Paul is an
accomplished speaker providing entertaining and inspirational talks
and seminars to many groups in Canada.
David Driscoll serves as Chair
of the Advisory Panel. A consultant and non-profit board director
he is the former Executive Director of the VanCity Community Foundation.
The Foundation is mandated to work with disinvested communities
using CED methods to achieve affordable housing, jobs and non-profit
enterprises, and has worked with many communities to build their
capacity, asset base and independence. Mr. Driscoll has a long and
distinguished career in public service, having served as Mayor of
the City of Port Moody, Deputy Chair of the Greater Vancouver Regional
District, and Trustee of the Municipal Finance Authority, to mention
only a few of his numerous public positions. In his home community
as well as provincially, he has been instrumental in extending and
reinforcing citizen participation and advisory structures, as well
as in addressing environmental issues. Mr. Driscoll has been a long-time
activist in the housing, environmental and education fields.
Katherine A. H. Graham, Dean of
the Faculty of Public Affairs, is a nationally
recognized expert in local government and decentralization, urban
development, and Aboriginal development and governance in the Canadian
north. At Carleton University, Professor Graham has led the development
of new professional-education programs for Aboriginal administrators
and has served as editor of the annual survey How Ottawa Spends.
She has also acted as an advisor to the Royal Commission on Aboriginal
Peoples, the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario.
Professor Graham serves as Co-Director of the Joint Carleton University-University
of Ottawa Centre for Voluntary Sector Research and Development,
and co-directs that Centres national project on voluntary-sector
outcome evaluation. Professor Graham operates a family farm near
Gananoque, Ontario.
Ted Jackson is Chair of the Carleton Centre for
Community Innovation, and
Associate Professor of PublicAdministration and International Affairs,
at Carleton University in Ottawa. He is also President of E. T.
Jackson & Associates Ltd., an international consulting firm. Co-founder
of the Community Economic Development Technical Asisstance Program,
Ted Jackson is one of Canada's leading authorities on local and
regional development, advising foundations, governments, development
agencies, non-profits, labour and business. His research interests
include local governance and poverty reduction, knowledge management,
financing civil society, and citizen-directed evaluation.
Barbara Levine
Barbara Levine is currently Manager, International Program for Development Evaluation
Training (IPDET), She was until recently, Director, Social Development Division
at WUSC, an international development NGO based in Ottawa. Ms. Levine
has spent over twenty years working in the field of community and
international development, including 15 years with the Canadian
International Development Agency. Among other posts, she served
as Director, Strategic Planning in CIDA's Policy Branch. She has
worked in Central America and the Caribbean, Southern Africa and
Southeast Asia, on issues ranging from social policy, human rights
and peace-building to environment and human resources development.
Ms. Levine served as CEDTAP's first Coordinator from 1997 to 1999,
and was Director of the Multiculturalism Program at Canadian Heritage from 1999-2001.
Margie Mendell
Professor Marguerite Mendell is Vice Principal and Associate Professor,
School of Community and Public Affairs, Concordia University and
Director, Karl Polanyi Institute of Political Economy, Concordia
University. A graduate of McGill University (1983 Ph.D. Economics),
Professor Mendell's research and teaching is on the social economy,
alternative investment strategies, comparative community economic
development, comparative public policy, history of economic thought,
and economic democracy, among others. Her current research concentrates
on the areas of community economic development, alternative investment
strategies, financial institutions in Quebec, the social economy
in Québec, economic democracy and governance from theoretical
and comparative perspectives, social indicators, and the Life and
work of Karl Polanyi.
Genevieve Harrison is the Administrator
in the Carleton Centre for Community Innovation. Prior to joining
CCCI, she held senior financial and administration positions at
private, public and not-for-profit organisations, including E.T.
Jackson & Associates Ltd., the Sierra Club of Canada, the Chamber
of Maritime Commerce and the Department of National Defence, as
well as on Parliament Hill. Genevieve has recently returned from
a year in the Turks and Caicos Islands where she researched and
wrote her first as yet untitled novel.
Ted Jackson is Chair of the Carleton Centre for
Community Innovation, and Associate Professor of Public Policy & Administration at Carleton
University in Ottawa. He is also President of E.T. Jackson & Associates Ltd.,
an international consulting firm. Co-founder of
the Community Economic Development Technical Asisstance Program,
Ted Jackson is one of Canada's leading authorities on local and
regional development, advising foundations, governments, development
agencies, non-profits, labour and business. His research interests
include local governance and poverty reduction, knowledge management,
financing civil society, and citizen-directed evaluation.
Webmaster: ccci"at"carleton.ca
|