Jul 29 2011

Hema Vyasby Hema Vyas, School4Civics alumnus

What does the transformed political map mean for urban issues? What does the changing face of Parliament mean in our increasingly diverse city region? Warren Kinsella, one of Canada’s most prominent political strategists and commentators led a multi-partisan discussion with members of Maytree’s School4Civics alumni. Many thanks to the School4Civics alumni for organizing this excellent and inspiring event!

On a steaming hot Wednesday in July, 60 people gathered to discuss one of the more shocking events of this past spring.

Warren Kinsella, Toronto-based lawyer, head of Daisy Consulting and Liberal spin doctor, led a discussion exploring how the federal election resulted in a Tory majority, New Democratic Official Opposition and a historically low number of seats for the Liberals. Depending on your party stripes, you were cheering, jeering or devastated in May, but I know of few people who were not stunned.

Kinsella’s insights regarding the power of (negative) campaigning, the extent to which election timing really is everything, and our party leaders’ styles led to a lively discussion.

One of the central themes that emerged was the alienation of Canadians from the democratic process. With voter turnout at 61% and youth voting estimated to be even lower, Kinsella mentioned that the lack of young voters determined federal election results.

Warren Kinsella at S4CBut why were voter numbers so low?

Even with the high turnover of Members of Parliament this year, Ottawa is far from representing today’s Canada. In demographics, experience and style, there is often a gap between what we find compelling and who we see speaking to our needs in Parliament.

An unusually high number of us in the room had been candidates and campaign organizers but still talked about how tough it is to have influence without the usual establishment credentials. The heart of the issue is about getting your foot in the door and then stubbornly remaining in the arena long enough to make a change, any change in politics.

This past election has broadened the appetite for change: It will take both the political establishment’s willingness to adapt and our own determination to get involved for federal transformation.

Will politicians sacrifice outdated traditions to restore their own relevance in Canadian homes?

To a great extent, that’s up to us.

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Jun 22 2011

Who spends a sunny, Saturday morning in June indoors learning about how to volunteer in an election campaign that doesn’t officially start until after Labour Day? The answer is a group of forty committed, dynamic and engaged emerging leaders from Peel Region and the City of Toronto.

Diverse in every sense of the word, and falling across the political spectrum, they are all active in some capacity in making change in their communities. Some have previously volunteered in campaigns. One is weighing a municipal by-election run. Two will stand as candidates for Member of Provincial Parliament on October 6.

Their participation in electoral politics enriches and strengthens our democracy. It matters who is within the corridors of power. It matters who our political leaders are.Those who lead and make decisions shape the future of our communities. Leaders are a powerful symbol and political leadership is particularly visible.

But, to ensure all sectors of society can participate, the political process needs to be demystified.

That’s where the School4Civics Bootcamp comes in. So often political involvement is fleeting, short-term and confusing.

This is particularly true of election campaigns. Volunteers work in campaigns, carrying out an endless list of tasks, without understanding their purpose within the larger context of the campaign. And after the ballots are cast, most will walk away having experienced an intense period of participation but without a plan to remain involved and indeed to become more connected and influential.

In our Bootcamp, participants gained insight into the process and practical tools to participate. Together with Sean Meagher, we packed the day with participatory training and exercises focused on volunteering with purpose, understanding the key elements of a campaign, and understanding how a campaign is built and executed.

Above all, through School4Civics we encourage participants to stay engaged and build a network that will allow for a lifetime of making social change through the political process. We hope that they will remain interested in political engagement over the long haul, which is when change can really happen.

The Bootcamp participants are off to do just that. They’ll volunteer on provincial campaigns. They’ll join a political party. They will become involved in their riding associations. Sooner or later many will be candidates.

We will offer another School4Civics Bootcamp in September, just as the candidates are knocking on doors and the campaign signs start to dot the lawns and balconies of homes across our region.

Expect new faces on your doorstep.

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Jun 02 2011

Interested in tools to enhance diversity in your organization? Need to pitch diversity to your management, board, or leadership? Let us help.

DiverseCity logoYour strategic starting point

Ask yourself:

  • How can you build diversity in leadership where you are?
  • Who is represented within the corridors of power?
  • Who is able to lead organizations, make decisions and shape the future?

Diversifying your leadership is not just the right thing to do, but it’s also a tool to fuel the region’s prosperity.

Ratna Omidvar – Why you need diverse leadership
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Leaders signal who belongs and who does not. They provide role models. They are a powerful symbol, for future generations, of what they can and cannot aspire to become.

Diversity in leadership won’t happen by accident. We need to be deliberate and systematic. We need to develop and deploy strategies for making change. Networks matter. Who you know can even become what you know. Deliberately sharing networks expands opportunities in a key way.  Networks and training programs make core leadership skills accessible to the best and the brightest.  Those with access to power can transfer this to new, emerging leaders by becoming mentors.

Making the case for diversity in leadership

DiverseCity

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Through the DiverseCity Counts project we dig deeper into relevant data to better understand the extent to which some organizations have made diversity a priority. The research and results may be useful for you.  Download Year 1 and Year 2 full research reports, summaries and video links for DiverseCity Counts – The Importance of Diverse Leadership in the Greater Toronto Area.

The Conference Board of Canada report The Value of Diverse Leadership (PDF) measured the impact of more diverse leadership and found that the benefits include:

  • improved financial and organizational performance;
  • increased capacity to link with new global and domestic markets;
  • expanded access to global and domestic talent pools;
  • enhanced innovation and creativity; and
  • strengthened social cohesion and social capital.

Learn more about making the business case for diversity.

Don’t reinvent, learn from the leadership of others!

We’ve got 10 practical tips for diversifying organizational leadership (PDF). Each tip briefly tells the story of how one organization took advantage of diversity to become stronger, more representative of their community and better.

Dive a little deeper into some promising practices of organizations diversifying their leadership.

Download Diversity in Governance: A Toolkit for Nonprofit Boards (PDF) a comprehensive toolkit for you to use when working with boards on issues around diversity and governance.

Maybe you’re interested in going even further, replicating DiverseCity onBoard (a matching service for boards and diverse candidates), or you just want to learn more about how it all works? We’ve created a replication website with resources, a toolkit and more. The site includes a free toolkit and answers the following questions:

  • How can I connect qualified members from under-represented communities to agencies, boards, commissions and nonprofits?
  • What can I learn from Maytree’s DiverseCity onBoard program?
  • Where can I find up-to-date resources and sample tools?

Maybe you need more research?

We’ve compiled some research, newspaper articles and other resources that explore various facets of diversity in leadership. This is a new but growing area for exploration. You’ll find research on why diversity matters and some specific research for business, nonprofits and governments.

Long live the conversation

Would it be useful to facilitate a conversation about diversity in leadership in your community or organization?

We’ve got a great starting point for you: Diversity Perspectives – A Manual for Leading Dialogue on Diversity in Leadership (PDF).

Find out more and watch some great leadership stories on the DiverseCity Toronto site. You can watch the growing series of videos on their own  or within the DiverseCity blog.

Get inspired with some DiverseCity stories

Alejandra Bravo, on DiverseCity School4Civics

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Tina Edan, on DiverseCity Voices

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Cathy Winter, on DiverseCity onBoard

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Dec 27 2010

Intentionality, instruments, and investment must be present if integration is to succeed.

In the successful integration of immigrants, there are three necessary conditions: intentionality, instruments, and investment.

Intentionality

Every country has a choice about how it views immigration; it can view it as a liability or as an asset. If immigration is viewed as a liability, tight rules will be established to limit its impact, which will be presumed to be more bad than good. Such rules will limit immigrants to working in certain sectors or types of jobs and to living in certain places, restrict the amount of time they spend in the country, and even tie them to a single employer or organization. Thus we see temporary foreign worker programs that presume we can have only certain immigrants for defined periods of time before we send them home. A temporary foreign worker program tells immigrants that their labour will be exploited, but that they are not wanted as citizens of the country. Despite the fact that such programs don’t work, they seem increasingly popular, and in Canada the federal government has implemented a temporary foreign worker program in recent years, against all advice to the contrary.

If, on the other hand, a country sees immigration as an asset, it will do what it can to maximize the value of that asset. It will design a selection system that complements the labour market, filling jobs for today’s economy and, more importantly, creating human capital for the emerging economy of tomorrow. It will permit immigrants to enter the fields of work in which they have training and experience, rather than requiring that they qualify under the strictures of domestic certification and credentials; the proper test should be of competence rather than credentials. It will help immigrants settle in neighbourhoods with good housing and transit service and access to good schools and community amenities. It will encourage participation in the life of the community, including in the political processes, whether by joining the board of a local library or community centre or by running for election to a city, state, or national legislature. The country that is successful in integration will not leave everything to chance, but will intentionally facilitate the key elements of successful settlement and integration: finding immigrants the right job, for which they have training and experience; settling smoothly into good neighbourhoods; and participating in the regular life of the community, not in an immigrant ghetto but in a neighbourhood typical of that city or town.

So the question of intentionality is: will we give them shackles, or will we give them wings? We can choose how we treat immigrants.

Instruments

Good intentions often founder on a failure to put them into operation. Successful public policy often depends on designing the right instruments or tools, which can be difficult. A good instrument takes into account the broad context in which the policy operates, and also the various interests in play. It can be impossible to satisfy every interest, and a gridlock ensues that can only be resolved by good design or leadership. The design of effective instruments is critical.

In Canada, we are developing a set of local immigrant employment councils, modelled on the Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council, or TRIEC. These councils have two main programs: a mentoring partnership that pairs an immigrant with a Canadian in the same line of work, so the Canadian can both coach the immigrant on job searching and job culture, and introduce the immigrant to his or her own network of contacts, which are so crucial in finding a job; and a training program for employers to help them develop human resource management skills for hiring immigrants effectively. These instruments work because they ultimately serve the interests of all the parties.

We have developed instruments for increasing the diversity of people in governance roles, both in formally elected office and on the governing bodies of agencies, boards, and commissions.DiverseCity onBoard is a program that maintains a roster of diverse candidates who we have qualified by interest, experience, and capability. Through a matching process, we can help organizations find the right candidate for their board. And we have developed School4Civics, which trains people who want to run for office or run an election campaign. In the last municipal elections in the Toronto region, 12 School4Civics graduates ran for office and dozens more volunteered on campaigns.

Another Toronto-based program works with foreign-born authors to help them develop their craft and find a market in Canada. Diaspora Dialogues is in its seventh year and has a roster of established Canadian authors to mentor immigrant authors. The purpose is two-fold: to help immigrant authors establish themselves in Toronto, and to reflect to Canadian readers the diverse face of Canada, a diversity of culture and point of view.

Enabling immigrants to settle in neighbourhoods is made easier by creating access to mortgages, for which most immigrants don’t qualify because they lack a domestic credit history. One of Canada’s most successful companies, Home Trust, offers mortgages to home buyers who don’t qualify for traditional mortgages because they have insufficient other assets to meet the coverage required by lenders. Home Trust makes sure the value of the home exceeds the value of the mortgage by doing a careful assessment of the property. The mortgage business has proven to be a profitable enterprise when conducted with proper discipline, and immigrants create a whole new market. A government – municipal or state – could work with such careful lenders to provide a set of mortgage products that would enable immigrants to purchase homes.

In Chicago, the Chicago Federal Reserve has created financial instruments to help conservative Muslims with home ownership and small business investment while still observing sharia law restrictions on borrowing money. The reserve has identified three types of Islamic loans, each existing somewhere between rental and ownership. The first option is essentially a staged transfer of ownership, the second a lease-purchase, and the third a more classical shared equity loan of the type common for affordable housing in the U.K. Without such instruments, Muslims who want to buy a home have to save hundreds of thousands of dollars to purchase it outright, get loans from family and friends, or put aside their religious beliefs and take out a conventional mortgage.

Investment

Without investment, good intentions and well designed instruments won’t work. Whether a government or society is willing to put money on the line is a critical test of whether they want immigration to work.

It is not a question only of money but often of a more precious kind of capital: political capital. In most countries there are those in the political spectrum only too willing to demonize “the other,” to raise fears of the threat of people from different countries, cultures, and religions. Such fear can create a powerful political tide, sweeping up all before it. In Toronto, we saw it in the recent election of a mayor who spoke against immigration. And Canada’s federal government has proven xenophobic when incidents like the recent arrival of a boatload of economic migrants from Asia occur.

There are not enough leaders prepared to make the case for immigration and to infuse their country with intentionality and instruments backed by the needed investment. Most of us know the arguments for immigration: economic prosperity, cultural diversity, new ideas and perspectives, and fresh energy. We also know the importance of getting integration right, of making it happen in a short time-frame and with as little human cost as possible. There is no sense in making it hard, because it becomes hard for everyone.

And we know that immigration is an investment that will pay a big return, sometimes in the first generation through the quick uptake of skilled immigrants, and certainly in the longer term as ensuing generations become educated and engaged citizens.

But we need our leaders to articulate that message, and beyond that to create and support instruments of inclusion. One that we have been trying to get our leaders in Canada to embrace is the idea of allowing non-citizens to vote in municipal elections. The argument for this is that it is a useful instrument of inclusion, of engaging immigrants in the life of the community quickly, particularly at the level of government closest to the people through the provision of everyday services. We call the campaign I Vote Toronto, and we are gradually building support for it, but we still need some key leaders to come on board. We need them to invest some political capital.

As we look around the world, we can identify countries that engage fully with the three I’s of immigrant integration, and countries that engage with fewer than three. But all three – intentionality, instruments, and investment – must be present if integration is to succeed.

(Originally published in The Mark.)

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Oct 28 2010

While the motto of the City of Toronto is “Diversity Our Strength,” you wouldn’t know it by looking at our newly elected city council. Matt Galloway, host of CBC Radio’s Metro Morning, spoke with Alejandra Bravo, manager of leadership programs at Maytree (including the DiverseCity School4Civics program), and John Campey, executive director of the not-for-profit organisation Social Planning Toronto, to find out why we should care about diversity in who represents us, and how to go about changing this underrepresentation.

Listen to the interview (opens new window).

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