2021 Transformative Change Awards presented at Power In Community Conference

Friday, June 25, 2021
Transformative Change Awards with banner graphics of birds and Alliance logo in white

The Alliance celebrated a record number of Transformative Change Awards at our 2021 Conference Power in Community last week. Congratulations to all of this year’s recipients, and thanks to everyone who helped us to celebrate these amazing community health champions and their work.

If you missed the awards, we can offer you some videos to catch up on what happened, and here’s the full list of 2021 award recipients.

Transformative Change Awards – teams and programs

Anishnawbe Health Toronto Mobile Units – Full awards video

Counselling Connect – Centretown CHC and Crossroads Children’s Mental Health Centre – Full awards video

Northwest Toronto COVID-19 Collaborative – Black Creek CHC and Rexdale CHC – Full awards video

Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program – Grand River CHC and Partners – Full awards video

 

Transformative Change Awards – Joe Leonard Award and other individual awards

The Joe Leonard Award was presented at the Alliance’s AGM on June 15. You can watch the full speeches and presentations of the Joe Leonard Awards here, given in 2021 to:

Simone Thibault, Centretown CHC

David Jeffery, CSC CHIGAMIK CHC

 

Other individual awards were presented at the Alliance conference, June 17, during this ceremony (video starts a little ways in, but includes all speeches from below)

Denise Brooks Health Equity Champion Award

Angela Robertson, Parkdale Queen West CHC

Adrianna Tetley Legacy Award

Denis Constantineau, CSC du Grand Sudbury

Community Health Champion Award

Dr. Janet Smylie

Media Awards

Jennifer Yang, Toronto Star

Amina Zafar, CBC News

 

 

 

 

 

Federal funding for Community Health Centres to increase vaccine confidence and uptake among marginalized individuals and groups across Canada

Logos of, from top left, clockwise, Canadian Association of Community Health Centres, Alliance for Healthier Communities, Nova Scotia Association of Community Health Centres, Manitoba Association of Community Health, British Columbia Association of Community Health Centres
Date: 
Friday, June 11, 2021

TORONTO // VANCOUVER – June 10, 2021 – On Tuesday, June 8, the Public Health Agency (PHAC) of Canada announced $2.5 million in funding to boost the work of Community Health Centres (CHCs) in increasing vaccine confidence and uptake across Canada, with special emphasis on the continued roll out of COVID-19 vaccines.

The funding, which comes through PHAC’s Immunization Partnership Fund (IPF), will enhance outreach and engagement with underserved and marginalized groups across the country. It is being distributed among a partnership of five national and provincial CHC associations including the Alliance for Healthier Communities (Ontario), British Columbia Association of Community Health Centres, Canadian Association of Community Health Centres, Manitoba Association of Community Health, and Nova Scotia Association of Community Health Centres.

The federal grants recognize the deep experience of CHCs in supporting and working alongside marginalized individuals and groups, their strong relationships of trust in local communities, and their extensive work to date in responding to the pandemic across Canada. CHCs have done so not only through team-based primary care, but also innovative services and programs that address the broader spectrum of social challenges posing an increased risk to health and safety during the pandemic; factors such as transportation barriers, social isolation, food insecurity, precarious housing, and the compounding impact of social exclusion due to racism, exclusion based on sexual identity, language and other factors.

Collectively, initiatives mounted by the five CHC associations will lead to:

  • Evidence-based tools, training, and supports for health care providers to counsel individuals on the importance of COVID-19 vaccines and other vaccines, developed with a health equity lens to ensure they are culturally appropriate, anti-oppressive and trauma-informed.
  • Tailored and evidence-based information to increase vaccine confidence and acceptance, with a particular focus on COVID-19 vaccines, including information as to where to access vaccine(s).
  • Supporting innovative mechanisms and community-led initiatives that reduce and remove barriers and provide access to vaccination.
  • Community-level communications and public engagement strategies to foster evidence-based dialogue around vaccines, and to address gaps in knowledge, attitudes and beliefs related to vaccination, with a particular emphasis on underserved or marginalized groups.
  • Collection and dissemination of best practice knowledge among CHCs and other health and social system practitioners across Canada to ensure improved support for marginalized and vulnerable populations during future vaccination and immunization efforts.

 

“We’re grateful to the federal government for these resources and for acknowledging the critical role CHCs play in integrating health and social services in communities across Canada. The initiatives that these grants support will build on the success CHCs have had over the past year in addressing the health and social support needs of individuals and groups that have been disproportionately affected by the pandemic.” Scott Wolfe Executive Director, Canadian Association of Community Health Centres

"We must approach those who are hesitant about the vaccines with compassion and support. Only then can we work together to achieve herd immunity. The partnership with PHAC and other CHC organizations around Canada enables trusted CHCs in the community to make sure we achieve the promise of the vaccine program: a BC that has achieved herd immunity and can reopen safely."Piotr Majkowski, Board Chair, British Columbia Association of Community Health Centres

"The generous support we have received will allow MACH to carry out a multi-pronged community vaccination campaign; we look forward to connecting with various communities across Manitoba who have been deeply affected by the pandemic." Carly Nicholson Representative, Manitoba Association of Community Health “Alliance members in Ontario have been supporting communities disproportionately impacted by COVID-19 throughout the pandemic, with local, tailored approaches to testing, wraparound social supports, and most recently, information and access to vaccines. We very much appreciate this funding, and it will enable us to build on the successes of these community-led approaches that are based on trust and relationships that CHCs have established with the communities that they serve.” Sarah Hobbs Chief Executive Officer, Alliance for Healthier Communities

“NSACHC members have been providing timely, accessible, and people-centered primary care, health promotion and social services in various communities throughout Nova Scotia for over 40 years. This very generous grant will allow us to expand our outreach to do the important vaccination education work that has come to light during the COVID -19 pandemic.”     Lorraine Burch Board Chair, Nova Scotia Association of Community Health Centres

FOR MEDIA AND OTHER INQUIRIES:

Jason Rehel Story Producer and Media Relations, Alliance for Healthier Communities Jason.Rehel@AllianceON.org; 416-817-9518 Valerie St John Executive Director, British Columbia Association of Community Health Centres vstjohn@bcachc.org; 250-216-1691

Hillary LeBlanc Communications and Digital Media Lead, Canadian Association of Community Health Centres hleblanc@cachc.ca Carly Nicholson Representative, Manitoba Association of Community Health cnicholson@mflohc.mb.ca; 204-295-8267

Lorraine Burch Board Chair, Nova Scotia Association of Community Health Centres lburch@ourhealthcentre.ca; 902-275-3847

We're marking Indigenous History Month, both in grieving and solidarity with Indigenous communities and in celebrating Indigenous ways of knowing and being

Thursday, June 3, 2021
Text graphic that reads: Marking Indigenous History Month 2021

We start Indigenous History Month in a sombre way – grieving the discovery of 215 children’s bodies, alongside residential school survivors, their families and all Indigenous peoples and communities across Turtle Island.

As outlined in our statement on discovery of mass grave on the site of the former Kamloops, B.C. residential school, this is not part of a “dark chapter”, as if it were a story told long ago and now just remembered or with surprise. These children, along with the hundreds of thousands of others, were violently ripped from families, from their communities, their cultures, their languages, their lands. This discovery is further evidence of this country’s ongoing genocide against Indigenous peoples and nations, symbols of Canada’s lack of commitment to the healing and reconciliation it claims to desire and work towards. This isn’t so much a wake-up call (those have happened, and you can see them laid out in media over the last 30 years), or a reckoning. This is a siren, an alarm that’s been going off for years that we can all hear again, while Indigenous people have heard it blaring throughout their lives.

Read our full statement here.

Take Action Here are areas where we – as settlers, immigrants, and people whose ancestors were enslaved across the Americas and the Caribbean - can take action and to do the work to understand the history, its roots in genocide, and the ongoing impacts of anti-Indigenous racism throughout society. You can find additional resources from On Canada Project: Settlers Take Action.

The following are adapted from the Ontario Non-Profit Network (ONN)’s statement on five ways for nonprofit can take action now to support Indigenous communities.

  1. Read the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s 94 Calls to Action and commit to ways you and your organization will be accountable. In addition to the calls to action, you can find all the reports from the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation here.
  2. Learn more about residential schools and g impact on communities and generations of Indigenous Peoples or take a free course on Indigenous histories and contemporary issues through University of Alberta (via coursera).
  3. Advocate to the federal government and your MP to ensure the Calls to Action are implemented. Currently only 8 out of 94 calls have been completed. Read analysis from the Yellowhead Institute about the lack of action.
  4. Advocate to the Ontario government and your MPP to work with First Nations to survey sites for unmarked graves at Ontario’s former residential schools.
  5. Advocate for Indigenous Health in Indigenous Hands and direct funding to Indigenous-led organizations and to issues Indigenous Peoples have identified need to be funded. 
  6. Listen to Indigenous voices. This week the Native Women's Association of Canada (NWAC) released its own action plan in response to the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, after stepping away from the federal government's action plan process relating to the MMIWG report, calling it 'toxic and dysfunctional' 

Further calls to action can be found in the statement released by our colleagues at the Indigenous Primary Health Care Council (IPHCC). You can read it here.

This month while we make space for grief, anger and mourning, we must also remember to create space for celebrations of Indigenous people, culture, language and life. Shared understandings are a path forward, and this month spotlights some of the ways that non-Indigenous folks can walk those paths.

Below we've collected a few starting points for people to learn about Indigenous artists, stories and ways of knowing:

As the month goes on, let's all try to be mindful -- of the hard truths of Canada's colonial history, of genocide in residential schools, of the steps non-Indigenous people and organizations and governments have yet to take (and how we can influence each other to take them), and of the rich histories of Indigenous peoples in these lands.