February 5, 2012

Paying It Forward – Empowering Community

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Nova Scotia’s Black Business Initiative (BBI) aims to improve the economic and business opportunities available to the African-Nova Scotian community. Here, BIM talks with the BBI’s Chief Strategist and CEO Rustum Southwell about the organization’s purposes and strategies. Southwell migrated to Canada from St. Kitts in 1972 and settled in Halifax. A devoted contributor to African-Nova Scotian community initiatives, his current board posts include the Halifax International Airport Authority Community Consultative Committee, United Way of Halifax, and the Board of Waterfront Development Corporation Ltd., to which he was recently appointed. In 2010, Southwell received the Black Business and Professional Association’s inaugural Distinguished Men of Honour award for his indelible contributions and leadership among black entrepreneurship and for raising the community’s economic empowerment. Since Southwell’s appointment as a founding Executive Director to the BBI in 1996, the BBI has assisted to create over 300 black businesses and nearly 700 jobs in Nova Scotia. BIM: What is the purpose of the BBI? RS: The BBI is a province-wide business development initiative committed to fostering the growth of businesses owned by members of Nova Scotia’s black community. We are committed to growing the black presence in a diverse range of business sectors including high-tech, manufacturing, tourism, and the cultural sector. BIM: How did the BBI come to … [Read more...]

Dealing with Debt: A five-step plan to be debt-free in three years or less

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If your employer tells you to expect a week’s delay for your next pay check, how will you respond? Will you find yourself panic-stricken, scrimmaging to rub two cents together to get by, or will you rest easy knowing you have a contingency plan—money saved in an emergency nest egg to see you through this minor financial setback? The Vanier Institute of the Family authored a report in early 2010 assessing the current financial state of Canadian families. It cited research that found 59 per cent of respondents stated “they would be in trouble if their pay check was delayed by even a week.” The study also revealed that Canadian families are “walking a financial high wire” with research from 2009 indicating several troubling trends. 2009 saw a 50 per cent increase in mortgages running 90 days or more in arrears compared to 2008. The number of credit card holders behind at least three months in their payments rose 40 per cent from 2008 to 2009. Also, household debt climbed to an astounding $96,100 in 2009, creating a debt-to-income ratio of 145 per cent, the highest it’s ever been according to the report. Along with the rest of the world, Canada is slowly recovering from one of the worst recessions experienced in a generation. Governments and corporations have begun to pick up the pieces and to lay out plans which will prevent repeats of some of their mistakes. But the “great recession” or “credit crisis” also brought to light the abysmal state of … [Read more...]

No Small Feat: Celebrating Our Legacy An interview with Robert Small

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“I believe history is the blueprint for the future. Through this poster, I would like to give the next generation of African-Canadians the hope that the future will be brighter than the past…” Robert Small - Black History Month Poster Unveiling, 2007 Toronto-based visual artist, owner of The Small Gallery and the man behind Legacy Enterprises, Robert Small has made it his life’s ambition to ensure that African-Canadians gain ‘full knowledge’ of their rich, indelible contributions and their powerful legacy to Canada—our home and native land—through his artwork, and he has made a lucrative career doing it. The creative mastermind behind The Official Black History Poster™, aptly renamed to Legacy Poster™ in recent years, Small is a self-taught artist who embarked on a creative journey 16 years ago to gain recognition for Black History Month and his posters, which proved to be a successful marriage between art and enterprise. The poster is a visual juxtaposition of diverse, successful and inspiring, contemporary and historic African-Canadians that showcase Smalls’ artistic signature of bright vivid portraits. His posters can be found mounted on the walls of classrooms, libraries, community organizations, churches, banks, homes and a variety of places across Canada, which is no small feat. Viewed by many as a leading and prominent Black History Month ambassador, Small has accumulated an expansive list of accomplishments as one of Canada’s most … [Read more...]