Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members.
My name is Dianne Kelderman. I am the president and CEO of the Nova Scotia Co-operative Council.
I thank you for the opportunity to come before this very important committee during this historic year, the International Year of Cooperatives.
I understand that you have already heard from many of our national cooperative and credit union partners, and you have no doubt heard, and they have shared with you, our impressive Canadian story.
I am pleased to share with you today the results of the economic impact of the Nova Scotia cooperative system. I am also pleased to share with you the impact we have had on the lives of ordinary Nova Scotians and on the cultural and social fabric of our communities.
If you extrapolate the Nova Scotia results you're going to hear across every region, every province, and every territory, with some give and take, you will get a national picture of why the cooperative sector is fundamental to the economy of Canada and, equally important, is fundamental to who we are as a nation. I will refer back to this point later in my comments.
The Nova Scotia Co-operative Council is the provincial economic development arm of the cooperative and credit union sector of Nova Scotia. We are owned, governed, and financed by the 431 cooperatives and credit unions that do business in our province. In other words, we are owned by the people of Nova Scotia.
We are a very significant economic player, with 431 businesses and $5.3 billion in assets. We employ 7,361 Nova Scotians. We provide housing for over 6,000 Nova Scotians. In 34 Nova Scotia communities, a credit union is the only financial institution. In 27 Nova Scotia communities, a cooperative is the main economic driver. Take those two out of those communities and think about the economic impact.
Sixty-five percent of all agriculture done in Atlantic Canada is done through cooperative enterprises.
We are strong and we are stable.
One out of every five cooperative enterprises fails. One of out of three private sector businesses fails.
We have a strong, historic, and proud commitment to rural communities.
To be exact, 309,012 individual Nova Scotians are member-owners of our cooperatives and credit unions. That is one out of every three people, or 33% of the population. We are bigger than any political party, any religious denomination, and any special interest group.
We are leaders in innovation, in building communities, in growing the economy, and in supporting people.
Our small-business support and lending programs over the past seven years have financed 1,158 small businesses, with loan losses of less than 3.5%. These are businesses, by the way, for which we have done financing at high-risk levels.
We have created over 7,500 jobs, as a partnership with these businesses, at a cost of $238 per job to the Province of Nova Scotia. Our motto is “Great Jobs Close to Home”.
Connecting People for Health Co-operative is Canada's first and only online health care clinic. It connects patients and doctors via the web. It is an enhanced health care service, but an uninsured health care service, and it is in total compliance with the Canada Health Act. It is a system that can change and have an impact on wait times. It is a patient portal. It is patient-centric, not government- and big-system-centric. It is a Nova Scotia innovation. It has export potential. And it is financed by the cooperative and credit union sector; it is not financed with taxpayer dollars.
Next is youth, our future.
Our partnerships in Nova Scotia are touching approximately 14,000 young people a year with cooperative leadership, business development, training, and leadership opportunities.
Nova Scotia's first social enterprise fund is our innovation and our capital. We are providing financing, term loans, working capital, and lines of credit for not-for-profits, for-profits, and cooperative societies that operate business enterprises that have a common social and economic goal.
We are a growing sector. On average, 18 new cooperative enterprises are incorporated on a yearly basis in Nova Scotia. In 2011, we had a record year, with 29 new incorporations across all industries and across all sectors.
We have a mentoring program, where cooperative leaders continue to give. It is a network of retired business professionals, cooperative credit union professionals, who mentor existing businesses and new start-ups in our province.
Cooperatives introduce corporate social responsibility to Canada, now widely emulated by the private sector. Credit unions were the first to introduce ATMs, automated teller machines. In fact, the first ATM in Canada was in Petit-de-Grat, Nova Scotia. Cooperatives are business enterprises, democratically owned, governed for the people by the people.
Cooperatives grew by 1.8% last year in Nova Scotia, despite the economic crisis. Our membership grew by 2%. Our top ten cooperatives paid a patronage dividend equal to 11% return on investment. I would suggest that's a good place to put your money.
The cooperative sector is often the first to respond to important economic and social challenges: financing for the forestry program; financing for immigrants, including an immigrant welcoming program; business interventions; governance training for boards; worker buyouts and business succession; and health care and education solutions. We are in the forefront.
There are many opportunities ahead. Cooperatives are putting people first. Cooperatives are creating sustainable jobs. Cooperatives are investing in communities. Cooperatives are on the forefront of innovation. I think the results speak for themselves.
Cooperatives, across all party lines, represent and embody so many of the greatest attributes that define Canada: democratic, fiscally responsible, socially responsible and caring, self-help, self-responsibility, equity and equality, global concern, and commitment.
We believe that actions, choices, and decisions matter. We also believe that people must come first. And we believe that we have a responsibility to be part of the solution and not part of the problem.
In that context, the Nova Scotia context, what do we need or hope for from our federal government?
First, we request recognition, understanding, and respect as a key economic player. We ask that this respect, understanding, and recognition be shown by placing the responsibility for cooperatives inside Industry Canada, where we belong. We are much more than agriculture. Ensure cooperative enterprises are eligible for and are included in all government programs. There is currently a big gap across federal government programs as it applies to cooperative enterprises. Ensure that the public service, the people who work for the federal government, know that cooperatives exist, first of all, and then, secondly, understand that they are unique and important business enterprises. Perhaps this could be achieved through an interdepartmental committee on cooperatives.
Secondly, introduce financial support mechanisms for the cooperative sector that are consistent with those currently available for the private sector—investments, partnerships, and tax credits, as an example.
Thirdly, cease the government practice of using our tax dollars to establish government-funded entities to compete with our businesses. If it can be done and provided by the private sector, then governments should not be competing with us.
Fourthly, consider cooperatives as an exemplary model for Canadian-owned business opportunities. Consumer-owned utilities and public services are just some examples.
The future is ours to invent. Alan Kay, a Nobel Prize winner, really said it well when he said, “The best way to predict the future is to invent it.”
That's what we're about. Successful economics, successful results, successful people engagement should be ramped up; it should not be disengaged at a time when the country needs us so much.
Thank you very much.