CENTRE FOR LOCAL PROSPERITY - Key Persons


Albert Marshall

Job Titles:
  • Elder Advisor on Two - Eyed Seeing
Albert is a highly respected and much loved Elder of the Mi'kmaw Nation. He lives in Eskasoni First Nation in Unama'ki (Cape Breton), NS, and is a passionate advocate of cross-cultural understandings and healing and of our human responsibilities to care for all creatures and our Earth Mother. He is the "designated voice" with respect to environmental issues for the Mi'kmaw Elders of Unama'ki and he sits on various committees that develop and guide collaborative initiatives and understandings in natural resource management or that serve First Nations' governance issues, or that otherwise work towards ethical environmental, social and economic practices.

Andy Horsnell

Job Titles:
  • Senior Consultant

Christine Heming

Job Titles:
  • Writer
  • Writer and Educator
Christine Heming is a writer and educator. She has been a student of the buddhadharma for over 45 years, and a senior teacher and meditation instructor in Shambhala. She hosts conversations and council gatherings on creating a kinder, more equitable and just society. She lives in Port Royal, Nova Scotia.

Christopher Googoo

Job Titles:
  • Director
  • Member of the Board
Chris joined Ulnooweg Development Group in April 2000 as a Procurement Liaison Officer, supporting Aboriginal businesses access procurement opportunities with government and private sector industries. In 2004, he accepted a Commercial Account Manager position serving the Nova Scotia region. In 2006, he was appointed General Manager of Ulnooweg. In recognition of Chris's contribution to the overall management of Ulnooweg as a growing organization, Chris's title was changed to Chief Operating Officer in 2017. He is a member of the Tripartite Economic Development Working Committee, Board member of the Community Sector Council of Nova Scotia and the Rural Communities Foundation of Nova Scotia. In 2016 he was elected to the Board of the Atlantic Provinces Chamber of Commerce and in 2018 he was appointed to the Innovacorp Board. His previous work has included membership with the Atlantic Aboriginal Economic Developers Network and the Mi'kmaw Economic Benefits Office. He was also a board member of the National Aboriginal Capital Corporation Association representing the Atlantic and Quebec region for over a decade. Chris has a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from St. Francis Xavier University and is a member of the We'koqma'q First Nation living with his wife and three children in Millbrook.

Dayle Eshelby - VP

Job Titles:
  • Director
  • Member of the Board
  • Vice - President
Dayle draws strength from enduring community growth and development. Dayle is the Rural Coordinator for St. Mary's Silver Economy Engagement Network and a Lockeport Town Councillor. Dayle leads RESOLVE! Management enhancing development leadership by empowering an organization's people and has Community Service Employment Support Caseworker experience. Involvement with academic institutions include Research Assistant and Coordinator in a partnership with Mount St Vincent University/ Tri-County Women's Centre, over fifteen years at McGill University and participation in the President's Roundtable at the Canadian Association for University Continuing Education National Convection. Locally Dayle was Lockeport's Integrated Community Sustainability Plan (ICSP) Coordinator and is Chairperson of numerous community boards.

Dr. Christopher Stone

Job Titles:
  • Director
  • Member of the Board
Dr. Christopher Stone received his PhD in Molecular Biology from McMaster University where he then worked as an Assistant Professor in Pathology and Molecular Medicine focusing on bacterial genomics and invasion. At the same time, he was involved in founding a biotechnology start-up company developing rapid diagnostic tools for rural communities. He was trying to provide low-cost diagnostic solutions for diseases such as Influenza, Chlamydia, and RSV in resource-poor settings where accelerating treatment can improve health outcomes. After that, he attended Dalhousie University Medical School and completed his Family Medicine training in the Annapolis Valley. He now practices as a general practitioner in the Annapolis Valley with a focus on pain management, addictions, and emergency care.

Dr. Maria Rodriguez

Job Titles:
  • Director
  • Member of the Board
Dr. Maria Rodriguez was born and raised in Venezuela and emigrated to Canada 26 years ago. After living in Quebec and Ontario, she has called PEI home for the past ten years. Maria recently retired after twenty years with the federal public service, where she held a variety of responsibilities, most recently with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada as Manager, Science Policy and Partnerships. She has many years of experience in science-based policy analysis, participatory processes, and partnership development, nationally and internationally, and is a strong advocate for inclusive decision-making processes and the need to create spaces and build capacity for active citizen engagement. Maria holds an agriculture engineering degree from the Central University of Venezuela and a PhD from McGill University, Montreal.

Elder Marshall

Elder Marshall coined the English phrase "Two-Eyed Seeing" for a guiding principle found in Mi'kmaq Knowledge as reflected in the language. Two-Eyed Seeing in his language is known as Etuaptmumk, which encourages the realization that beneficial outcomes are much more likely in any given situation if we are willing to bring two or more perspectives into play. As Elder Marshall says, "learn to see from your one eye with the best strengths in the Indigenous knowledges and ways of knowing … and learn to see from your other

Gordon Slade

Job Titles:
  • Chairman Emeritus, Shorefast Foundation, and Senior Fellow, New Ocean Ethic
  • Leader in the Sustainable Economic Development of Newfoundland
Gordon Slade is a leader in the sustainable economic development of Newfoundland and Labrador. After an early career in fisheries conservation, in 1975, he was appointed the provincial Deputy Minister of Fisheries. In 1982, he was appointed the Federal Economic Development Coordinator, Newfoundland Region. In 1987, Mr Slade became Vice-President, Newfoundland Division, for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA). He also served as Co-Chair of the $300 million dollar (CAD) Canada-Newfoundland Offshore Development Fund. In 1988, Mr Slade established The Battle Harbour Historic Trust to protect the history and culture of the intact salt-fishing village of Battle Harbour. Mr Slade has been awarded the Order of Canada for his community work. The Battle Harbour initiative has earned numerous awards, including the Royal Canadian Geographical Society's Gold Medal. He has received an Honorary Doctorate Degree from Memorial University, and the Order of Newfoundland and Labrador. Mr Slade's latest project is the renaissance of the remote region of Fogo Island and Change Islands with the Shorefast Foundation. He is developing partnerships with governments, communities, and local residents to preserve local traditions, while developing a model for the sustainable management of rural communities internationally.

Gregory Heming - Founder

Job Titles:
  • Co - Founder
  • Senior Advisor
Gregory is a Co-founder of the Centre for Local Prosperity. He is a philosophical ecologist, writer, climate activist and former elected official. He holds a PhD in Literary Ecology and Northern Studies with special interest in steady-state economics, public policy and ecocide.

Heather Johannesen

Job Titles:
  • Ecological Economist
  • Economist
Heather is an ecological economist and sustainability practitioner. She has served as senior project manager on sustainability projects involving multi-level government agencies and private sector partnerships both within Canada and internationally with a focus on climate change, energy, water security initiatives, and the development of indicators of progress. In addition to her private practice, Heather was an associate professor at Royal Roads University and Saint Mary's University in the areas of sustainability, systems thinking, ecological economics and corporate social responsibility. She currently serves on the Nova Scotia Round Table for Environmental Goals and Sustainable Prosperity Act, where she brings a solutions-oriented approach to our current dilemmas.

James Hunter

Job Titles:
  • Emeritus Professor of History at the University of the Highlands and Islands, Scotland
James was the first Director of the Centre for History between 2005-2010. In the mid-1980s, he became the first director of the Scottish Crofters Union, now the Scottish Crofting Federation. Between 1998-2004 he was chairman of Highlands and Islands Enterprise, the north of Scotland's development agency. Jim is the author of 13 books about the Highlands and Islands and about the region's worldwide diaspora. His latest book, Set Adrift Upon the World: The Sutherland Clearances, published by Birlinn, won a Saltire Society award as Best History Book 2016. ‘Rarely have the clearances been written about so evocatively,' the Saltire panel commented. ‘Hunter's empathy with those involved speaks to us with elegant restraint in an account that sweeps from the Sutherland straths to the struggles of those forced to seek new lives in North America.' Jim Hunter's first book, The Making of the Crofting Community, described by a contributor to Scottish Historical Review as ‘one of the most significant books of its generation', has been in print for more than 40 years. His other books include A Dance Called America: The Scottish Highlands, the United States and Canada (1994), Last of the Free: A History of the Highlands and Islands (1999), Scottish Exodus: Travels Among a Worldwide Clan (2005) and, From the Low Tide of the Sea to the Highest Mountain Tops (2012), an account of the development of community ownership in the Highlands and Island. Professor Hunter was made a CBE in 2001. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2007.

Justin Cantafio

Job Titles:
  • Member of the Board
  • President of the Board
  • Executive Director of Farmers' Markets of Nova Scotia
Justin is anchored by a steadfast belief in the power of small-scale, community-based businesses to build truly sustainable social and economic development. It's what drove him to spend his master's degree living and working on ten organic farms from Quebec to the Pacific Coast. He's since helped with managing Atlantic Canada's first sustainable seafood subscription program through Off the Hook Community Supported Fishery, worked with the Ecology Action Centre to spearhead a Canada-wide program to promote locally-sourced food in schools, universities, and hospitals, and connected small-scale fishers and aquaculturalists with high-value markets across Nova Scotia and beyond with Halifax's Afishionado Fishmongers. Justin is currently the Executive Director of Farmers' Markets of Nova Scotia, a non-profit cooperative of over 35 farmers' markets throughout the province. When he's not crafting up ideas to re-localize our economy and promote local businesses, you might find Justin running in the woods, cooking up big hearty meals with friends, or relaxing in his off-grid cabin by the sea.

Karen Foster

Job Titles:
  • Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Rural Futures for Atlantic Canada
  • Research Chair in Sustainable Rural Futures for Atlantic Canada
Karen Foster is Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Rural Futures for Atlantic Canada. She is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Social Anthropology at Dalhousie University, where she teaches about work, economy and gender. Her research spans economic sociology, the sociology of work, and the history of economic thought. Her forthcoming book, Productivity and Prosperity (University of Toronto Press, 2016), examines the meaning and measurement of "productivity" in Canada. She is a founding member of Basic Income Nova Scotia, an avid cyclist, partner to Brian Foster and mother to 2-year-old Alice.

Len Barron

Job Titles:
  • Writer, Playwright, Director, Performer and Dancer
Len began college when he was thirty years old after years of hauling scrap iron, selling magazines, and driving a taxi. Since graduating from the University of Colorado in 1967 and Antioch-Putney Graduate School in 1970, he founded and directed Spring, an alternative high school, and taught Sociology at the University of Colorado, San Diego State University, Prescott College in Arizona and Dull Knife Memorial College on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation in Montana. For ten years he was an interviewer on KGNU, community radio in Boulder, Colorado. Since 1989 he has presented his one-person theatre pieces, "Walking Lightly…A Portrait of Einstein," and "Einstein and Niels Bohr… A Fairy Tale" for audiences ranging from middle school students to a conference of Plasma Physicists. In 2012, instead of his usual solo presentation, he directed the Einstein/Bohr Fairy Tale with a cast of eight grandmothers. In October of 2015 a documentary of the making of that production was awarded the Best International Film Prize at the Sunrise International Film Festival in Pugwash, Nova Scotia.

Natalie Weder - Treasurer

Job Titles:
  • Director
  • Member of the Board
  • Treasurer
Natalie is driven to address the environmental and social crises we are facing, and believes community empowerment is vital in this aim. In an effort to connect people to planet, she has led student clubs devoted to getting youth outside and acting against climate change. With a BSc in biology from Acadia University, she now works as a research scientist at a biotech company producing renewable omega-3 supplements. She enjoys living among Nova Scotia's close-knit towns, but also draws from her experience growing up in Haida Gwaii, BC, to envision resilient and vibrant communities. She spends her free time hiking, watching birds, and growing vegetables.

Phil Ferraro

Job Titles:
  • Director
  • Member of the Board
Phil Ferraro, is on the board of directors for the Centre for Local Prosperity and on the advisory board of Gifts from the Heart Inc. His mentors included social theorist Murray Bookchin, environmental scientist Dr. John Todd and Samuel Kaymen, Founder of the Natural Organic Farmers Association (currently Northeast Organic Farming Association); The Rural Education Center, and Stonyfield Farm Inc. Phil's master's degree in Social Ecology included a thesis on creating food and energy self-reliance in northern climates with studies in renewable energy, organic agriculture, community development, and social responsibility. He is also an early pioneer of permaculture design; having received his accreditation in 1995. In the early 90's Phil introduced a series of environmental education courses at the University of Prince Edward Island which led to his co-founding The Institute for Bioregional Studies Ltd. (IBS) in 1995. From 1999 - 2016, IBS has managed a series of far-reaching programs on behalf of the PEI ADAPT Council, Agriculture Canada and Bioenterprise Inc., helping agriculture and agri-food producers respond to emerging issues and develop new ways of doing business.

Regan Rosberg

Job Titles:
  • Environmental Artist
Regan Rosburg (b. 1977) is an interdisciplinary artist who weaves together science, psychology, history, and social engagement. With a passion for studying various ecosystems and biota, her work investigates not only the exquisite intelligence of ecology, but also the causes and ramifications of over-consumption. She is represented by William Havu Gallery (Denver, CO), and teaches at the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design. She is the artistic director of Cayo Artist Residency in Eleuthera (Bahamas). In 2020 she published The Church of Water: A Portrait of the Arctic, a collection of images from her 2019 Arctic Circle Residency expedition. She outlines the scientific research that went into planning her trip, as well as the insights she had about plastic pollution, overconsumption, beauty and time.

Regan Rosburg

Job Titles:
  • Artist

Robert Cervelli

Job Titles:
  • Executive Director

Sarah Ravlic

Job Titles:
  • Social Planner
Sarah is an accomplished social planner and consultation specialist with experience supporting local governments to address issues of equity and inclusion across the social determinants of health. Sarah brings more than six years of experience in the planning field and her previous work includes supporting local government staff and elected officials to integrate an equity lens into engagement processes as well as policy and plan development. Sarah's recent work has focused on housing access and affordability and working with individuals with lived experience of homelessness and housing insecurity. She has Art of Hosting and San'yas Indigenous Cultural Safety training, the Government of Canada Gender-Based Analysis Plus training and completed her Master of Planning at Dalhousie University.

Susan Witt

Job Titles:
  • Executive Director of the Schumacher Center for a New Economics
  • Executive Director, Schumacher Center for a New Economics
Susan is the Executive Director of the Schumacher Center for a New Economics, heir to the legacy programs of the E.F.Schumacher Society. She led the development of the Schumacher Center's highly regarded lecture, publication, conference, seminar, and library programs. These programs established the Schumacher Center as a pioneering voice for a new economy shaped by social and ecological principles. Over the past 35 years, Susan has maintained a deep commitment to implementing projects for the commons, such as land trusts, micro-lending and local currency initiatives. While deeply engaged with the history and theory of a new economy and its implications for the transformation of our relationship to land, labor, and capital, Susan Witt has simultaneously worked to place theory into practice in her home region of the Berkshires, with projects such as community land trusts, local currencies and community supported industry.

Tracy Marshall

Job Titles:
  • Director
  • Member of the Board
Tracy Marshall is from Potlotek First Nation. She is an active member of CEPI Youth, and currently the Youth Coordinator for CEPI. She sits on the Bras d'Or Lakes Biosphere Reserve Association Board of Directors as the youth representative. As a child, she started to learn about melting "ice caps" and was concerned for polar bears, and ever since haven't stopped being an activist for the environment. Not knowing where to start, she just stopped littering and encouraging friends and family not to as well. The rest was a ripple effect from that moment on. Tracy was a co-organizer of the CLP 2019 Youth Retreat, a Thinker in the May-June 2020 retreat and a trusted advisor. She is working with CLP to collate written transcripts of Elder Albert Marshall's teachings. Tracy is in the Bachelor of Arts and Science in Environment program at Cape Breton University.

Wendy Keats

Job Titles:
  • Executive Director, Co
Wendy Keats, Executive Director, Co-operative Enterprise Council of New Brunswick Wendy has worked in community economic development for nearly 40 years. She helped found CECNB in 2007-she was so excited by the prospect of building strong economies in NB through co-op and social enterprise that she gave up her private consulting practice to become CECNB's first Executive Director.