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The 2025 Summit for Creative Community Solutions will take place May 8, 2025.

The location of the Summit is on Wilfrid Laurier University's Brantford campus in the Research and Academic Centre, 150 Dalhousie, Brantford ON, N3T 2J4. 

Schedule

[Schedule will be updated as needed.]

8:30-9:00 a.m. | Location: RCW Lobby

9:00-9:50 a.m. | Room: RCW002

10:00-11:00 a.m. Session 1: Panels

  • Sustainable Entrepreneurship: Turning Challenges into Opportunities | Room: RCE004
  • From Pixels to People: Harnessing Digital Tools for Real-World Change | Room: RCW202
  • Just Transitions: Sustainability, Reconciliation, and Community Resilience | Room: RCW002
  • Community Connections through Experiential Learning | Room: RCW203
  • BioAdaptive Interface Lab Showrun and Info Session | Location: RCW lobby

11:00-11:10 a.m. BREAK

11:10-11:40 am Location: RCW002

11:40 a.m. to 12:40 p.m. LUNCH (Music by Noah Abrahamse) | Location: RCW lobby

  • Tour: Sustainability at Brantford Campus | Location: RCW lobby

12:40-1:40 p.m.  Session 2: Panels

  • Storytelling for Change: Crafting Narratives that Connect and Inspire| Room: RCW002
  • Building Inclusive Communities: Housing, Culture, and Advocacy for a Better Tomorrow | Room: RCW202
  • Respect, Resilience, & Gratitude – Where Art, Science, Local and Indigenous Knowledge Intersect | Room: RCE319
  • Bridging Movements and Ideas: Empowering Change through Advocacy, Education, and Dialogue | Room: RCW203
  • BioAdaptive Interface Lab Showrun and Info Session | Location: RCW lobby

1:40-1:50 p.m. BREAK

1:50-2:50 p.m. Session 3: Panels

  • The Ripple Effect of Authentic Self-Expression | Room: RCW002
  • Dancing the Bridge: Navigating the Gap through Dance | Room: RCE004
  • Bridging Gaps, Building Belonging: Identity, Mental Health, and Education | Room: RCW202
  • Inspired community, Real impact | Room: RCW203

2:50-3:00 p.m. BREAK

3:00-3:45 p.m. | Room: RCE004

7:00 p.m.  POST-EVENT PARTY: QUEERAOKE hosted by Queer Joy | Location: Hudson Public, 93 Dalhousie St. 

 

Session Details

Keynot: Lucy Marco, Creating a Community for a Lifetime

Session 1: Panels

Sustainable Entrepreneurship: Turning Challenges into Opportunities

This panel brings together business‑sustainability experts who will reveal how companies are embedding accessible, planet‑friendly practices—from hyper‑local initiatives to nation‑wide programs. You’ll hear candid stories about the hurdles organizations face, discover inventive solutions already in play, and leave with practical tips to boost your own sustainability efforts.

Moderator: Eric Meliton, Manager of Sustainability Office

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From Pixels to People: Harnessing Digital Tools for Real-World Change

This panel explores how games and immersive technologies can foster community care, enhance mental health support, and promote cognitive well-being. Featuring professors Sandra Danilovic, Jennifer Lavoie, and John E. Muñoz, this panel highlights creative, research-driven projects—from game jams that address health inequities, to virtual reality training for police in mental health crisis response, to games designed to support older adults with and without cognitive decline. Open to the public, this conversation invites the community to discover how digital tools can be powerful agents of empathy, connection, and social impact.

Moderator: Johnny Kung, Manager of Research Partnerships, Wilfrid Laurier University

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Just Transitions: Sustainability, Reconciliation, and Community Resilience

This panel spotlights just transitions across sustainability, reconciliation, and community resilience. Alex Latta, Margaret Ireland, and Tthets’éhk’edélı First Nation present an adaptation strategy reconnecting settlers, Dene teachings, and Mother Earth. Bryce Gunson reveals how structural inequities magnify rural Ontario’s climate vulnerabilities and outlines “just resilience” for fair adaptation. Bryan Gilvesy showcases a farmer‑delivered, nature‑based program that turns rural economies into environmental solution providers, creating significant local ecological, cultural, social, and economic lasting gains for collective land, people, and future generations.

Moderator: Melody Morton Ninomiya, Canada Research Chair and Associate Professor Department of Health Sciences

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Community Connections through Experiential Learning

The Community & Workplace Partnerships panel discussion will highlight some of our community partnerships and student placements that relate to the event themes of community connections and integration. In this panel we will showcase partners and students from the new Interdisciplinary Experiential Learning course at Laurier. Through these experiences, students connect with the community, link theory to practice, and help partners with their goals and to address challenges. Highlighting this new course and some of its partnerships, we hope to inspire continued collaboration and celebrate what students and community are doing together for mutual benefit.

Moderator: Sara Darling, Coordinator, Community Service-Learning, Wilfrid Laurier University

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Keynote: Rita-Marie Hadley, Leveraging Accessibility to Build Connections

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Session 2 Panels

Storytelling for Change: Crafting Narratives that Connect and Inspire

This panel brings together writers and creatives who explore the power of storytelling and poetry to drive meaningful connections and inspire change in both business and environmental contexts. Alison Fishburn will discuss how businesses can use narrative techniques to build brand identity, engage audiences, and simplify complex ideas. Lishai Peel will share her expertise in the arts and culture sector, focusing on the role of storytelling in organizational leadership. Finally, Jaclyn Desforges will examine how community poemmaking can serve as a site for climate revolution, exploring how poetry can transform our relationships with the natural world. Together, these speakers will demonstrate the transformative potential of stories in shaping our communities and businesses.

Moderator: Kathryn Carter, Full Professor of English and Interim Co-ordinator of User Experience Design and Creator of the Game Design and Development Program

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Building Inclusive Communities: Housing, Culture, and Advocacy for a Better Tomorrow

This panel addresses critical community issues that intersect housing, culture, and social advocacy in Brantford and Brant County. Katie MacDonald and Nicole Callander will discuss the urgent need for sustainable, supportive housing solutions for individuals with disabilities, highlighting their collaborative efforts to create inclusive, community-integrated housing options. This is followed by Wiktor Kulinski’s strategic analysis of the 2024 Culture Basic Survey, which provides valuable insights into the state of arts, culture, and heritage in the region, guiding future cultural policy and investment. Finally, Tara Buchanan, along with the team from The Bridge Brant, will share their journey of advocating for the 2sLGBTQ+ community, from grassroots beginnings to fostering self-sustaining organizations such as Worqshop and Brantford Pride. Together, the panel offers a comprehensive exploration of community-driven solutions to address housing disparities, cultural development, and social inclusion.

Moderator: Laura Almeida, Project Coordinator Social Development and Policy, City of Brantford

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Respect, Resilience, & Gratitude – Where Art, Science, Local and Indigenous Knowledge Intersect

 

Moderator: Peter Smith, Founder and Creative Director of Canadian Centre for Rural Creativity

 

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Bridging Movements and Ideas: Empowering Change through Advocacy, Education, and Dialogue

This panel explores the intersection of grassroots social movements, free speech, and educational empowerment through a series of thought-provoking presentations. Stuart Schussler will discuss the challenges and strategies of connecting students with dynamic grassroots organizations at the forefront of social change, highlighting the importance of building trust and capacity. Tamara and Leanne Laur will present Power of the V: Sisters Rising Together, a youth-led initiative that empowers young people through intergenerational mentorship, using mindfulness and leadership development to foster resilience. Finally, Holly Gibbs will introduce the principles of Universal Design for Learning (UDL), focusing on how inclusive teaching practices can reduce barriers to learning and create more accessible, equitable educational environments. Together, these presentations offer valuable insights into how advocacy, education, and respectful dialogue can drive social change and build stronger communities.

Moderator: 

 

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BioAdaptive Interface Lab, Showrun

Come and visit the demos preapred by this group of research scientistis in User Experience Design conducting research the intersection of human physiology and digital interaction, exploring how our bodies and minds connect with technology to create more immersive, responsive, and impactful experiences. We will have virtual reality games, wearable sensors and fun demos to try. 

 

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Session 3 Panels

The Ripple Effect of Authentic Self-Expression 

The power of seeing someone be unapologetically Queer and celebrate their identity, gives others the freedom to do the same. This goes for anyone on the 2SLBTQ+ spectrum, questioning folks and allies.
Queer-centered spaces and events, show that it’s not only ok to be different, it’s encouraged. Safe and celebratory spaces can promote authentic self-expression for everyone involved, leading to a large ripple effect across an entire city and beyond. This panel will feature three 2SLGBTQ+ community organizations: Brant Pride, Fruit Salad and Queer Joy Events. They will speak to why they started their organization, who inspired them and what their events do to promote authentic self-expression.

Moderator: Reba Joy, Founder of Queer Joy

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Dancing the Bridge: Navigating the Gap through Dance

This panel brings together presentations by three different Brantford-based professional dance artists- Paromita Kar, Sumedha Mongia and Pooja Sathe-Kulkarni. These three artists have navigated sustainability in their professional dance careers through various navigational strategies- from  traversing Middle Eastern and Central Asian dance forms to exploring various dance idioms within the South Asian mosaic of dances as well as community-based work through dance, to finding guidance and support from Ontario’s dance community and maintaining practice in the traditions of classical Indian dance forms. Each of these artists have a distinctive and unique journey through their dance careers in Ontario as  first generation immigrants to Canada, and in this panel, they share some of the pathways they have taken in order to achieve sustainability in the professional creative arts industry.

Moderator:

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Bridging Gaps, Building Belonging: Identity, Mental Health, and Education

This panel explores the intersection of identity, mental health, and community support through collaborative approaches in addressing the needs of diverse populations. Presenters will discuss tailored mental health strategies, community-based research, and inclusive programming aimed at improving the lives of marginalized groups in Canada. Topics include mental health support for Afghan newcomers, the partnership between academic and community organizations to support pregnant and parenting youth, and the role of research in shaping community wellness programs.

Moderator: James Popham, Chair of the Criminology Program, Laurier Brantford

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Inspired community, Real impact

 

Since its launch in 1999, Laurier’s Brantford campus has transformed from a university initiative aimed at increasing accessibility to a vibrant, integral part of the community. Over the past 25 years, Laurier has become an anchor institution, driving downtown revitalization and creating opportunities that benefit not only students and faculty but the broader community. The Inspired Community, Real Impact report showcases how the university has positively impacted Brantford through accessible infrastructure, spaces, careers, and programming.

This panel will feature highlights from the report, followed by a discussion with three groups that have benefited from collaborations with Laurier’s campus resources, including the podcast studio, LaunchPad/StartUp Lab, and faculty researchers. The session will explore the university’s role in fostering community growth and providing resources that support innovation and development.

Moderator: Beth Gurney, Laurier Communications & Community Engagement

 

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Keynote: Alexis Buettgen, Inclusive and Sustainable Economic Development: Challenges and Opportunities for Equity-based Co-creation 

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Performances

Sustainability at Laurier Brantford Tour

Efforts are underway to shape Laurier into an institution that seamlessly incorporates sustainability across all facets of university life. Our goal is to motivate, educate, and empower our community to participate in initiatives that pave the way for a sustainable future. With an established 2023-2028 Sustainability Action Plan for Laurier, the Summit tour is positioned to provide participants with highlights of what has been established at Brantford campus and what may be coming next in 2025-26.

Tour Stops:

  • Sustainable Hawk Fund featured projects
    • Laurier Apiaries
    • Cut the Crap
    • Nurture Pak
  • Breakfast Bar (Wellness Education & Dean of Students)
  • Freestore (Dean of Students)
  • Research and Academic Centre LEED Silver features
  • Indigenous Student Centre garden site

 

Eric Meliton

Eric Meliton s a thought leader and industry conduit with over 20 years of strategic experience, which includes analyzing cleantech trends, execution of sustainability-themed objectives, and strengthening of stakeholder and governmental relationships. He has worked in the water industry for over 18 years in roles focused on public private partnerships, strategic decision-making, manufacturing best practices, and operational efficiency. Eric’s role at Laurier is to provide sustainability leadership in a collaborative, multi-campus environment in Brantford, Kitchener, Milton, and Waterloo.

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