Innovation and Technology Showcase Returns to Fleming College April 5

Creativity, dedication and teamwork will be on full display at the Venture North building during the annual Fleming College Innovation and Technology Showcase on April 5.

photo courtesy of flemng college.

A highlight of the academic year, this event is a chance for Fleming College’s Global Business Management students to present the applied projects they have been working on. 

Twenty teams comprised of 73 students are competing in this year’s challenge with a wide array of projects.

Some projects paired students with established, external organizations. A team working with a local non-profit organization helped that organization connect with community members and increase memberships, while another team paired with a Toronto office furniture company created a marketing plan to attract new clients.  

Other projects include the creation of a parking app to help market unused parking spaces on private and commercial properties, where another project focused on identifying environmentally friendly ways to handle industrial waste.  

After an initial round of judging on April 5, 10 teams will go on to the finals taking place at Fleming College’s Sutherland Campus on May 10. Student teams are eligible for cash prizes which are sponsored by IEEE.

Other sponsors for the Innovation and Technology Showcase include Community Futures Peterborough, Peterborough and the Kawarthas Economic Development, Ashburnham Realty, Peterborough and the Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce and the Innovation Cluster.  

The showcase is open to the public from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

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Hometown PTBO: Jeremy Poulin Getting Sticky With Red Mill Maple Syrup In Millbrook and His Favourite Uses of the Canadian Delicacy

This week on Hometown PTBO, Pete Dalliday talks with Jeremy Poulin of Red Mill Maple Syrup about growing up in Millbrook, the Maple Syrup business and his favourite uses of the Canadian delicacy.

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Voice of Business: We Are All Ambassadors For Our Region and We Have a Lot to Showcase

The summer season will soon be upon us and it’s going to be a pivotal year for the tourism industry.

It’s an understatement to say the last three years have been especially challenging for the tourism sector. It’s not just the public health restrictions and shut downs that we went through — tourism, and the service and hospitality sectors more broadly, are facing some of the biggest hurdles in hiring and retaining their workforce. This is especially difficult in rural areas where there is little local workforce to draw from.

According to the State of the Ontario Tourism Industry Report from the Ontario Chamber of Commerce and Tourism Industry Association of Ontario, issues including access to labour, soaring debt, rural internet challenges, and a lack of public transportation connecting destinations have led to only four in 10 tourism operators forecasting profitability in 2024.

While this paints a bleak picture of the industry, our region has so much to offer. For the outdoorsy, we have a collection of beautiful lakes, rivers, and hiking trails that are the envy of many places across Canada and beyond. Downtown Peterborough offers a collection of culinary and cultural activities that punch well above our weight. Those looking to spend a few nights can choose between big hotels with all the amenities or quaint boutique hotels, resorts that are bustling with activity or secluded and serene, lakefront cottages, bed and breakfasts, or bring your own lodging with a camper or tent.

One particular gem that’s returning bigger and better is Peterborough Musicfest. Where else can you find a summer-long free concert series that has hosted the likes of Randy Bachman, Tegan and Sara, and Walk Off the Earth? Musicfest has a local economic impact of $5 million and brings in an audience of 150,000 over the summer. It’s a long-running hit with locals, but more than 1/3 of attendees report being from out-of-town.

It's not just big names and big crowds — it’s uniquely Peterborough. It’s right on the shores of Little Lake, the beautiful gathering place at the end of the rapids known as Nogojiwanong. It’s also in the heart of our city, just a few blocks from our vibrant downtown restaurant and shopping experience and close enough to inhale the sweet smell of oatmeal from Quaker. As a free music festival that aims big, it’s supported by our community through corporate sponsorships from local businesses, government grants, community fundraising initiatives, and private donations.

The 2023 Peterborough Musicfest Lineup has yet to be announced, but the team have already spilled the beans on two acts: Dwayne Gretzky on July 5 and Little River Band on July 26.

Our region has a many more activities that enhance our tourism sector. 4th Line Theatre is running two shows at their beautiful rural location near Millbrook. We have top-notch entertainment venues at Market Hall, Showplace Performance Centre, and the Peterborough Memorial Centre. You can immerse yourself in history at Lang Pioneer Village, Petroglyphs Provincial Park, Peterborough Museum & Archives and soon at a beautiful brand new Canadian Canoe Museum. We have beaches, wineries, breweries, distilleries, agricultural fairs, unique shopping experiences, art galleries, golf courses, agritourism, river cruises, and much more. Peterborough and the Kawarthas Tourism has a host of suggestions for things to enjoy here in our region.

We have so much to offer here in Peterborough and the Kawarthas. Let’s be intentional in investing here in our community when it comes to enjoying and promoting local. Tourism campaigns aren’t just something for marketing agencies — it’s something we can all do when talking with family, friends, colleagues, and our social media connections. We are all ambassadors for Peterborough and the Kawarthas and we have a lot to showcase.

Content provided by the Peterborough and the Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce.

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PKHBA Announces Finalists For the 2022 Home Building Awards

Peterborough and the Kawarthas Home Builders Association (PKHBA) has announced the finalists of the 20th Annual Housing Design Awards for the 2022 season with winners to be announced in a gala at The Venue on April 27.

PHOTO COURTESY OF PETERBOROUGH AND THE KAWARTHAS HOME BUILDERS ASSOCIATION.

Finalists were chosen in over 30 different categories with nearly 100 entries from local businesses from across Peterborough and Kawartha Lakes.

PKHBA members submitted their entries which were judged earlier this month and have announced the following as finalists:

  • ACM Designs

  • Birchview Design

  • Bromont Homes

  • Cabinetree

  • Dietrich Homes

  • Discovery Dream Homes

  • Flato Developments

  • Gilbert + Burke Associates

  • Greenleaf/Cor-Plan

  • Habitat for Humanity

  • Hickory Lane Kitchens

  • Kawartha Lakes Construction

  • Linwood Custom Homes

  • Monaghan Lumber

  • Parkview Homes

  • Peterborough Homes

  • Pristine Homes

  • Reliance Home Comfort

  • Spotlight Home & Lifestyle

  • Timberline Custom Homes

  • Trademark Homes

The categories of the finalists are revealed at the Awards Gala.

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StoosNews Spotlight: Check Out The Business Beat This Week Featuring NAKA, Spray Net, Dançe Nouveau and Countdown Creative

PTBOCanada is delighted to be running StoosNews columns each week here, spotlighting new businesses and startups in Peterborough and the Kawarthas. Here is this week’s edition…

Susan Tung, the owner of the former Hanoi House on Hunter street has, like many in the restaurant business, seen some severe ups and downs over the last three years, but also like many, Susan has bounced back with the recent opening of her new restaurant Naka Japanese.

Located in the same space at 213 Hunter St., Naka Japanese serves ramen, fried chicken, fresh oysters, vegetarian options, delicious appetizers, as well as cocktails and beer. Hanoi House continues to operate from its location at 1440 Lansdowne St.

Jason Rutherford started his own Spray-Net franchise a couple of years ago. Spray Net is a unique system that customizes the paint to your specific surface.

Jason recently introduced another innovative spray-on coating for shingles that acts as a powerful adhesive that glues and locks the granules on your shingles firmly in place and prolongs the life of your shingles with a breathable waterproof seal. For details visit spray-net.com or call Jason at 705-957-8813.

Dance Nouveau owner Lindsay Storms describes herself as an old soul in a new studio.

Operating out of Beverly Browns Studio 505 at 505 Sherbrooke St., Dance Nouveau offers jazz, ballet, contemporary and modern, CANdance, intro to dance and more. Lindsay combines her own extensive experience with an equally qualified group of instructors, including Beverley Brown-Chislett, Leah Wakelin, Nicole Quinlan and Amy Strizic. For complete details visit dance-nouveau.com.

Lucas Graham utilized the Starter Company program to plan and launch his own specialized digital agency here in Peterborough.

Countdown Creative specializes in Not For Profit organizations and sustainable small businesses, offering web design and development, email marketing, social media management, and content writing and blogging. If you haven’t yet incorporated a robust digital strategy into your non-profit or small business, check out countdowncreative.agency

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Voice of Business: Ontario Budget Must Focus on Business Predictability and Growth

Ontario needs to foster an environment that supports longer-term, sustainable economic growth.

That’s the message the Ontario Chamber of Commerce (OCC) is sending to the provincial government with its 2023 budget submission.

The recent Ontario Economic Report (OER) showed Ontario business confidence has dropped to a record low in 2023. Driving that are labour shortages, inflation, healthcare system vulnerabilities, and fears of a potential economic slowdown.

“We know from the OCC’s 2023 OER that many small businesses would like to see public policies that support their immediate financial and operational needs, while large businesses are more interested in broader workforce development and health care challenges,” said Rocco Rossi, President and CEO of the OCC. “What we are looking for in Budget 2023 are measures that support greater productivity and long-term, sustainable economic growth. That means we want to see the government continue to prioritize growth-enabling investments to address labour shortages, the health care crisis, and infrastructure deficits, and modernize regulations and government services in the year ahead.”

The budget submission groups recommendations to the Government of Ontario under the following categories: Sustainable Growth, Complete Communities, and Modernization.

Some key proposals include:

  • Fostering an inclusive workforce and addressing labour market challenges by supporting innovative training and education models, boosting immigration, making regional immigration pilots permanent, continuing to remove barriers to labour mobility and foreign credential recognition, and adopting supplier diversity programs to create opportunities for entrepreneurs and businesses that support diversity and inclusion.

  • Strengthening health system capacity and resilience by continuing to tackle the health human resources crisis, combating growing rates of mental health and addictions challenges, supporting the aging population, and continuing to address the backlog of surgeries and routine immunizations, as well as deferred cancer treatments, diagnostics, and procedures.

  • Investing in growth-enabling infrastructure by continuing to accelerate broadband rollout across the province, building affordable housing and complete communities, expanding regional transportation connectivity, and investing in energy generation, transmission, and distribution infrastructure to support long-term growth and resiliency.

  • Modernizing government services and regulations by building an integrated health data system, bolstering interprovincial trade, improving supply chain infrastructure and public sector procurement processes, and lowering administrative burdens on business.

The recommendations outlined in the OCC’s budget submission were developed with businesses, associations, post-secondary institutions, and chambers of commerce and boards of trade from across the province. See the full submission here.

Ontario's business community needs a clear and predictable path forward to support economic recovery and growth. We want to see the government direct sufficient resources towards the hardest-hit sectors, while laying the groundwork for a sustainable and inclusive economy.

Content provided by the Peterborough and the Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce.

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StoosNews Spotlight: Check Out The Business Beat This Week Featuring Gaia's Greens, Bean's Books, Seniors Showcase and PKED

PTBOCanada is delighted to be running StoosNews columns each week here, spotlighting new businesses and startups in Peterborough and the Kawarthas. Here is this week’s edition…

Laura Dempsey has launched a new grow-to-order microgreens farm, offering weekly pickups at two locations in Peterborough and Lakefield.

Gaia's Greens Family Farm is a small, ‘direct to community’ farm. Microgreens are up to 40 times more nutrient-dense than mature greens like Broccoli, offering a healthy addition to virtually every single meal. Get more details at gaiasgreens.ca.

Pamela Cole has started her own small business called Bean’s Books, specializing in children’s educational literature.

She just published her first workbook and first kid’s book on Amazon. The workbook is all about the alphabet, teaching kids how to write both upper and lowercase, recognize letters through matching, fill-in-the-blank activities, and colouring pages. The children’s book is an interactive story that takes place at the farmer’s market. Find her at Bean’s Books on Facebook.

Seniors Showcase is back in person this year on June 21 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Peterborough Sport and Wellness Centre at 775 Brealey Dr.

This annual event brings together more than 100 exhibitors that offer products and services for an actively aging demographic — all under one roof. The show offers free workshops for seniors and their families all day, making it a one-stop shop for products, services, and education. Go to pkchamber.ca for more details or to book an exhibitor booth.

Summer is closer than it appears which means it’s time for young people to start thinking about starting their own business with the help of Summer Company program run by Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development’s Business Advisory Centre.

The program helps youth aged 15 to 29 try their hand at business ownership by providing up to $3,000 in start-up funding, one-on-one guidance from business advisors, mentorship from local business leaders, access to business workshops, training and resources and ongoing business support. The deadline for applications is May 15. Check it out at investptbo.ca.

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Voice of Business: The Government Needs to Re-evaluate the Repayment Terms of the CEBA Program

Loans and grants were a lifeline for businesses three years ago when the pandemic hit. Now, the path to repayment is proving challenging.

Many businesses borrowed from anywhere they could — banks, credit unions, the government, family, and personal finances — as rain day funds weren’t deep enough to deal with years of public health restrictions.

One program in particular offered tangible help early on in the pandemic — the Canada Emergency Business Account (CEBA), which offered a total of $60,000 in interest-free loans for small businesses and not-for-profits with up to $20,000 eligible for loan forgiveness.

In 2021, the Peterborough and the Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce had its policy resolution “CEBA Loan Forgiveness For Hardest Hit Businesses” endorsed by chambers and boards of trade from across Canada. We pushed for at least a two-year deadline extension, keeping the forgivable portion available to all businesses that continue to have operations impacted by ongoing COVID-19 public health restrictions, and allowing businesses that continue to have operations impacted to be exempt from incurring interest prior to the balance of their loan being due. Otherwise, those businesses hit the hardest would get the least out of the program (interest on their loans and no forgivable portion) while putting the government in the awkward position of having to collect from the very businesses it pledged to support with this measure.

In January 2022, the federal government extended the deadline by one year. That means businesses will be expected to pay back two-thirds of their loan by Dec.31, 2023 or they will become ineligible to get a portion of their loan forgiven and begin to accrue interest at 5% before coming due December 31, 2025.

A recent CBC article titled “Only a fraction of CEBA loans have been repaid as businesses call for deadline extension” claims only 13% of the 900,000 businesses have repaid their loan in full. In total, $5.7 billion has been repaid of the more than $49 billion in loans issued.

A lot has changed since those initial loans were issued in 2020. The optimists among us figured we would be through the worst of the pandemic and its public health restrictions in a matter of weeks or months. Three years later and we finally seem to be through the worst of it but have been hit with continued supply chain and labour bottlenecks and challenges, the highest inflation in a generation, soaring interest rates, and the looming threat of a recession.

Given all that has unfolded, our 2021 policy resolution may not have gone far enough.

We do need to encourage those who have come through the last three years in decent financial shape to pay back their loans. There are more than $43 billion in outstanding CEBA loans out there and it’s to the benefit of all taxpayers that those who are able to repay it do so. And this program is just one part of the massive, multi-government spending program that helped people, businesses, and non-profits make it through an unprecedented global crisis. Our governments have accrued massive amounts of debt and we need to do what we can to pay back what is owed.

But we need to set criteria to support those hit the hardest. The result of the current design of the program is that the most vulnerable businesses will also get the least benefit from it, resulting in significant interest incurred and the requirement to pay back 100 per cent of the principal — dragging out their recovery even longer.

This government has acknowledged the disproportionate impact on social demographics including women, ethnic and racial minorities, and First Nations. A larger number of people in these demographics depend on the hardest-hit businesses for employment and those who own businesses tend to have less financial backing to weather a financial crisis like COVID-19. The hardest hit business sectors include food service, hospitality, tourism, arts and entertainment, retail, and personal service. Many faced the most significant public health restrictions, were least likely to have access to capital, and continue to bear the brunt of our workforce shortage.

Adding to this struggle is the mental health crisis many business owners are facing. Prolonged social restrictions, struggle to repay debt, and a less optimistic recovery are weighing heavily on many people who have invested significant time and money into their businesses.

The federal government needs to re-evaluate the repayment terms of the CEBA program. Businesses hardest hit over the last three years require a longer interest-free loan period and a larger debt forgiveness program.

Content provided by the Peterborough and the Kawarthas Chamber of Commerce.

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Peterborough and the Kawarthas Home Builders Association Celebrated at National Conference

Peterborough and the Kawarthas Home Builders Association (PKHBA) announces that past president Garnet Northey has been named to the executive board of the Canadian Home Builders Association, and PKHBA member Trademark Homes has won a nationally renowned award at this years Home Building Week in Canada Conference.

photo courtesy of Peterborough and the Kawarthas Home Builders Association.

During the conference, members from across the nation submitted their best work of 2022 for judging. Winners in over 50 categories were announced at the conference in Banff, AB last month.

One of PKHBA members, Trademark Homes, won the National Award of Housing Excellence for best custom home over 5,000 square feet for their project on Balsam Lake in the City of Kawartha Lakes. Trademark Homes has been a member of PKHBA since 2022 and continues to provide residents of the Peterborough and Kawartha Lakes with outstanding service in their field.

Past president of PKHBA and owner of Spotlight Home & Lifestyle Inc. Garnet Northey was named as the new treasure for CHBA at this same conference.

“This association is really a grassroots association. I’m from Peterborough, a little town in Ontario, very involved provincially and now nationally,” said Northey. “It’s a learning experience but it really allows me to get a good cross sectional matrix of all of our members at all levels so that I can represent our members properly at the province and now at nationals. So, I'm really looking forward to it and continuing to serve in this capacity.”

For more information on what PKHBA learned and presented at the national conference, contact Rebecca via email.

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StoosNews Spotlight: Check Out The Business Beat This Week Featuring Maker Space, SPARK, ONE Salon Suites and Bhojan

PTBOCanada is delighted to be running StoosNews columns each week here, spotlighting new businesses and startups in Peterborough and the Kawarthas. Here is this week’s edition…

As of March 10, Artspace has its new Maker Space open to the public.

The space will be open on Fridays and Saturdays for artist drop-in hours from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Artists, makers, and community members are encouraged to stop by, bring their own work and/or use the equipment and materials available. Everyone will receive a short orientation before gaining access to equipment. Find out more at artspaceptbo.ca or drop by Artspace at 378 Aylmer St. N.

Peterborough’s annual celebration of photography, SPARK Photo Festival, is back this April with the voices and vision of more than 90 participating photographers.

Spark is a month-long festival of artists displaying their art in venues across the region, both in traditional galleries and in some surprising spaces, such as shops, offices, cafés, restaurants, schools and even outdoors, for the enjoyment of the community. Get a sneak peek at the kick-off pub night and pop-up sale event on March 29 at The Publican House Brew Pub. Find more information and get tickets to the launch event at sparkphotofestival.org.

Dianna Cairns and Ashley Hunter are bringing their ONE Salon Suites to Peterborough following the success of their first location in Kingston.

ONE Salon Suites is a Beauty & Wellness Gallery that brings together independent beauty professionals under one roof. You get to operate your own personalized suite while benefiting from a collaborative community of experts in the industry. They have 25 suites that range in price and size at 950 Lansdowne St. W.(behind Walmart, facing The Parkway). Check them out at onesalonsuites.com.

You’ll be seeing double heading down George Street these days as a family have opened two new business across from each other and both called Bhojan.

One side of the street is an Indian restaurant and the other side is a grocery store. They specialize in vegan and gluten-free food. The authentic Indian cuisine restaurant is located at 427 George St. N. while the grocery store featuring food from across India is located at 428 George Street N.

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