Black Leadership and Governance Project
Taking our seat at the table
TAIBU Community Health Centre, in partnership with University of Toronto Scarborough, East Scarborough Boys and Girls Club, and Alpha Alpha Delta Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., have devised a method of dismantling Anti- Black Racist barriers hindering the participation of Black Canadians at imperative decision-making tables. To that end the B.G.L.P. has created a Black focused curriculum for a Governance and Leadership Project, funded by the City of Toronto.
The main components of the Black Governance & Leadership Project include:
- Build the Capacity of Black led grassroots and emerging groups across Toronto on governance as a way of ensuring sustainability and community impact.
- Train and mentor individual members from the Black community and match them to opportunities of governance position with the objective of increase the participation of Black Torontonians on board and committees of health and social services providing agencies and organizations.
- Engage mainstream organizations in building their capacity of Anti-Black Racism awareness and moving from tokenistic approach of having racialized and marginalized voices on their governance and leadership position to a finding ways of changing process and power dynamics towards ensuring equitable representation to the benefit of the organization and the communities served. It also assists mainstream organization in developing an effective recruitment strategy to reach to Black and other racialized communities.
Before the advent of COVID-19 we had a scheduled event to bring Phase III of BGLP to the Toronto Board of Health. We were also in the planning stages to work with the Boards of Scarborough’s Anchor Institutions – Scarborough Health Network, University of Toronto Scarborough, Centennial College, Toronto Zoo.
BGLP is part of TAIBU’s strategic direction and operational plan to bring about systems change.
Working Together:
Addressing anti-Black racism and health inequities in Ontario
In 2018, TAIBU Community Health Centre released a position paper that examined the unique health challenges faced by Black Ontarians.
Rooted in anti-Black racism, they called on the province to take action to directly address the health outcomes of this population.
Allocate funding to develop a Health and Well-being Strategy
Systematically collect and publicly report raced-based data
Invest in Black community-based service providers and charitable organizations working to improve health outcomes
Develop a comprehensive strategy to eliminate anti-Black racism in the delivery of healthcare and social services
In the News
Sharing our vision, views and voice to issues that matter
TAIBU, the Black Health Leaders Committee and the Alliance have been working together across the province to address the deleterious impact systemic discrimination and marginalization have had on the health and well-being of Black people.
June 5, 2020
TAIBU Addressing Anti-Black Racism in Ontario
June 5, 2020
Toronto Board Health’s responds to TAIBU’s letter
June 3, 2020
Anti-Black Racism impacts health and as healthcare organizations we must act now
June 2, 2020
Statement from Black health leaders:
Anti-Black Racism is a Public Health Crisis
April 22, 2020
Letter to Premier Ford, Deputy Premier Elliott and Dr. Williams regarding the need to collect and use socio-demographic and race-based data
April 15, 2020
Statement from Black Health Leaders on COVID-19’s impact on Black Communities in Ontario
April 15, 2020
Black Health Leaders Respond to CMOH
March 2, 2020
Black Mental Health Day