Our Extended Team

Evenings & Weekends Consulting extended team members have hands-on experience working within, and leading, an array of community and nonprofit organizations. ​We’ll match you with the strategists whose experience best aligns with your project’s needs.

  • Am Johal, he/him

    Coach

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    Am has previously been Director of SFU’s Vancity Office of Community Engagement, Co-Director of SFU's Community Engaged Research Initiative and host of the podcast, Below the Radar. He has additional affiliations at SFU with Graduate Liberal Studies, Labour Studies and the Institute for the Humanities.

    He has been on the boards of the Vancouver International Film Festival, Vancity Community Foundation, Indian Summer Arts Society, Impact on Communities Coalition, 221A, Greenpeace Canada, BC Alliance for Arts and Culture, the Or Gallery, the City of Vancouver’s Arts and Culture Committee and the Vancouver City Planning Commission. In 2020, he was recognized with the Warren Gill Award for Community Impact and in 2024 with the Hari Sharma Community Award.

    He is the author of 'Ecological Metapolitics: Badiou and the Anthropocene' (2015), co-author with Matt Hern of ‘Global Warming and the Sweetness of Life: A Tar Sands Tale’ (2018) and 'O My Friends, There is No Friend: The Politics of Friendship at the End of Ecology' (2024).

  • Azaria Thornhill, she/her

    Coach | Facilitator

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    Azaria has worked in communities for over the past 15 years with 10 years of cross-sector leadership experience leveraging strategic partnerships and launching high-impact programs for diverse populations of children, youth, families and seniors. More recently, she has pivoted into the field of mental health and is a Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying). She embodies a relational, holistic, compassionate, person-centred approach grounded by an intersectional, anti-racist, anti-oppressive, culturally responsive, trauma-informed lens. As a body of culture with Afro-Caribbean roots, she continues to explore the impacts of imperialist white supremacist hetero-patriarchal systems. A fundamental part of her work is to move toward collective liberation and healing.

    Azaria is a University of Toronto graduate with a background in psychology, health sciences, community development, food justice, and program management. She has a love for music, movement, nature and spicy cuisine.

  • Camilo Garay, he/him

    Strategist

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    Growing up in a social housing community in Toronto, Camilo is no stranger to the demoralizing experiences of poverty, racism, housing insecurity and serious violence that plague many of our Canadian communities. These experiences have been integral in building his relentless commitment to equity and capacity-building in communities across the Greater Toronto Area. Camilo Garay is a respected leader with over 5 years of experience in the not-for-profit sector, including his work with Visions of Science Network for Learning, where he served as the Director of Partnerships and Collaborations, and his work with CivicAction, where he currently serves as the Director of Development and Partnerships. Camilo finds great joy in building long-lasting partnerships, collaborating with multi-sectoral stakeholders, and developing creative solutions to community engagement that cultivate social and economic well-being across the Greater Toronto Area. As Camilo’s passion for civic engagement continues to grow, he has been fortunate enough to be elected to the Board of Governors at Toronto Metropolitan University, elected as the Chair of the Toronto Community Housing Corporation Partnership Advisory Committee, selected as a 2020 CivicAction DiverseCity Fellow, and invited to serve on FoodShare’s Advisory Committee. Camilo sees himself as a lifelong learner, disruptor, community-builder, and is passionate about building a vibrant, agile, and inventive Canada.

  • Celina Caesar-Chavannes, she/her

    Coach

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    Celina is a dynamic professional with a remarkable track record across business consultancy, politics, academia, and advocacy. An acclaimed business consultant, coach, and international speaker, Celina also serves as the Senior Advisor for Cultural Transformation and Strategic Initiatives at Queen’s University, where she lectures part-time.

    Her political career includes serving as a Member of Parliament for Whitby and holding prestigious positions such as Parliamentary Secretary to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and to the Minister of International Development. Known for championing mental health, equity, justice, and gender issues, she garnered numerous accolades during her tenure, including being recognized by O (Oprah) Magazine and Chatelaine Magazine. Celina continues to serve her community through roles on the Lakeridge Health Foundation Board and Elexicon Corporation Board.

    Celina's educational background is equally impressive, holding an Executive MBA from the Rotman School of Management, an MBA in Healthcare Management, and a Bachelor of Science in Human Biology, among other certifications and ongoing academic pursuits, including a current Neuroscience PhD program at Queen’s University. She is a [Deepak] Chopra certified health and meditation instructor and coach.

    Before politics she was the founder of Resolve Research Solutions, Inc., where she led a highly successful research management consulting firm aimed at enhancing the lives of individuals living with neurological conditions and their caregivers. Additionally, her tenure at various healthcare organizations and her role in influential national studies underscore her dedication to impactful research.

    Celina’s best-selling memoir "Can You Hear Me Now?" was published by Random House Canada in 2021, and she has contributed to various publications focusing on politics, health, and social issues. Her speaking engagements at global platforms, including the United Nations, Harvard University, and various conferences, reflect her expertise in leadership, diversity, inclusion, and social change.

    An award-winning advocate, Celina has been honored with prestigious awards like the Chatelaine Magazine Woman of the Year, Mental Health Parliamentarian Award, and the Bob Marley Award, among others, acknowledging her outstanding contributions to politics, mental health advocacy, and community service.

    With an extensive portfolio spanning consultancy, academia, advocacy, and political leadership, Celina Caesar-Chavannes emerges as an influential figure dedicated to fostering positive change, championing justice, and driving transformative initiatives with the aim of restoring our collective humanity. She can be followed on all social media platforms @iamcelinacc

  • Chiyi Tam, she/her

    Coach | Facilitator

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    Chiyi is an urban planner and anti-gentrification organizer raised in Vancouver, on unceded Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) and Səl̓ílwətaʔ (Tsleil-Waututh) lands and waters, in the translation between places and culture. She is currently the executive director of the Kensington Market Community Land Trust. She also organizes with Friends of Chinatown Toronto, which is also exploring community ownership as an anti-displacement strategy for racial & economic justice in Toronto’s Chinatowns. She frequently consults with groups regarding social enterprise legislation, governance and cooperative strategies. She aims to reciprocate knowledge into community.

  • Chris Wilson, he/him

    Strategist

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    Chris is a passionate cultural leader based in Toronto with extensive experience in Arts and Culture and the Non-Profit sector. As a dedicated cultural programmer and brand partnership specialist, Chris has a proven track record of assembling and managing innovative, diverse, and attractive year-round programs of high-quality music and cultural events.

    Currently pursuing a Master's of Design at OCAD U in Strategic Foresight and Innovation, Chris is focused on supporting Arts & Culture and the Non-Profit sector through policy development and the design of urban spaces within our neighborhoods in response to the desires and interests of individuals. He is passionate about building communities that are better prepared for the challenges and opportunities of the future.

    Chris approaches his work from the lens of a social architect, focused on designing and creating social systems, structures, and processes that promote collaboration, engagement, and positive change. He is dedicated to creating more connected and meaningful communities and has a keen interest in foresight and future’s work. He identifies potential future trends, risks, and opportunities that may impact various sectors, combining this with his bottom-up approach by involving community members in the design and planning process.

    Along with his studies, Chris is actively involved in the community and sits on the Board at the Akin Projects, Soho House, Polaris Music Prize and is Board Chair at It's OK*, where he plays an integral role in developing a new studio space for creatives in collaboration with the City of Toronto.

    Overall, Chris is deeply committed to the development and growth of individuals and communities. Through his skills and experience, he is dedicated to creating programs and initiatives that support the needs and aspirations of all individuals, and build a more vibrant and inclusive cultural landscape.

  • Dane Bland - CFRE, he/him

    Fundraising Strategist

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    Dane is a Certified Fundraising Executive who brings a decade of nonprofit experience, raising tens of millions of dollars in contributions through corporate and foundation partnerships, major gifts, and multi-channel mass-market campaigns in his career. He is deeply committed to volunteerism, community management, political activism, advocacy, and philanthropy. On top of a depth of experience in fundraising, he brings expertise in communications, digital marketing, direct marketing, and media relations, generating over one billion impressions with strategic marketing and media campaigns.

    Dane has worked with international and local charitable causes in human rights, arts, healthcare and higher education. He graduated from the Trent University Business Administration Program and Seneca College Fundraising Management postgraduate certificate program.

    He is a member of the board of governors for 4th Line Theatre, and a board member of the Association of Fundraising Professionals (Greater Toronto Chapter). He has been a CFRE Ambassador since 2019.

    Dane strongly believes that change can begin with small acts of philanthropy and advocacy and proudly works to translate that impact into systemic change, social betterment, and political action.

  • Daniella Barreto, she/her

    Strategist

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    Daniella is a public health researcher and podcast producer. She holds an MSc. in Population and Public Health from UBC and a BSc in Health Sciences from SFU.

    She was an early core organizer with Black Lives Matter–Vancouver and a Jeanne Sauvé Public Leadership Fellow. Originally from Zimbabwe, she now lives on the unceded and occupied territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations (Vancouver, BC).

    Daniella has more than a decade of experience in community advocacy and facilitation, from delivering inclusive sexual health education in high schools to driving popular education and activism for Black queer and trans safety. She has worked in academia, non-profit organizations, and the private sector. Daniella has authored multiple peer-reviewed epidemiology papers, a book chapter and a thesis, occasional op-eds, and has presented her research at international conferences.

    She has also been producing well-received podcasts since 2017. Most recently she created, wrote and produced Amnesty International Canada’s flagship human rights podcast on anti-Black racism, surveillance and policing, Rights Back At You, which won a coveted Editor’s Choice spot on Apple Podcasts.

    At heart she is a creative and tenacious troublemaker for good who enjoys the hard conversations and challenging the way things have “always been done”.

    Usually you can find her cycling with her friends, listening to a podcast (if she’s not making one!), or taking photographs.

  • Daniella Leacock, she/her

    Coach

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    Daniella is a community-driven activist and strategist with over a decade of experience working alongside QTBIPOC-led grassroots organizations, nonprofits, and equity-focused initiatives. As a Black Queer Caribbean immigrant based in Toronto, her work is grounded in anti-oppressive and anti-racist frameworks, with a deep commitment to collective care, justice, and systems change.

    With a background in program design, policy advocacy, and community engagement, Daniella continues to support organizations in building sustainable strategies, securing funding, and centering the voices of those most impacted. Whether facilitating collaborative planning sessions, leading cross-sector coalitions, or advising on inclusive practices, she brings an approach that is grounded in equity, authenticity, and building strong, collaborative relationships.

    Daniella has held leadership roles in the housing, mental health, and harm reduction sectors — including Manager at the Toronto Drop-In Network and Mental Health and Direct Services Manager at the Black Coalition for AIDS Prevention ( Black CAP.) She has contributed to city-wide campaigns, network building, and funding advocacy. Most notably, her recent advocacy efforts played a key role in securing an additional $1.8 million in municipal funding to strengthen Toronto’s drop-in sector.

    Daniella’s practice is rooted in listening, building trust, and co-creating with communities to advance transformative change.

  • Diana Bronson, she/her

    Coach

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    Diana has over three decades of experience in the non-profit sector working on human rights, climate change and biodiversity, and food system change. She has also worked on Parliament Hill, in public broadcasting and feminist organizing. She works in both English and French. After leaving her position as Executive Director of Food Secure Canada in 2019, Diana became certified as an Integral Associate Coach and now works to enhance the effectiveness and well-being of her clients who are mostly involved in the non-profit sector. Diana has a deep understanding of the challenges and opportunities of social change work and sees practices of mindfulness and self-awareness as essential components of the new world we are seeking to build. When not at work, Diana enjoys gardening, cycling, swimming and generally delighting in nature in the Laurentian mountains where she lives.

  • Deborah Littman, she/her

    Strategist

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    Deborah is an experienced organizer with a demonstrated history of working in the labour and non-profit sectors, with skills in organizational development, leadership training, volunteer management and community engagement. Deborah was most recently Lead Organizer for Metro Vancouver Alliance, a broad-based alliance of over 50 labour, community, educational and faith organizations, working together for the common good. As an Organizer, Deborah has trained hundreds of community leaders and developed projects and campaigns, bringing together community organizations and non-profits around common issues. Deborah has also been deeply involved in campaigning around low pay and living wage, helping to launch living wage campaigns in the UK, Canada and New Zealand.

  • Ellery Rosin, she/her

    People & Culture Strategist

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    Ellery is a human resources professional with an expertise in policy and systems change to drive organizational equity, inclusion, and justice. A tinkerer and empath by nature, she is always looking for ways to improve processes, experiences, and impact for employers and employees. Ellery is driven to improve human resources systems and organizational culture in order to attract the people best positioned for the work, empower people to do their best work, and enable organizations to deepen and expand their impact. She has spent her career building diverse, empowered teams; developing meaningful, just employee lifecycles; and bringing systems thinking to process improvement. Her background in international experiential education allows her to bring facilitation skills, cultural competency, and humility to her work in HR, organizational policy, and training and development. Ellery’s favourite way to connect with people is over food, whether it’s sharing time in the garden, grocery shopping, or eating. Her go-to contribution to a group gathering is a freshly baked loaf of sourdough bread.

  • Emilie Chan, she/her

    Digital Strategist

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    Emilie is a digital marketing expert who specializes in building and executing seamless data-driven omnichannel strategies. She is passionate about consumer behaviour and branding, and is skilled and awarded for strategic decision-making, team building, and marketing innovation. Emilie is currently an Associate Account Director at a leading digital performance marketing agency in Toronto, Canada. In her role, she develops, executes, and manages paid media strategies for global and multi-market brands across various industries. When not at work, Emilie can be found somewhere in the neighbourhood trying a new restaurant.

  • Evan Vipond, they/them

    Strategist

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    Evan Vipond is a researcher, educator, and consultant. They come with over 15 years of experience working with 2SLGBTQIA+ communities across sectors, including education, arts and culture, health care, and justice initiatives. Evan specializes in 2SLGBTQIA+ inclusion training and workshop facilitation, curriculum development, policy review, and 2SLGBTQIA+ community consultations. Evan is also a research officer at the Open Digital Literacy and Access Network (ODLAN), which seeks to bridge the digital divide that 2SLGBTQIA+ communities face. They are a PhD Candidate in Gender, Feminist and Women’s Studies at York University.

  • Gelek Badheytsang, he/him

    Strategist

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    Gelek is a Tibetan Canadian communications professional based in Toronto. With a keen focus and commitment towards social justice, decolonization, the climate crisis, art and activism, he has led a diverse portfolio of communications and media projects spanning various sectors, organizations and campaigns. Gelek’s writing and photography have been published in the Toronto Star, Maclean’s, VICE Canada, Azure Magazine, NOW Toronto, Briarpatch Magazine, and more. As a communications consultant with Jay Pitter Placemaking, he was involved in producing reports like “Engaging Black People and Power” and “The Little Jamaica Cultural District Plan.” He currently works as the Strategic Communications Lead for the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer. When he is able to find time, he hosts and produces “A Good Refugee Podcast.”

  • Greg Wong, he/him

    Facilitator

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    Greg is a community worker and multidisciplinary artist based in Toronto. He is used to wearing several hats at once, having always held at least four or five jobs concurrently since entering the workforce. This has given him a breadth of front-line experience in different fields including retail, arts work, student organizing, and community work especially relating to sexuality and sexual health, harm reduction and mental health. Despite the diversity of perspectives, he has found that we are generally all trying to address the same question, just in different ways: how can we come together in an ecosystem of labour to imagine a better quality of life? When not at home with his cats, Greg can often be spotted in the city riding his bicycle, photographing an event, getting down on a dancefloor, or enjoying a public park.

  • Hli Haykwhl Ẃii X̱sgaak, Melanie Mark, she/her

    Facilitator

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    Hli Haykwhl Ẃii X̱sgaak, Melanie Mark is a bold and tenacious leader, advocate, and strategist. She has over 25 years' experience in the nonprofit sector, in government, as an elected official and as an entrepreneur- with a demonstrated track record advancing social, environmental, and economic justice through reconciliation. Melanie is Nisga'a, Gitxsan, Cree and Ojibway and was the first First Nations woman to be elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in 2016. She is also the inaugural First Nations woman to serve in BC’s Cabinet as the Minister of Advanced Education, Skills and Training (2017- 2020) and later as the Minister of Tourism, Arts, Culture and Sport (2020-2022). Melanie retired from politics in 2023 to focus on her daughters and her two businesses: Remarkable First Nations Regenerative Industries & Hli Haykwhl Ẃii X̱sgaak Consulting. Adversity has shaped Melanie's advocacy, and she believes strongly in sharing how we can and must Paddle Together to implement the 94 Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

  • Jade Guthrie, she/her

    Strategist | Researcher

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    jade is a queer, mixed-race educator, facilitator, and community organizer. jade is committed to social change work rooted in justice, liberation, and joy and approaches this work with tenderness, curiosity, and reciprocity.

    Based in Treaty 13 territory, jade currently oversees FoodShare Toronto’s community learning and engagement programs. Before that, she worked across the non-profit sector with organizations like the Stop Community Food Centre and Thorncliffe Park Women’s Committee, and as a social policy research intern with the City of Toronto’s Social Development, Finance, and Administration Division.

    Beyond 9-5, jade is a community organizer with Justicia for Migrant Workers and sits on the Black Food Sovereignty Action Plan Advisory Circle. She was previously an advocacy co-lead on the Toronto Youth Food Policy Council and co-created the Black-youth-led ‘Soul Food Project TO’ community cookbook. Her words have been published online in rabble, and heard on podcasts like the Toronto Star’s 'This Matters' and Canadaland.

    jade’s approach to learning and social change work is shaped by intersectional feminism, critical race theory, and anti-colonial pedagogies. She holds a Masters of Social Work from York University and an MA in Communication and Culture from Toronto Metropolitan University.

    She is also an avid baker, enthusiastic dumpling-eater, amateur rug-hooker, and reality tv fanatic.

  • Jenna Tenn-Yuk, she/her

    Strategist

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    Jenna is a writer, speaker and EDI consultant who empowers people to share their stories and truths. She has spoken internationally at Harvard, The Walrus Talks and TEDx, exploring the complexities of race, queerness and faith. She is a graduate of Carleton University’s journalism program and has a master’s degree in gender studies from the University of Ottawa, where she lectured on spoken word and activism. Her writing has been featured in Broadview, CBC, the Ottawa Citizen and The Huffington Post.

    Jenna was featured in an OUTtv documentary, Queers, Christians and Canadian Justice, exploring Trinity Western University’s proposed law school and the impacts on 2SLGBTQ+ students and faculty. She is a founding member of the Asian Canadian Women’s Alliance and the founder of Queer Sunday, a community for queer and trans BIPOC people of faith. Jenna believes in the power of storytelling to break silences, connect people and change the world around us.

  • Kais Padamshi, he/him

    Strategist

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    Kais is a Black East African-Mixed settler based in Tkaronto/Toronto (Treaty 13) working as a visual artist, published writer, playwright, equity consultant, arts administrator, wellness facilitator and community worker. His writing practice encompasses academic, research-based texts, curatorial essays, poetry, and exhibition reviews centering African Diasporic narratives. His writing practice focuses on themes of cultural identity, belonging, de-colonial futures in addition to individual and collective healing.

    As an equity consultant, Kais has researched, developed and facilitated numerous Anti-Black racism training for not-for-profit organizations, student union boards, and other private organizations and businesses. Working as an arts administrator for 4+ years, Kais has produced various public programs, developed numerous strategic partnerships and developed professional development mentorship opportunities for artists and creatives based in Tkaronto/Toronto (Treaty 13) alongside his marketing and communications experience.

  • Kaitlin Sandor-Kerr, she/her

    Coach | HR Strategist

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    With 15 years of experience in human resources management, Kaitlin is a leadership development coach, consultant and mentor to business and community leaders. She specializes in the empowerment and growth of new leaders and first-time managers, helping them build their skills and confidence, and helping them build leadership habits intended to serve them and their teams throughout their careers.

    Kaitlin’s coaching practice centres around a core insight: new managers are not typically set up for success which can lead to less-engaged and ineffective teams. Bringing a lens of balance, equity, inclusion and empowerment, Kaitlin helps her coaching clients to navigate difficult conversations, have candid communications, and develop strategies for empowering teams and working within and navigating patriarchal, racist, capitalist structures. Kaitlin’s approach to supporting managers reflects how employees want: to feel like their work is valued, to feel like they are heard, and to feel like management and the employer are communicating clearly and honestly.

    As a professional with ADHD, Kaitlin also offers support and coaching around neurodivergence in the workplace. She brings a unique perspective on levering employees’ super powers, and helping managers find ways to best support them.

    Kaitlin’s human resources consulting practice specializes in applying those same principles on an organizational level. Kaitlin helps organizations identify their values, and then works to embed and reflect those values in policies, procedures and operational practices; and she holds her clients accountable to those identified values. She supports leadership in decision making and communication, and is called on to offer her counsel for difficult conversations. At the forefront of that work are diversity, inclusion, belonging, equity and justice. She has experience working with organizations that focus on vulnerable communities, as well as non-traditional governance models and decision-making frameworks.

  • Kaleb Robertson, he/him

    Facilitator

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    Kaleb is a Tkaronto based Cultural Producer who does workshops for youth and adults on identity, body positivity, queerness, trans issues, drag, and creating diverse inclusive spaces. His multimedia workshops include sharing personal experiences as a trans person and sparking discussions around intersectionality and privilege. He speaks to groups of all ages about his own experiences of gender and encourages people to relate those experiences to their own lives and community, regardless of gender identity or sexuality. Kaleb also performs as Fluffy Soufflé (they/them), a non-binary drag character. Fluffy is half of the magical children's entertainment duo, Fay & Fluffy’s Storytime, who do live performances and have a television show on Family called the Fabulous Show with Fay & Fluffy. When producing events and performing, their goal is to make drag accessible to all ages, and to foster a fun, inclusive environment.

  • Kate Fane, she/they

    Communications Strategist

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    Kate is a Toronto-based writer, organizer, and communications specialist with over twelve years of experience directing communications for progressive causes, organizations, and political campaigns.

    Kate specializes in issues of gender justice, community health, and income inequality, and has worked with organizations like the Workers’ Action Centre, the University of Toronto’s School of Cities, The Stop Community Food Centre, the Equal Pay Coalition, The Responsible Investment Association, The Metcalf Foundation, Jane’s Walk Toronto, and Davenport-Perth Neighbourhood and Community Health Centre.

    Kate is particularly interested in weaving digital storytelling with social policy advocacy to advance equity and support community self-determination. She is a graduate of the University of Toronto, the Maytree Policy School, and the Institute for Change Leaders.

    In her spare time, she manages communications for the Toronto Comic Arts Festival and wanders in Toronto's ravines.

  • Kaydeen Bankasingh, she/her

    Facilitator

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    Kaydeen is a grassroots community facilitator, organizer and coordinator. For over ten years she has worked to facilitate group process dynamics and develop equitable relationships between residents, agencies and other partners. As an adult and popular educator, Kaydeen works with marginalized populations including youth and newcomers to build their capacity to be effective leaders and change makers in their communities. Kaydeen is a new associate with our team.

  • Kell Gerlings, they/them

    People Practices Strategist | Coach

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    Kell is a transformative HR & people practices leader, coach, policy writer, and anti-oppressive facilitator. With a labour background in anti-poverty activism and housing justice, and an M.Ed in Adult Education and Community Development, they have worked in all aspects of ‘HR’ management, community organizing, conflict transformation, curriculum & policy development, coaching, and advocacy campaigns.

    Kell works to build unbreakable solidarity across divides in order to strengthen all our movements for social change, specifically through increasing our skills in communication, conflict, deep listening, power analysis, and leadership. They particularly enjoy working with young workers, new managers, and folks going through transformation - in their work life, personal journeys, or the rocky process of learning and unlearning that can occur at any time.

    They are a co-founder of a worker cooperative of queer and trans nonprofit workers, offering services in values-aligned operations, people practices, policy development, training and bookkeeping. They are a queer, non-binary person living in rural Mi'kma'ki, Nova Scotia, a life that suits their joy of long walks along coasts and rivers.

  • Lee Mae Spence, she/her

    Strategist

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    Lee Mae Spence is an Ininew First Nations, Metis and mixed settler woman from Treaty 5 Territory in northern Manitoba, Canada. As the founder of Embodied Resurgence, she is on a mission to transmute apathy to liberation, because it’s our right. In the last 10 years, she has supported individuals and organizations to have meaningful and transformative conversations on the intersections of colonialism, intergenerational trauma, ancestral reclamation and collective wholistic wellbeing. And accountability begins with ourselves.

  • Leticia Ama Deawuo, she/her

    Strategist

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    A seasoned community and nonprofit leader with over 18 years of experience in driving local and international food justice and food sovereignty through community engagement. Demonstrated expertise in strategic problem-solving, organizational leadership, and cultivating partnerships across diverse stakeholders. Formerly served as Executive Director of SeedChange, advocating for small-scale farmers in Canada and worldwide. Led groundbreaking initiatives as Director of Black Creek Community Farm to enhance food access and justice in Toronto's Jane and Finch neighborhood. Leveraging a unique background rooted in a family tradition of small-scale farming in Ghana and deep ties to the Jane and Finch community. Highly sought-after speaker and thought leader, sharing insights on food sovereignty, agroecology, and social justice through media appearances, panel discussions, keynote addresses, and academic lectures. Master's degree research at York University focused on the transformative potential of decolonization and traditional knowledge in reshaping our food and environmental practices.

  • Logan Staats, he/him

    Facilitator

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    Mohawk singer-songwriter Logan Staats began as a diamond in the rough, and has become the gem of indigenous folk-rock. Staats grew up in Brantford, Ontario with no formal musical training, just a good ear and raw lyrical talent. He played the local circuit for years before his 2015 debut release ‘Goodbye Goldia’, an unvarnished yet hard hitting folk album. He went on to win CTV’s ‘The Launch’ in 2018, gaining commercial success and touring across North America and Europe. After all that, Staats decided to come home, making the intentional decision to re-root at Six Nations of the Grand River.“I wanted to bring my songwriting back to the medicine inside of music, to the medicine inside of reclamation,” he says. This is the philosophy behind his sophomore album ‘A Light In The Attic’. These songs are a healing salve, contemplatively composed and offered to listeners in need of comfort. His sound draws heavily from the rich blues and rock legacy of Six Nations. His music has garnered a Juno nomination, multiple Native American Music Awards, and the SOCAN Indigenous Songwriter of the year. Nowadays, he splits his time between Six Nations, Vancouver Island, and everywhere in between.

  • Mercy Ayesha Alohan-Eke, she/they

    Coach

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    Mercy Ayesha is determined to help people around them—fuelled by passion, transparency, and authenticity.

    Awarded with Seneca College’s Stephen E. Quinlan Award and Nicolas Esper Liberal Arts Award, their continued work to actively improve our community was widely recognized. As the recipient of the Julianne Pettigrew Award at the 2021 OACUHO Residence Life Conference for their outstanding presentation on anti-racist and anti-oppression frameworks in programming.

    Having lived an incredibly turbulent life as a child, they are determined to make sure no one experiences the difficulties they have as a Peer Advisor on Lumenus Community Services’ Harm Reduction Hangouts Advisory Committee and CAMH’s Youth Advisory Group to support young people with lived experience of mental illness, substance abuse or sex work.

    Mercy Ayesha has always been an active citizen, performing various roles in political and electoral campaigns in both her home of London, UK and her new home of Tkaronto, Canada, with a lifelong commitment to contributing a positive change to their community.

  • Michelle Smith, she/her

    Strategist

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    Michelle is a passionate human rights educator dedicated to advancing the rights of marginalized and equity-deserving groups. She is interested in promoting anti-racist and anti-oppressive practices as well as exploring notions of social justice, liberation, and systems change through a critical race theory lens.

    As a former immigration lawyer, Michelle has had the privilege of representing refugees and undocumented migrants. She has used her legal background to support victims of discrimination and survivors of gender-based violence. Since then, she has worked in the education sector to advance best practices in equity and anti-discrimination as an investigator, mediator, and strategic advisor at the University of Guelph.

    Michelle holds a degree in Political Science and International Development Studies from York University, a Juris Doctor from Osgoode Hall Law School, and is licensed with the Law Society of Ontario. She has been an active volunteer with feminist advocacy organizations including Elizabeth Fry Toronto, the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies, and the YWCA Canada.

    Michelle takes a trauma-informed and compassion-based approach to her work in supporting individuals through conflict, and she aims to help team leaders create more inclusive spaces.

  • Mihret Haile, she/her

    Coach

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    Mihret is a trauma-informed, culturally attuned coach with over 15 years of experience supporting people through life’s big transitions. As a second-generation immigrant stepping into first-generation entrepreneurship, she knows how much courage it takes to face the unknown.

    Her journey has taken her through grassroots community work, community health, mental health advocacy, and roles as a Paralegal and Mental Health worker in the criminal justice system, places where she witnessed deep injustices firsthand. Her family’s own struggles with mental health challenges and the criminal justice system have been a powerful source of inspiration, fueling her passion to support others facing similar barriers. She also led efforts to build schools internationally, deepening her commitment to equity, education, and finding purpose that truly aligns with your values.

    After experiencing the limitations and disempowerment of the old corporate world, Mihret made a bold choice to leave it behind and trust in her own vision through entrepreneurship. She now helps those struggling with empowerment, whether in their careers or personal lives, by guiding them to build confidence, develop leadership, and create clear plans that help them take control and move forward.

    Mihret’s coaching blends empathy with practical strategies, using tools like facilitation, confidence building, reflective inquiry, and goal setting to support lasting growth.

    Specializing in career transitions, personal development, and authentic living, Mihret helps clients break free from limiting beliefs, rewrite their stories, and step confidently into their next chapters. She guides them to uncover inner clarity and create the momentum needed to lead with purpose and courage.

    For those ready to challenge old narratives, live intentionally, and lead from within, Mihret is a trusted partner on the journey forward.

  • Minnie Njeri Karanja, she/her

    Coach

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    Njeri (pronunciation: J-ee-ri) has worked in the non-profit sector in Canada and internationally for over a decade. Her work’s approach is through the lenses of intersectionality, justice, decolonization, equity, inclusion and diversity. Her professional experience has encompassed working on global socio-economic issues of gender equity, refugee rights, access to clean water and sanitation in rural areas to local systemic issues including philanthropic reform, anti-Black racism, poverty, food justice, public legal education for non-profits and youth unemployment.

    Njeri coaches, mentors and advises non-profit and social impact leaders on values-aligned strategies in various areas of organizational effectiveness including organizational development, governance, stakeholder relations, fundraising, grant writing, government relations, and public policy.

    As a member of the Advisory Committee for the Charitable Sector, she brings to the table insights about the needs of the Canadian charitable sector particularly those of Black-led, Black-serving and Black-focused non-profits. Her contribution has informed equitable and inclusive practices and regulatory changes by the Charities directorate and the Federal department of finance. Njeri has completed a Masters degree in International Relations and a Certificate in Public Policy and Management. She volunteers her time to mentor young professionals and with local grassroots organizations. Njeri is a granddaughter of a Kenyan freedom fighter and lives in the traditional, ancestral, and stolen territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh Nations - also known as Vancouver, British Columbia.

  • Moe Pramanick, she/her

    Illustrator

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    Moe is a visual artist based in Toronto. She explores themes of grief, transformation, kinship and other feelings that emerge from her interpersonal relationships. Moe is interested in using illustration, public art and workshop to allow space for herself and others to nurture visions of a new world. By day, Moe works in food justice advocacy at FoodShare Toronto, exploring how food access relates to harm reduction, abolition and transformative justice. She is curious about building solidarity inside and across movements, practicing mutual aid, and learning to love responsibly.

  • Mojdeh Azad, she/her

    Strategist | Coach

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    Mojdeh is an impact and results oriented community builder and leader. For nearly 15 years, Mojdeh has coached organizational leaders and consulted with institutions across all sectors seeking to heighten their equity lens and carry the principles of justice, equity, inclusion and belonging into all elements of their business operations. She is an award-winning facilitator and learning and development designer, inspired by the popular education model to mobilize knowledge through an anti-oppression lens.

    Mojdeh believes that a supportive, inspiring organizational culture where there are shared values and goals is how cross-functional teams in complex systems thrive. Mojdeh has expertise in labour relations, change management, government relations, and issue-based campaigns and advocacy. Most recently, her thought leadership on radical accountability has been nationally recognized in her tenure as President and CEO of Pillar Nonprofit Network.

  • Mueni Mutinda, she/her

    Coach

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    Mueni is a Kenyan-Canadian with a passion for meaningful conversation, and seeing and meeting people where they are at. She is skilled at fearlessly cultivating and nurturing meaningful connections and strategic partnerships for enhanced cooperation through facilitation, coaching, training and mentorship, leading departments and building networks.

    Mueni is a conscientious, focused and assertive leader, who has successfully built and maintained strong teams, both in Canada, and across East and West Africa. Mueni’s analytical expertise is demonstrated in her passion and commitment to engage at a system’s level through a conscious equality lens. For Mueni, real and sustained transformation can only emerge when all of us are included and able to fully participate in building and rehabilitating broken relations (seeing ourselves as deeply interconnected), to co-create equitable, inclusive, engaging and meaningful spaces, ideas and possibilities.

    Mueni is the founder and principal consultant at Mutinda Consulting, an Equity and justice-centered, and radically inclusive approach to program management. She recently led community consultations in collaboration with the Province of Prince Edward Island, a partnership which contributed to the province' first Anti-Racism Action Plan. Mueni is delighted to work with others and sees the opportunity to do so as the gift of this present moment. In this way, Mueni is a disruptor, truth-teller with love and vision for the possibility of the energy inherent in each one of us.

  • Mythri Vijendran, she/her

    Strategist | Facilitator

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    Mythri is a Tamil cis woman who has held roles in project management, evaluation, and equity, aimed at moving forward various social and public health initiatives. Through both her work and training, she has developed strong skills in conflict resolution, mediation, facilitation and restorative practices through an anti-oppression and anti-racism lens. Mythri has completed training on embodied social justice and embodied conflict resolution where she learned body-centered practices combined with trauma-informed techniques and anti-oppression principles to address conflict. She has also been trained in restorative justice practices and mediation based on the principles of restorative justice, which focuses on repairing harm and fostering accountability. Mythri has a deep commitment to challenging systems and processes rooted in colonialism, capitalism and white supremacy, while integrating ancestral wisdom and values. She completed a Masters in Public Health at University of Toronto with a focus on the impact of social inequities on health. When not working, Mythri enjoys running, reading and spending time with family.

  • Nathalie Lozano Neira, she/her

    Strategist | Researcher

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    Nathalie is from Muysca territory in Colombia. She arrived in occupied and unceded territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, Səl̓ílwətaɬ, and Skwxwú7mesh Nations in 2000 as a government assisted refugee. For over 20 years Nathalie has been involved in migrant justice and decolonial justice organizing efforts. She has experience in facilitation, curriculum development and community-based social justice research. She is a doctoral student in the Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice Institute at UBC focusing on relationship building and relationality within Indigenous women grassroot collectives in Turtle Island (North America) and Abya Yala (Latin America). She holds an MA from Simon Fraser University where her thesis focused on the well-being of migrant women organizers in the social justice sector.

  • Phillip Dwight Morgan, he/him

    Content writer

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    Phillip is a freelance writer and researcher with seven years of experience writing speeches, op-eds, profiles, and reports. His writing has appeared in Maclean's, The Toronto Star, CBC News, and The Walrus, among others. In 2017, Phillip was selected as the inaugural rabble.ca Jack Layton Journalism for Change Fellow and he is currently working on his first book, Where do we begin?, with the generous support of the Toronto Arts Council and Ontario Arts Council. When not at work, Phill is almost always snuggling his cat, playing sports, or reading a book.

  • Rachel La Touche, she/her

    Strategist

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    Rachel is an 11-time award-winning scholar, professor, and EDI advocate, turned consultant. She specializes in workplace culture and mental health and is most passionate about crafting the vision, strategy, implementation, and evaluation of organizational initiatives. She is Caribbean-Canadian, an expert gardener, seasoned traveler, fierce justice advocate, and settler on the Indigenous land of Tkaronto. She received her BAH from Queen’s University in Sociology, Graduate Certificate in Canadian Studies and MA in Sociology from the State University of New York at Buffalo, and a Ph.D. in Sociology from Indiana University.

  • RaeChelle-Faith Hamilton, she/her

    Government Relations Specialist

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    RaeChelle-Faith is a people-centric strategist, community capacity builder, entrepreneur and solutions architect. With over 4 years' experience in government relations and advocacy and over 6 years' project management expertise, she's passionate about decolonizing and influencing public policy and building community programmes that work. Born and raised in Jamaica, she's trained in law, government relations and project management--combining all three to serve and impact youth and communities for the better. She brings her vast experience in program/ project coordination and government relations--specializing in areas of: GR strategy, communications, event planning and management, digital campaigning, educational consulting, research and writing, community organizing, stakeholder management, media relations, youth policy development, and business development. RaeChelle-Faith worked and volunteered for numerous organizations such as: the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), CARICOM, the Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) Division of Global Affairs Canada in Jamaica, the Yonge Street Mission, Leading in Colour, NATIONAL Public Relations, the Ministry of Tourism in Jamaica, and, most recently, JN Clarke Consulting. She's excited to play her part in telling client stories and securing their advocacy wins!

  • Remy Klein, they/them

    Facilitator

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    Remy is a community-based facilitator and organizer who works with people to help them bring more care, complexity, and collectivity into what they do. They work at George Brown College as a coordinator and professor in the Transitions to Post-Secondary Education program, an academic program geared towards adult learners who have faced barriers to education due to challenges with mental health and/or substance use. A winner of the George Brown College Innovation Award, Remy is also a Universal Design for Learning coach and former facilitator of Foundations for Flourishing, a workshop series designed to support college educators in cultivating an emotionally-literate, trauma-informed, and anti-oppressive teaching practice.

  • Rickesh Lakhani, he/him

    Coach

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    Rickesh believes that we are all responsible for each other’s success, and that social impact organizations will do their best work when they are nurturing from within and grounded in truth and trust.

    He has over 15 years of experience in the social impact sector, including serving as the Executive Director at Future Possibilities for Kids, a community-based organization serving children, and as the Director, Campaign at United Way York Region, leading an $8M annual fundraising campaign. Rickesh is a Certified Fundraising Executive (CFRE), sits on the Global Council for the Community-Centric Fundraising movement, and has volunteered with numerous causes and boards.

    He enjoys spending time with his family including his 3 children, camping, bike riding, cooking, and playing drums.

  • Roselyne Douge-Charles, she/they

    Facilitator

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    Roselyne, an educator, activist, and consultant, has a rich background in teaching at Algonquin College in Ottawa and George Brown College in Toronto. Currently residing on unseeded and unsurrendered Algonquin Territory (Ottawa, ON), they are interested in the intersections of racial, food, disability and gender justice. With experience in various community centers across Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto, and New York, Roselyne possesses a deep understanding of how anti-Black racism manifests in Canada and across borders. They are passionate about shedding light on the systemic persecutions affecting Black lives, including the carceral system, education, health, art, parenthood, environmental degradation, and disability justice. Roselyne holds a degree in Women's and Gender Studies from the University of Ottawa and has roots in Montreal, Brooklyn, New York, and her ancestral land of Haiti. Please remember to use a mix of she/they pronouns when referring to Roselyne to respect them and the way they navigate the world.

  • Roxanne Duncan, she/her

    Coach

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    Roxanne is an experienced mission-driven executive with deep expertise in non-profit leadership. She began her career in the cultural sector, driven by a belief that art is a powerful agent for social change. She has led major capital projects, fundraising campaigns, complex partnerships, and has steered organizations through transformational growth, supporting teams through turbulent times of change.

    She has worked at the intersection of public policy, business, law, academia, science, technology, media, and art, creating space for difficult conversations across diverse perspectives.

    Roxanne’s coaching helps people find their leadership voice, manage governance and board challenges, create clear intentions for career transitions, make values-aligned decisions for themselves and their organizations, and create vibrant organizations that operate with care for people and communities.

    She currently serves on the board of directors for Rise Up!, a digital archive of feminist activism in Canada. Outside of work, she finds joy snacking at the beach, walking in the forest, singing loudly in the car, or curled up with her darling cat.

  • Sally (Yue) Lin, she/her

    Coach

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    Sally has over a decade of experience working in the fields of public health and public policy. Currently, she works full-time as a public servant for a provincial government, where she works collaboratively across multiple sectors on issues related to harm reduction, substance use, and mental health. In addition to her government work, Sally has been providing career coaching to equity-deserving professionals who self-identify as Black, Indigenous, People of Colour and/or as a member in one or more marginalized group(s) since 2021. She has mentored and coached dozens of clients from diverse backgrounds and sectors to help them achieve their career goals and aspirations.

    Sally is a graduate of both McGill University and the University of British Columbia where she specialized in psychology, anthropology, and public health. She is also a Cantonese Canadian,1.5 generation immigrant with a weakness for a good bowl of noodles.

  • Sandro Pehar, he/him

    Creative Director

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    Sandro is a photographer, cinematographer and director working in commercial and narrative projects across Canada. Having previously helmed the food and wellness brand, Lovekind Inc, as their Creative Director and the edu-tech company, Learners, as their Director of Production, Sandro's work spans across diverse industries. His photography exhibit, In The Pit, profiling dishwashers in restaurants has been exhibited at Daniels Artscape & his last short film, Melody, won best film & cinematography awards at multiple film festivals. In his off-time he helps teach empathetic storytelling with TellPeople. Outside of work, Sandro loves to bike (fast) around the city and recently composed the music for the fringe show A Small Part of the Whole Story.

  • Shellene Drakes-Tull, she/her

    Strategist

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    Shellene is a writer, communications strategist, and educator. Helping people connect and engage through storytelling has always been a passion for her. For all of us, answering the question, ‘who are you?’ is integral to creating your story and standing confidently in your truth. Shellene is a contributing columnist at the Toronto Star and a freelance journalist who has shared the stories of diversity, equity, and inclusion at the Globe and Mail, Toronto District School Board, Deloitte, and others. She is a sessional lecturer and the creator and instructor of the Modern-Day Griot Project at the University of Toronto’s Scarborough campus teaching about the stories of Black Canadians to change the narrative of Blackness in Canada.

  • Sophie Duncan, she/her

    Coach

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    Sophie is a consultant and researcher working at the intersections of social, economic, and environmental justice issues. As one of our consultants, she works with clients on issues related to organizational governance, equity and inclusion, and organizational change. Sophie is also a Project Manager for the Leading Social Justice Fellowship, a cross-sectoral leadership development program focused on social justice and run in partnership with United Way Greater Toronto, the School of Cities, and Rotman Executive Programs. In this role, Sophie coaches teams from across the GTA on project planning and implementation and co-leads program design, evaluation, and partnership coordination. Sophie is a board member at the Fair Finance Fund, a non-profit social finance fund dedicated to providing loans and mentorship services to local food and farm enterprises that value strong local food systems, local economies, and a healthy planet.

    Sophie holds an MBA from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management and a BA from Wesleyan University. Her previous work includes research on behavioural insights and Canadian food policy with Behaviourally Informed Organizations, consulting to the Coalition of Immokalee Workers on a new development strategy, leading food access and community development programming in rural Vermont, and more. From 2013 - 2014, Sophie was a Fulbright Researcher in Morocco, studying traditional food and ideas about innovation and authenticity.

    Outside of work, you can find Sophie out in the garden, in the kitchen, or enjoying local trails.

  • Tenzin Tsering, she/her

    Illustrator

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    Tenzin is a Tibetan-Filipino Illustrator based in Toronto, Canada. With a passion for digital art and a keen eye for design, she enjoys comics, characters and colours which is greatly reflected in her work. Her creative expertise lies in creating visually captivating illustrations and with educational and highly researched elements that effectively communicate and engage with her audience.

    Graduating from OCAD University, she honed her skills and acquired a Bachelor's degree in Illustration. She developed a deep understanding of design principles, colour theory, and composition, and beyond her professional pursuits, Tenzin actively participates in the creative community by tabling at events, attending workshops, and creating artwork for the Tibetan Cultural Center.

  • Terri Rutty, she/they

    Coach

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    With over 15 years as an activist and community leader Terri’s vision is to live in a world free of racism, inequity, and injustice. Where everyone has the resources to heal from historical, institutional, intergenerational, persistent and pervasive (HIIPP) trauma and thrives in collective liberation rooted in community care.

    Terri is the founder of Tuf Lov consulting where she gives clients the skills to actively dismantle systems of oppression in their workplaces, homes, and communities by creating brave spaces for uncomfortable and challenging conversations.

    As an antiracism, justice, equity, diversity, decolonization, and inclusion (JEDDI) consultant, coach, and facilitator Terri uses liberatory coaching principles and somatic abolitionism techniques to support her clients to get on their path to healing, justice and true liberation.

    Terri is also an advisor and facilitator of the Food Trade Game, co-founder of Black in BC Aid and an organizer and facilitator with Women of Colour Talks (WOC Talks) a space for all women of color to gather, share resources, uplift each other, heal, and be joyful inclusive of trans women, cis women, non-binary, genderqueer, agender, and intersex folks.

  • Thanuja Thananayagam, she/her

    Coach

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    Thanuja is a Sri Lankan-born antiracism practitioner with over two decades of dedicated experience in holistic human resources. She is a seasoned professional expert in various facets of the field and her journey encompasses talent acquisition, talent management, equity, diversity, and inclusion, all centered around cultivating an environment where every individual feels a sense of belonging. Thanuja's passion for fostering inclusivity and fairness has led her to become a prominent advocate for equity and diversity, consistently driving initiatives that bridge gaps and promote understanding.

    Beyond her HR expertise, Thanuja holds an MBA and MEd and currently pursuing her Ph.D. She is a devoted antiracism researcher presently engaged in the research phase of her Ph.D., further exemplifying her commitment to dismantling systemic prejudices and generating knowledge that fosters meaningful change.

    As a mental health advocate, she’s a board member of GenWell Project, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to promoting human connection.

  • Tristan Oliff, he/him

    Strategist

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    Tristan is an impact-focused storyteller who seeks to use his energy to promote meaningful collaboration and facilitate equitable and sustainable social change. His professional journey has led him through parliament hill, into the non-profit world, and around the new media movement, providing a unique background in media relations, policy communication, and collaborative community engagement. With South African and French Canadian roots, Tristan has been based in Ottawa for the past 7 years.

  • Vicky Mochama, she/her

    Strategist

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    Vicky is a writer, editor and podcaster. She has a breadth of experience in editorial leadership - as a co-editor of the national bestselling book Canadaland Guide to Canada; as a guest editor of The Ethnic Aisle; as the Critical Race, Culture and Society Editor at the Conversation; and as the managing editor at Study Hall. She has worked as the national columnist at Metro News Canada, and as a contributing columnist at the Toronto Star and the Globe and Mail. She has bylines in the Washington Post, the Guardian, Cottage Life, the Walrus, BuzzFeed, VICE Canada, and others. She has been a host and producer of podcasts Safe Space (Metro News) and No Little Plans (St. Joseph Media). Her work focuses on highlighting Canada's Black and racialized communities.

  • Vjeruska Koscina, she/her

    Strategist

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    With over a decade of experience in Management Consulting, Vjeruska is a dynamic and creative leader recognized for steering projects, shaping strategies, and conducting market analyses. Holding an MBA and a Bachelor's Degree in Business Administration, along with a Post Graduate Certificate in Marketing Management, her expertise lies in consulting and market research for public and private institutions from different industries such as construction, manufacturing, mining, and agriculture. Successfully managing more than 50 projects spanning South America, North America, and Europe, she exhibits cross-cultural competency, facilitating effective collaboration across diverse teams.

    Beyond her analytical and project management skills, she demonstrates a passion for creating social impact. In Canada, she has specialized in consulting services to non-profits, social enterprises, and startups, focusing on strategic planning, organizational diagnostics, and continuous improvement processes. This commitment to driving positive change aligns with her broader goal of not only achieving financial success in projects but also making a meaningful societal impact. With a unique blend of expertise, adaptability, and a dedication to social responsibility, she is poised to contribute significantly to organizational success while making a positive difference in the non-profit sector.

  • Yamikani Msosa, they/them/ze/hir

    Strategist

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    Yamikani is a Black genderqueer Malawian arrivant currently living in Tkaronto. As creative and facilitator, they love building containers for connections to be forged and holding space for individual, community, and systems transformation. Yamikani is committed to a practice of anti-racism & anti-oppression, using popular culture, creative facilitation, emergent strategy and digital engagement. They completed hir Master’s degree in Women and Gender Studies at Carleton University, and a Certificate from Michigan State University in Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, and Organizational Change. In hir spare time Yami teaches yoga to survivors of sexual and gender-based violence & Yoga for Black Grief.