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 Impact Bridges Group is often described as a professional service firm and as an intermediary or umbrella organization in support of social development programs. We work with partners who take an evidence-based approach to designing and managing programs and want to continually find new ways of improving performance and outcome-based results. The following are some of the partners IBG is working with and who exhibit these characteristics:


 

Innovative financing to address homelessness

The 90Works’ mission is to overcome and prevent homelessness, poverty and family violence by working with clients to help them become self-sufficient. The organization’s vision is to help people move from being in crisis and vulnerable to a state of being safe, stable and thriving.

90Works has a theory of change (ToC) that describes how different interventions deliver these desired results. The ToC describes the causal logic of how and why the program is able to achieve intended outcomes. As a learning organization, 90Works is always testing the cause-and-effect causal logic, based on the data gathered from its performance management system, and using these insights to make changes to further improve results. 90Works is involved in applied research around client behavioral change and is continually learning how program interventions contribute to sustaining the intended outcomes.

As a social development leader, 90Works is looking to expand its services to new geographic locations. Impact Bridges Group is proud to be working with 90Works to explore innovative financing instruments that can be effectively used to further address the need of homelessness, especially among veterans.

 

IBG IS LOOKING FOR ENERGY PARTNERS

IBG wants to partner with organizations that have verifiable evidence of building institutional capacity within local communities.  The outcomes of building institutional capacity will be demonstrated in strong market structures and support systems.  Our desire is to work with these types of partners to further strengthen and build resilient, sustainable markets that can further grow through the use of affordable, reliable and clean energy services.  We believe that the introduction of clean energy into a growing market can be done responsibly towards reducing poverty, mitigating climate change and providing positive externalities.

The use of clean energy, for households and business use, provides positive benefits that extend throughout the community.  To achieve our objective of maximizing the net social benefits from clean energy it is necessary to understand the major determinants of energy demand and the instruments of demand management.  As well, the energy demand must be met with the most appropriate energy technological options, especially for rural areas.

If you’re interested in off-grid rural electrification, please contact us and share your ideas.  We’re interested in hearing from many stakeholders – community members, local and national government, development practitioners, donors, investors, clean energy developers and others.

Send us an email at info@impactbridgesgroup.com with “Clean Energy for Rural Communities” in the subject line.  Share with us your plans and let us know if we can assist.


 

These inexpensive shelters are being constructed in Ukraine and used as homes, businesses, health clinics, and many other uses.
For more information on these shelters, contact IBG at
info@impactbridgesgroup.com with Shelter in the subject line.

 
 
 

UKRAINE EMERGENCY – ESSENTIAL MEDICAL SUPPLIES

The hospitals across Ukraine are becoming increasingly desperate for essential medical supplies.  Impact Bridges Group is based in Lviv and working with partners as part of the humanitarian response.  Essential health supplies, such as life-saving medicinal oxygen supplies, are required for those injured, as well as, those with critical illness and other complications from pregnancy, childbirth, chronic conditions, and blood infections.

Although the situation is worsening each day, Ukraine has, in recent years, significantly strengthened its health systems that includes the rapid scale-up of oxygen therapy for severely ill patients. These investments in infrastructure and technical know-how are being severely tested, but are also providing hope to the many who are in need of medical attention.  Medical oxygen generator manufacturers are beginning to face shortage of zeolite which is a main chemical product needed to produce safe medical oxygen.  IBG will work closely with partners, such as the World Health Organization, who is providing leadership to making oxygen available, as well as, other lifesaving medical supplies.

IBG has worked with its health delivery partners to identify critical medical supplies that are needed in the region.  A list of these medical supplies is provided below.  IBG is coordinating with others to make sure that the procurement and distribution of drugs and medical supplies is done in a most efficient and effective manner.

Impact Bridges Group is located in Lviv, approximately 80 km from the Poland border (Korczowa – Krakovets)

Please click here for a list of required drugs and medical supplies

 
 
 
 
 

Ukraine Food Security Foundation

The project is meant to support smallholder farmers as a means of securing livelihoods for communities now & into the future by laying the foundations for (re) building a more secure and more sustainable food system in Ukraine and neighbouring countries that are having to host the massive influx of refugees.

The Ukraine Food Security Foundation (UFSF) initiative is a response to a need and opportunity identified by the Ukrainian Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food to support innovation and organization of community-oriented producer-consumer arrangements with smallholder farmers as partners aimed at increasing food security by:

  • operating food systems in conflict zones and (re) building them in post-conflict situations,

  • generating livelihoods for displaced individuals and groups from war zones and integrating them into host communities in ways that benefit all those affected

  • regenerating and bringing back into farming areas devastated by the war (incl. urban farming) and new areas subdivided out of large farm holdings

  • designing & implementing food security policies, regulations and programmes to accelerate Ukraine’s EU accession.

 
 

Ministry of Health – Rwanda

FIO CORPORATION
COUNTRY: RWANDA
PROJECT: STRENGTHENING OF PRIMARY HEALTH CARE IN RWANDA
PILOT PROJECT: TESTING INNOVATIONS FOR ADDRESSING GENDER EQUALITY IN THE PHC SYSTEM

INTRODUCTION

Rwanda is being challenged with an increased prevalence of malaria that is associated with low income areas, non-compliance with bed-net usage and living below 1700 meters of altitude. New interventions are being used in lower income areas, but with questionable results. While available evidence suggests that in the event of equal exposure, adult men and women are equally vulnerable to malaria infection, women tend to be a much higher risk.

The Rwandan Ministry of Health (MoH) is determined to eradicate malaria and is working with the Roll Back Malaria program, and the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) that is being led by USAID and implemented together with the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Rwandan MoH has a strategy that is focused on 1) vector control; 2) human health including diagnosis and drug-based treatments and prevention; and 3) critical support systems that include supply chains. Within this strategy, there are concerns with data collection and implementation, by NGO partners, at the community-level.

Rwanda is among the few countries to have achieved universal health coverage due to its vision of inclusiveness, equity, and comprehensive and integrated quality service delivery, with a strong focus on primary health care. Within the health sector, Rwanda has been open to financial innovations, such as health insurance and performance-based financing models.

At the district level, government officers sign performance-based contracts with health facilities. Performance against indicators is monitored with quarterly evaluations and through analysis of results in annual reports. While these performance-based models have worked well they do not apply to NGO health partners implementing malaria programs.

THE CHALLENGE

While the MoH has a strong culture of enforcing data-driven decision-making and policy formulation there are challenges in getting timely and accurate community-based information.  The main source of data is the Health Management Information System (HMIS) where data is inputted in health centres and hospitals, and then compiled monthly and transmitted to the centralized HMIS server.  At the moment, paper reports are prepared at community health posts, health centers and local hospitals.  Community Health Workers prepare a monthly report of activities using 13 different forms, all paper-based.   Once the reports are prepared, they will be sent to be digitized and then submitted to the main HMIS. 

Another related challenge is making sure that health partner NGOs are effectively addressing the needs of the community and especially those most vulnerable, such as women and girls.  Poor data and weak data-systems, especially at the local level, impair an adequate understanding of issues impacting the poor, as well as the ability to deliver evidence-based policy and programming.  To have NGO partners maximize the net social benefits of their programs will require the sharing of timely and relevant data.  It will also be important to positively incentivize program partners so that target interventions are prioritized and intended results achieved.

OUR RESPONSE

The pilot project is premised on alignment with existing systems where there are niches for improvement. The pilot project has two innovation solutions – 1) data collection and management, and 2) service delivery incentives that include targeting gender equality issues.

The Fionet software and mobile devices enables community health workers to deliver expert-level testing and clinical case management and having all the data captured, geo-tagged, and uploaded in real time.  The Fionet portal allows for remote supervisors in Kigali to generate real-time managerial insights for program managers to make dynamic adjustments to improve outcomes.  It connects with multiple 3rd party point-of-care devices, such as diagnostic and physiological measurement devices, and uploads all their data.  It also integrates seamlessly with the Rwandan health care HMIS systems.

The technology being deployed is innovative, but to achieve the intended outcomes it is depended on the service delivery system to be working efficiently.  This is especially the case for NGOs that are a partner of the Ministry of Health.  IBG has worked on a performance-based contract methodology that is expected to improve outcome level results.  The IBG methodology focuses on three key areas:

Targeting what Matters - the Fionet mobile devices are a critical part of a performance management system (PMS).  A PMS needs to collect the right data, that is, data that will drive the team’s understanding of whether and how the program is achieving critical results.  Impact Bridges Group works with NGO teams to shift the measurement focus towards generating real-time managerial insights for program managers to make dynamic adjustments to improve gender equality and other program outcomes.  This is unique, as many NGOs are focused on measuring outputs.

Use of Incentives to Improve Gender Equality - in a similar manner to the performance contract implemented by the Ministry of Health, Impact Bridges Group will tie funding to implementing organizations to agreed-upon results.  In other words, the implementing NGOs will be financially rewarded for achieving the intended results and not for having good intentions to do so.  Financial and other incentives are used to have NGO implementers to be explicitly focused on finding the best means of providing services to marginalized groups of women and girls.  It is expected that implementing organizations will have a mindset shift in that these women will be seen as clients and given the utmost attention in providing services.

Creating Space for Innovation and Maximizing Results - Impact Bridges Group will design the payment instrument so that it offers the space, needed by the implementing organization(s), for adapting and iterating the program design and delivery practices.  The focus is on achieving improved outcomes for marginalized women and girls and implementers are encouraged to change activities, based on the evidence from the data collected, in an effort to further improve services.  Unlike traditional programs that hold implementing organizations to the proposal plans, the pilot project will provide flexibility and freedom to pursue a range of strategies, based on evidence, that are expected to achieve greater impact.   


Practical Education Network

Country: Ghana
Project: Science, Technology, Engineering, & Mathematics (STEM)

Intro to PEN’s CEO – Heather Beem

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Heather holds a PhD in Mechanical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. During her time in graduate school and at D-Lab, she developed a passion for STEM education and indigenous innovation. At D-Lab, she co-founded and co-instructed D-Lab: Education in addition to mentoring students from other D-Lab classes.

While at MIT, she began developing the Practical Education Network (PEN) with a team of fellow students and others. They won numerous competitions including the MIT Sloan Africa Innovate Business Plan Competition (2015), IEEE/IBM SmarterPlanet Challenge, 1st Place Curriculum (2012), and the MIT Global Challenge/IDEAS Competition (2011).

Since graduating in 2015, Heather has been leading PEN in their pursuit of scaling experiential learning in resource-limited settings. She has worked with hundreds of students and teachers from Boston to Ghana to Peru.


The Challenge:

The COVID-19 pandemic has upended children's lives in unprecedented ways. Hundreds of millions of children are spending months away from their classrooms, and for the majority of students in West Africa, no school means no learning. According to UNICEF, the longer that children (especially the vulnerable ones) stay away from school, the less likely they are to return. It is critical to provide students alternative ways to learn and rebuild their routine.
After recording the first two cases of COVID-19 in March, the Government of Ghana closed all schools. We project that late 2020/early 2021 is when schools will re-open and be fully operational again. An estimated 5-8 million Ghanaian students are completely devoid of structured learning opportunities. The existing gaps in quality education between West Africa and the developed world are being exacerbated through this crisis and threaten to have ripple effects on the region's ability to develop in years to come.


Our Response:

PEN is raising $300,000 in emergency funding to roll out a suite of digital STEM educational content for students and teachers in Ghana. We are leveraging an extensive set of curriculum-aligned, practical STEM activities (1,000+) and a strong network of teachers (3,000+) to rapidly translate existing content and deploy at scale. This will not only ensure that learning continues, but it will restore hope for students and purpose for teachers, whilst enabling the government to concentrate on COVID-19 mitigation efforts. Once schools re-open, these activities will be blended with PEN's existing in-person work, so as to employ improved modes of disseminating STEM education across the continent.

1. Bringing STEM to Homes through radio, videos, animations, graphical instructions, and booklets to enable students to cover the sequence of science content that they would have been covering in school, and in a hands-on manner. All PEN content leverages simple materials, including those that can be found in a typical Ghanaian home. We also include tips for parents to support their children and engage with them in carrying out the activities;

2. Bringing STEM to Teachers through online training via Zoom. Our network of 3,000+ teachers is on standby, eager to receive ideas for how they can continue reaching their students with hands-on STEM content. They will be trained in digital literacy and given templates for engaging their students on various channels (WhatsApp, radio, etc. depending on location);

3. Simplifying STEM through PEN's Resource Manuals, which contain thousands of hands-on activities using local materials and which are aligned to the national curriculum. These manuals will be sent first to teachers in the rural communities.



About Practical Education Network:

Practical Education Network (PEN) equips West African STEM teachers to employ inquiry-based pedagogies in their classrooms, utilizing locally available materials. PEN has developed thousands of hands-on STEM activities that leverage low-cost and readily available materials. These were designed with Ghanaian teachers, and we are now working towards sharing these widely with teachers and parents globally, as they seek meaningful modes of engaging students while stuck at home during the COVID-19 crisis. PEN was born at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), while the founder was pursuing her Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering.

Since 2014, we have trained 3,000+ STEM teachers on our practical pedagogical approach to STEM, impacted over 590,000 students and equipped 100 teachers to attain the status of PEN Trainer. This is accomplished through our holistic teacher training program, where teachers learn, design, and share MIT-style, hands-on activities. The activities are fully aligned to the national curricula and created from low-cost, locally available materials.



PEN's Impact

PEN's activities have been recognized globally, and achieved successes locally. Notably is the call from educational policy makers in Ghana for PEN to participate in the revision of national curriculum for basic schools. Spearheaded by National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA), PEN infused portions of its hands-on content into Ghana's new primary and junior high school national science curricula.

A controlled study conducted to ascertain the impact of PEN's approach to STEM on students and teachers in the Ghanaian Junior High School classroom by Michigan Technological University in the 2017/2018 academic year revealed that our approach had a beneficial impact on students' classroom environment, attitudes towards science, and improved outcomes in standardized test scores. Teachers trained through the study were found to be very comfortable with setup of materials and confident in offering hands-on delivery using our method. Comparing outcomes between the experimental and control schools' performance on the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE), pupils whose teachers had PEN's hands-on STEM training increased their performance by 28.78%, which is a 97% higher improvement than those who had no PEN training (14.6%). The former group also reported their attitudes towards science improving 141% more than the latter group, over the course of the academic year.

http://www.practicaleducationnetwork.com/

Alternative ways to give:

For gifts by check: Address your check to Impact Bridges Group, write Practical Education Network Project in the memo section of the check, and send it to Impact Bridges Group, 5434 Driscoll Drive. Manotick, ON, K4M 1E3

Gifts by wire transfer or to contribute other types of property: Email Impact Bridges Group at: info@impactbridgesgroup.com or phone (416) 558 1954.

 

In view of the current COVID-19 pandemic, the PEN CEO Heather Beem shares the strategies we are adopting to ensure the continuity of STEM education in Ghana.

 
 

 

MURAHO TECHNOLOGY – RWANDA

WOMEN IN ICT PROJECT

INTRODUCTION

Muraho Technology is the leading Software Testing services provider in Rwanda.  Their model for Tech Services focuses on winning and bringing international tech services projects into Rwanda and engaging young people into effective teams to deliver work with excellence.

THE CHALLENGE

Muraho Technology became the leading Software Testing service provider in Rwanda by having a world-class and internationally recognized team of software testers.  Muraho Technology is committed to narrowing the gender equality gap and has made a decision to only hire women testers.  The women hired as software testers require training in project management and quality assurance software testing.  This training would need to provide them with the operational skills and to have them tested through an internationally recognized certification.

OUR RESPONSE

Impact Bridges Group and its project partners developed a training curriculum for a quality assurance (QA) specialized training program for 15 women.  The curriculum included project group work on real world scenarios and on mock exams.   The project management training consisted of lecture sessions, group exercises, personal assignments and an exam.  All of this training prepared the women for the International Software Testing Qualifications Board (ISTQB) examination and certification.

All of the fifteen women wrote and passed the ISTQB examination and were subsequently provided with international certification and then hired by Muraho Technology.  The ongoing challenge for Muraho Technology is to keep the QA pipeline filled with international contracts.  In a separate contract (with Global Affairs Canada) Impact Bridges Group provided Muraho Technology with a roadmap on becoming investment ready and the use of innovative financing to further expand their business and social impact.


Please contact Impact Bridges Group for information on these and other opportunities.



PARTNERS: FAITH-DRIVEN COMMUNITY

PROJECT:  FAITH-DRIVEN IMPACT BONDS

BACKGROUND

Impact Bonds are an innovative financing tool and social policy tool that traditionally bring together different groups – government, corporations, private investors, foundations, service providers and social enterprises – to deliver effective and prevention-focused solutions to the toughest issues facing communities.

Based on Impact Bridges Group’s work experience with impact bonds there is an important community player that has not been considered and that is the faith community.  The faith community is a natural partner, given the history and involvement with social issues, and its strong conviction towards values-based contributions to investing.  The United Nations has recognized the important role of the faith community in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

OUR RESPONSE

Impact Bridges Group is working with a small group of people to explore how the faith community can fully participate in social and environmental community responses through the use of an impact bond.  A meeting is being held on November 9, 2020 to look at a Career Impact Bond and to have an exploratory discussion on the role of the faith community in finding solutions to the many challenges within our communities through the use of innovative financing.

If interested, please contact Impact Bridges Group at info@impactbridgesgroup.com with “Faith Community and Innovative Financing” in the Subject line.

Impact Bonds are Results-Based Financing contracts that finance the up-front delivery of social services. Some examples of how they are used include: A multinational bank gives a girls' education non-profit in India enough funds to scale their program to 3 new villages.

 

ASSETS IN TRANSITION

 

In Canada, there are many churches that are facing a crisis.  Every city and many towns have church closings that have been taking place on a regular basis since the turn of the century.  This means there are hundreds of churches and community resources that are gone.   It also leaves congregations without a building and grappling with difficult questions.  Impact Bridges Group, along with others, are convinced there is a much better means of addressing issues of low attendance and revenue constraints than selling the church.  We are working with some very talented groups of people who are concerned with this phenomenon of churches being sold.

The US-based Faith and Finance community (which extends beyond the US) calls this phenomenon “Assets in Transition” which has been picked up by Canadian organizations such as Parish Properties, United Church of Canada (UCC), WayBase, and others.  The transition that we are experiencing is about the use of real estate and the challenge of what has been referred to as “two-pocket thinking” in regards to faith and money.  Money is often thought of as being used for charity and these financial resources are gathered through tithing.  We are to live by faith and the idea of having profit investments is too often seen as being somewhat suspect.  Fortunately, in many instances, this is changing as more churches are being challenged for various reasons, including their response to the COVID pandemic, to ask fundamental questions about “Who is my neighbour?”, “How best do we steward our resources in extreme times of need?”.  These same questions are a challenge to churches that are facing possible closure.  It is time for the church to consider how it might ‘pivot’.

Many churches are beginning to have conversations on how they can be smarter and more responsible stewards.  One means is by identifying how the church can become inextricably tied to economic opportunities that can provide maximum social benefits to the poor in their community.  The United Church of Christ Church Building & Loan Fund Executive Director, Rev. Dr. Patrick Duggan has said that, “In trying to discern a better way to steward their assets, some church leaders think they need to be better capitalists. But to unleash abundance, faith leaders need to be better missionaries – to discern a renewed mission and to advance it with passion and focus.”

Impact Bridges Group is passionate about the role that the church can have in rejuvenating and addressing the needs of poor and marginalized within their communities.  Impact Bridges Group brings its expertise in investment appraisal and works with partners to bring about an innovative and long overdue missional response to our neighbours.  We want to be part of this global movement that is reimaging what it means to be the church.

 
 

impact bridges group: covid-19 response for canada

 

The COVID-19 pandemic is having a profound shock on Canadian society by challenging the resilience of our national, provincial and community social and economic systems. While the immediate focus is on responding to the crisis, attention will need to be given to the impact that will continue to play-out for years to come.  Impact Bridges Group is involved in responding to the immediate crisis, but is also planning for a longer engagement in the recovery.  Marginalized and vulnerable groups will be impacted the most by this crisis, along with others who have unexpectedly lost employment or are living with health and other implications directly as a result of COVID-19.   It is for these reasons that Impact Bridges Group has joined forces with others in a common approach on how to move forward together.

Impact Bridges Group endorses the following Principles for a Just Recovery.  Here are the 6 principles that are essential to a #JustRecovery that will allow us to #BuildBackBetter:

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  • Put people’s health and well-being first. No exceptions.

  • Strengthen the social safety net and provide relief directly to people.

  • Prioritize the needs of workers and communities.

  • Build resilience to prevent future crises.

  • Build solidarity and equity across communities, generations, and borders.

  • Uphold Indigenous Rights and work in partnership with Indigenous peoples.


Eastern Ontario

 
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South Western Ontario

 
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AFFORDABLE AND APPROPRIATE HOUSING

LOCATION: County of Wellington

THE CHALLENGE:

The vision within the 10-year Housing and Homelessness Plan for the County of Wellington is that “Everyone in Guelph-Wellington can find and maintain an appropriate, safe and affordable place to call home.” The reality is that the lack of affordable housing, both rental and ownership, is a growing issue for the County. Wellington County has a vacancy rate well below the 3% required for a healthy rental market. Affordable housing is not only an issue to low-income households, but also to moderate-income earners. The number of households at risk, especially taking COVID-19 into consideration, is expected to rise, and the demand for social housing will continue to increase. Meanwhile, growth rates in the County of Wellington and Guelph are far outpacing that of Ontario and Canada.

In no particular order, the most vulnerable groups in the County of Wellington include: i) recent immigrants; ii) people with activity limitations; iii) indigenous seniors; and, iv) LGBTQ+ seniors.

OUR RESPONSE:

It is always a challenge to understand complex systems, let alone being able to make changes to them. Impact Bridges Group’s approach is to begin by providing clarity on how to design the evaluation of systems change.

IBG seeks to learn about complex systems by engaging with stakeholders in a robust and systematic manner. Through the use of proven methodologies and frameworks along with data analysis, the learning is able to contribute verifiable evidence towards affecting real change in the housing situation for marginalized and vulnerable groups.

Depending on the rigour used in the learning, it is possible for IBG to do analytical work and provide insights on which changes to the system will maximize net social benefits. In other words, the collective group will be able to identify those changes that will get the biggest bang for the dollar invested in them. By using an evidence-based approach, IBG can provide leverage points that can be included in program design, as well as in the development or amendment to public policy for affordable housing. This type of insight and analysis was used successfully in the Housing First strategy that provided verifiable evidence of the impact of making permanent housing the first priority.

The program activities and outputs are in the control of Impact Bridges Group and those collaborating on the systems-based approach to housing. The outcomes will require behavioural changes of system actors. Innovative approaches can be used to incentivize each of the actors to select choices that will maximize the net benefits for those in need of affordable housing.

The IBG Content/Process Expert will always work with an experienced Content Expert, one from each of the key vulnerable groups. All the planning for each of the four consultative meetings will be led by IBG and the respective Content Expert. Findings from the consultative meetings will be disseminated with the intent being to advocate for sustainable solutions to the affordable housing crisis.

 
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