February 10, 2016
LEADING-EDGE PANEL DISCUSSIONS….4 U?
By Andrew Cardozo
The Pearson Centre organizes Panel discussions for your conferences on issues that are important to you. Let us know if you would like a panel discussion for your conference or Board meeting, in Ottawa or elsewhere.
We organized this panel to provide the board and members of the CEEA with an update on the new politics in Ottawa and on how decisions are made in the federal government. The non-partisan panel spoke about their perspectives on these issues and answered questions from the audience.
We also hosted “Doing Politics Differently” in November – a panel of reps from the Liberal, Conservative New Democtatic and Green Parties. See main page for link.
We can organize similar non-partisan or multi-partisan discussions for your members with some of the brightest, best-connected and most influential folks in business, labour, NGOs and public affairs. We want the public and those interacting with government to be well informed about all the complexities involved. Talk to us about your needs!
(Contact: Andrew Cardozo: acardozo@thepearsoncentre.ca 613-295-1260)
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“Doing Business in Ottawa”
Organized by the Pearson Centre, for the Canadian Energy Efficiency Association
Wednesday, November 18, 2015; 7:30 to 9:00 am
Sheraton Hotel, 150 Albert Street, Ottawa
Panel:
Susan Delacourt, Political Columnist and Authour
Susan Scotti, Senior Vice President, Canadian Council of Chief Executives
Scott Thurlow, Senior Counsel, Temple Scott Associates
Moderators:
Elizabeth McDonald, CEO, Canadian Energy Efficiency Association (Host)
Andrew Cardozo, President, Pearson Centre
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5 rules to consider in advocating your position
• Understand the decision-making process
o Political process, the departmental bureaucracy, agencies, tax policy, federal-provincial jurisdiction
o Time lines of the system – how long things take: the next federal budget (likely in late February-early March, is one major upcoming event)
• Know what current policy is
o Demonstrate that you understand current policy (laws, regulation, etc.) and clearly state what you support or what changes you want to see.
• Know the relevant Liberal platform & read the mandate letters
o Explain how or where your issues coincide…or collide.
• Understand that the new government is committed to environmental sustainability and energy efficiency and wants to combat climate change, and that it is a new government.
o Can you relate your issues to its issues including the Paris Conference on climate change
o Keep your language and terminology appropriate to each audience
• Follow-up by email with those you met
o Always send the people you meet a message to indicate your understanding of the outcome. Discuss the follow-up you plan.