A Lasting Impact: An ACC Graduate’s Work in Tanzania Impacts Thousands

Jon Sebastien took full advantage of the opportunities within his grasp to better the lives of people thousands of kilometers away in Tanzania.  He graduated in 2009 from the Land and Water Management program at Assiniboine Community College and with the skills he learned during the program, particularly project management, Sebastien was able to “create his own job” through an internship. This internship later led to employment with SNV Netherlands Development Organization, where Sebastien played a crucial role in bringing better cookstoves and solar energy to rural communities in Tanzania.

More efficient cookstoves are vital to Tanzanians as 95% of the country’s energy comes from the burning of firewood and charcoal. The result of the dependency on these two sources has led to environmental degradation and a lack of sustainability as deforestation becomes a more prominent issue. This project also aimed to better the lives of Tanzanian women who could spend up to ten hours of their day collecting fuel, starting the cookstove, preparing and cooking the meal.

During the EnDev program that Sebastien worked in, the new cookstoves could burn either firewood or charcoal at a rate of 45-55% more efficiently. The stoves are produced by small entrepreneurs in Tanzania, and when they’re sold to a customer the entrepreneur receives points that are redeemable to support growth and production capacity.

  “It’s like Air Miles for entrepreneurs… As long as it’s going to assist with production. They can get anything from water storage tanks for ceramics to metal cutters and power tools to bicycles.” Sebastien said when he returned to Brandon after eight years in Tanzania.

The program was a huge success. 60 small enterprises, employing more than 100 people full-time and another 200 part-time, collectively produced more than 2,500 stoves a month as a new product line within their enterprises.

EnDev undertook the task of expanding solar energy in Tanzania, rewarding companies who go the extra mile to hook up farmers who live far from conventional power grids. Sebastian developed a private sector fund to stimulate the spread of solar power in the rural Lake Zone region, using Results Based Financing (RBF.) Companies that meet the fund’s criteria can get direct financing – but only upon verified delivery of quality solar product sales to rural customers. This project has been life-changing to people such as Elizabeth Mukwimba, 

Mukwimba, a 62-year-old Tanzanian farmer, stated, “Having an energy-efficient cookstove has made a huge impact. The difference with solar is also huge! We used to have to use kerosene for lighting. With the price of kerosene always going up, solar makes a huge difference for people like me. It means my grandchildren can see to study in the night.”

History of Brandon 

Well here we are. Beginning another semester on a big stretch of aspen parkland on the banks of the Assiniboine river. Most of us don’t give much thought as to what preceded our existence in a place and prefer not to think of ourselves as a data point on a census. 

After the glaciers of the last ice age receded in southwest Manitoba about 10,000 years ago, the land was home to people who would become known as the Ojibwa, Cree, Dene, Sioux, Mandan, and Assiniboine groups. Although the area’s history doesn’t start in the 1880s, most information readily available to the public regarding Brandon’s past starts with the era that saw a great influx of Quebec and Maritime Protestants followed by British and American immigrants. 

The expanse of a city we now inhabit was first imagined by a boat of people, carrying goods upstream from Winnipeg to Fort Ellice, a Hudson Bay Post on the Assiniboine near todays St. Lazare. 

The south bank of the Assiniboine was empty, but the north bank housed a bourgeoning town named Grand Valley. Grand Valley was settled by two brothers; John and Dougal McVicar in the 1870s. Although the exact location of the westward extension of the Canadian Pacific Railway had not yet been determined, routes through Minnedosa or Rapid City had been considered. With this expectation, regular voyages made by steamwheelers brought increasing numbers of settlers from the east.

In Spring of 1881, citizens of Grand Valley were thrilled to find out that the railway powers that be had decided on a more westerly route Winnipeg. The McVicar brothers jumped at the chance for their humble settlement to become a railway trade hub when the CPR sent a scout to decide on the divisional point for a townsites along the railway. This scout was Thomas L. Rosser, who had recently made a career change from being Confederate Cavalry Major General in the American Civil War to the chief engineer of the Canadian Pacific Railway. 

For the railway to be built through Grand Valley, Rosser offered Dougal McVicar $25,000. McVicar countered with $50,000 to which Rosser supposedly replied “I’ll be damned if a town of any kind is ever built here” – a fairly courteous response, considering his previous employment. So Rosser crossed the Assiniboine and built the railway town on the south side of the river. When rumour of an impending change for the site of the railway began circulating, Grand Valley had hope again to be the site but the city was built on a low lying plane and flooded extensively. After this, Grand Valley began to gradually disappear, 1884 Brandon newspapers ran ads offering to swap “that warehouse in Grand Valley for a horse”.

Within a year of Rosser’s passive aggressive move to build an entire town opposite the McVicar’s, population growth was exponential. In April of 1882 leading citizens called a public meeting that resulted in applying for a city charter. The charter was passed by the provincial government on May 30, 1882, meaning Brandon had skipped village or town phase of growth and skipped straight to being a city.  

It’s thought that the name Brandon originated from the Blue Hills of Brandon. The namesake of a Hudson Bay trading post “Brandon House”. Which was named after a hill on an island in James Bay where Captain James moored his ship in the winter of 1631. Brandon may more accurately be referred to as Brandon IV. 

The population of Brandon increased considerably with each coming train from the east. Settler Beecham Trotter described Brandon as of April 1882 with “streets… filled with a picturesque throng – land sharks, remittance men with dogs and guns, prospectors, adventurers of every stripe”. 

The first school board was elected in 1881. The Brandon Sun published their first paper in 1882. 1882 also saw Brandon’s first agricultural exhibition, the construction of multiple hotels, and the first central school on the west side of 100 block of 10th street. In response to inequities regarding railways and tariffs, including the CPR’s monopoly over land and the provincial control of resources, the Farmers Protective Union was established in 1883 in Brandon. 

The County of Brandon was formed in 1884, with the incorporation of surrounding municipalities including Cornwallis, Elton, Whitehead, and Glenwood, but was dismantled the same year. This was the same year that the construction of the first Brandon Courthouse began on Louise Avenue east and Rideau street. It operated until 1908, served as a provincial jail until 1979, and is not part of Rideau Park personal care home. The Canadian Pacific Railway was finally completed in 1885. Prior to this year, 6th street was a bustling hub, but after the economic development of 1886, Rosser Avenue became the most dominant street in the city. By the end of the 19th century, Brandon was ahead of its prairie counterparts with a federal agricultural research station, provincial jail, mental hospital, school of nursing, and Brandon College. 

Brandon’s first taxi service opened by the Dennison Brothers offered the choice between an auto or horse drawn vehicle in 1909. In 1912 construction of the Prince Edward Hotel began at the southwest corner of 9th street and Princess with an estimated cost of $500,000. The building was set to be extravagant, faced with brick imported from Belgium, and set to be decked out with European furnishings that ended up at the bottom of the Atlantic with the Titanic. The building was demolished in 1980.  

Although the first woman elected to Brandon’s public office in 1915, settler women couldn’t vote until 1916. However progressive a woman in office may have been in 1915, Brandon’s first female mayor wasn’t elected until 2010. In 1916, compulsory education was instituted and the purchase and consumption of alcohol was declared illegal in Manitoba. Seed packaging company, McKenzie Seeds originated in Brandon and during this grew into one of the largest seed houses in the British Commonwealth. 

The first world war saw many of Brandon’s buildings being repurposed; Brandon’s exhibition building was used as an internment camp from 1914 to 1916. The Brandon Collegiate Institute was used as an emergency treatment centre to treat the unmanageable volume of patients during the 1918 flu epidemic that took approximately 1,215 lives. Prohibition ended in 1923, the same year that the first radio station was established by CKX and owned by Manitoba telephones (now known as Bell MTS). 

From a small blip in the endless great plains to a stop for the Assiniboine River fur trade, to the modern Wheat City we now know, that is a brief and fairly accurate description of how Brandon Manitoba became the default coordinates for our google maps app.

Weise worte 

    Herzlich willkommen in der Brandon Universität! Es muss gleich vorweg gesagt sein dass euer Leben sich drastisch ändern wird, jetzt wo euer Unileben anfängt. Nur keine Angst, ich hab da so manche Tipps die euch diese Wandel Periode etwas einfacher machen könnten. Erster Tipp: Lernt neue Leute kennen. Momentan sind rund 3500 Studenten hier zu Hause, und jeder hat seine eigene Geschichte und Hintergrund. Die Uni ist der perfekte Platz Menschen kennenzulernen denen ihr in eurem Leben sonst nie begegnen würdet. Zweiter Tipp: Jeder macht mal Fehler und hat Zeiten wo sein Studium ihm etwas schwer fällt, wenn ihr irgendwann mal in diesen Schuhen steckt dann ist das trotzdem kein Grund einen Nervenzusammenbruch zu erleiden. Es stehen euch mehrere Programme zur Verfügung die euch auf eurem, vieleicht stolprigen Weg, zur Abschlussfeier helfen können. Fragt einfach im Studentenservices Büro nach. Dritter Tipp: Habt spass! Das Unileben kann zeitweise richtig stressig werden, erst recht wenn ihr euch nur auf euer Studium konzentriert. Das Leben geht weiter auch während den Semesterprüfungen. Das soll nicht heissen das ihr nicht auch büffeln müsst, nur dass ein jeder sein Gleichgewicht zwischen Spass und Arbeit finden sollte. Wenn alles gut geht steht ihr am ende nicht wie Faust da und sagt  „Habe nun, ach! Philosophie, Juristerei und Medizin, Und leider auch Theologie Durchaus studiert, mit heißem Bemühn. Da steh ich nun, ich armer Tor! Und bin so klug als wie zuvor”.  

Translation, German To English

Wise Words

    Welcome to Brandon University! It must be said right away that your life will change drastically now that your university days have started. Just don't panic, I have a couple of tips that could make this transitional period easier on you. First tip: Get to know new people. At the moment there are around 3500 students at BU, each with their own story and background. The University is the perfect place to meet people that you would otherwise have never run into in your life. Second tip: Everyone makes mistakes and experiences times where they struggle at school, should you ever find yourselves in this situation there is still no reason to panic. There are many programs at your disposal that can help you on your, perhaps bumpy, road to graduation. Just go to the student services office and seek help. Third tip: Have fun! University life can get quite stressful at times, especially if you are solely concentrating on your studies. Life continues even during exams. That isn't to say that you won't have to  study hard as well, just that everyone should find the right balance between work and play. If all goes well you won't have to say, as Faust does, at the end "Have now, alas! quite studied through Philosophy and Medicine, And Law, and ah! Theology, too, With hot desire the truth to win! And here, at last, I stand, poor fool! As wise as when I entered school”.

 

Brandon Knights Chess

Last year a few chess enthusiasts came together at the University to create a chess club. It culminated ten months later with a few of the younger players heading to the East Coast to play at the national level after mopping the floor with nearly every other person in the group. Seriously, it was embarrassing how one-sided the games they played against me were. Do not underestimate fourteen-year-olds, they haven’t developed the empathy to not embarrass a weak-willed fragile adult like me.

I deserved it. 

The chess club will be meeting every Saturday starting on September 8th from 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM in the university Harvest Hall. Sometimes it lasts a little longer than that. You can drop in with a small donation to the club, get some practice in and prepare for the planned big tournament at the end of November. There will be lessons for beginning players, training and analyses for players with some games under their belt, and a challenge for those who have an ego about this stuff or want to play at a higher level. Trust me, it won’t last long. You can also just come and play for fun. 

The organizer, Rod Riquelme, matches players by ability and makes sure everyone that shows up can play the maximum amount of games. So if you’re awake by 1:00 PM on a Saturday and want another excuse to avoid the course readings, come join the Brandon Knights.