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Innovation + Job News

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$25 million investment will help Oakville energy conservation company Fifth Light hire 86

Fifth Light, an Oakville-based company that helps companies conserve energy by automatically dimming lights, will invest $25 million to advance its technology over the next five years, an investment that is expected to create 86 new jobs.

The company's innovative "dimmable ballast for fluorescent light bulbs" automatically dims indoor lighting depending on the amount of exterior light available. The company says its technology helps businesses with fluorescent lighting conserve energy, generate revenue, increase productivity and reduce waste.

"This investment gives us a heightened ability to deliver on upcoming contracts using a groundbreaking system we wholeheartedly believe in," says Dr. Joseph Dableh, CEO and president of Fifth Light Technology. His comments came after last month's announcement by the provincial government that the Ministry of Economic Development would provide a grant of $3.75 million to the company as part of the $25 million total investment.

Author: Edward Keenan
Sources: Dr. Joseph Dableh, CEO and president, Fifth Light Technology; Leigh-Ann Popek, Minister of Economic Development and Trade's Office

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Startup Shape Collage shapes up with 1.5 million downloads, six figure revenue -- will be hiring

Unlike many web startups, Shape Collage was profitable from its launch in 2009. Founded by University of Toronto PhD student Vincent Cheung to, as he says, "solve my own problem of what to do with the hundreds and thousands of digital photos that I was taking with my camera. because he realized other collage-making programs. I didn't like what the existing collage makers did, so I made my own." The company has since racked up six figure revenue (and 25% month-over-month revenue growth), 1.5 million downloads and multiple awards.

Cheung designed the program for his own use and then offered it for free online. He racked up 90,000 downloads in one month. As he continued to work on his graduate studies in computer and electrical engineering, he launched Shape Collage as a business with help from the school's Innovation and Partnerships program, to great accolades. Most recently, he won the Ontario division of the Advancing Canadian Entrepreneurship award. His business model involves giving away his product free but offering an enhanced professional version for sale.

Cheung says he expects the size of the business to double over the next year. As for staff, until now it's just been him, "Founder, CEO, and Janitor" as his web profile says. But Cheung reports he's looking into hiring four support staff soon -- a student intern developer, a sales rep, a marketing person and a graphic designer.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Sources: Vincent Cheung, President, Shape Collage; Charles Lim on the MaRS blog; News @ University of Toronto

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New program funds community-based clean energy projects (and jobs) to the tune of $200K

While most of the headlines -- and job news -- about Ontario's Feed-in-Tariff energy program have involved multinationals (see Samsung's $7 billion, 15,000-job bonanza, for instance), many have been pushing the potential of community energy partnerships -- locally organized and owned programs to produce energy at the neighbourhood level. Earlier this week, the MaRS Discovery District hosted a forum on just that subject, featuring speakers from around the world offering relevant information on financing and organization of community energy.

On cue, the provincial government announced a program to give such projects a boost: the new Community Energy Partnerships Program (CEPP) will cover development costs of up to $200,000 for not-for-profit and co-op energy projects.

In a release, Minister of Energy and Infrastructure Brad Duguid pointed out both the environmental and employment benefits of the program. "Opening Ontario's doors to clean energy means that everyone can participate in growing Ontario's clean energy economy and the jobs associated with it," he said.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Amy Tang, Office of the Honourable Brad Duguid

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New Toronto-based Cavet Tech launches innovative light control LumiSmart in 15 countries

Cavet Technologies launched a new product this week out of the Yonge-Lawrence neighbourhood of Toronto, introducing an innovative, environmentally friendly lighting product in 15 countries. The LumiSmart ILC (which stands for Intelligent Lighting Controller) is a patented device that controls florescent lighting systems for businesses to save energy without effecting the comfort of a building's occupants.

The company boasts that although they just launched this week, they draw on a decade of research by the founders and own six patents. Company spokesperson Leslie Taschner says that though the company launches with fewer than 10 employees, it will be partnering with Don Mills-based Celestica to manufacture and ship the LumiSmart around the world, which could produce a number of additional jobs in Toronto.

Taschner says that the product is uniquely suited to its home of Ontario, given the Ontario Green Energy Act requirements and the recent local momentum around energy conservation, and notes that while headlines have recently been occupied by foreign company's partnering with the provincial government on renewable energy, Cavet is a proudly local company that will take Toronto-born clean technology, design and manufacturing to the world.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Leslie Taschner, Cavet Technologies

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Takeda Canada celebrates one year and 35 new jobs -- expects to hire another 70 in coming years

On April 28, Takeda Canada celebrated the first anniversary of its launch in Mississauga with an event at its headquarters. The company has hired 35 people since opening and says it expects to grow its workforce by 200 per cent "in the next few years."

President and General Manager Daaron Dohler said in an announcement of the celebration that the 230-year-old Japanese parent company, Takeda Pharmaceuticals, selected the GTA location for its Canadian operation because of the people it could hire there and work environment. "Takeda Canada selected Mississauga for its Canadian headquarters because it is a central location that offers a sophisticated talent pool, modern healthcare system, leading medical centres, thriving biotechnology industry and tremendous scientific expertise and innovation," said Dohler. "Takeda Canada is committed to growing our head office team, adding a national sales force and forging strong, collaborative partnerships with key stakeholders in order to serve the unmet needs of healthcare providers and patients in Canada."

In its one year of operation, according to the company, they "reacquired the commercial rights to type 2 diabetes treatment ACTOS(R) (pioglitazone HCI) and submitted multiple New Drug Submissions to Health Canada." It plans to expand by exploiting its parent company's expertise in diabetes, cardiovascular disease, oncology and gastroenterology.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Laurene Redding, Takeda Canada, Inc.

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Alterna micro-finance has helped 340 borrowers create 900+ jobs and $1M in business

In a study of its social enterprise micro-lending program, Alterna Savings found that in a decade of small loans, they've helped business owners create jobs while creating loyal customers. The credit union is now calling on Canada's big banks to implement similar programs and on governments to encourage them to do so.

The loan program, which give loans of less than $15,000, typically to entrepreneurs who do not qualify for conventional business loans. The Carleton Centre for Community Innovation, which conducted the study, found that of the 14 per cent of the program's 340 borrowers that they interviewed, 21 per cent were able to stop receiving government assistance and support themselves from their businesses as a result of the loans. Fully 62 per cent of participants have hired between two and four employees. If the results are representative of all borrowers, it adds up to well over 900 total jobs created.

The program is not directly profitable, according to Alterna VP Kimberley Ney. "It almost breaks even," she says, "But we look at it as a long-term strategy. Borrowers have brought us over $1 million in subsequent banking business. they tend to be pretty loyal, because when no one else would look at them, we were there."

The study also found substantial social benefits to the program, and Ney says the government could help such initiatives spread by, for instance, guaranteeing loans (more than 90 per cent are fully paid off) or changing social assistance rules so beneficiaries could receive loans without being immediately cut off.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Kimberley Ney, SVP Marketing, Communications and Corporate Social Responsibility, Alterna Savings

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Queen's Park kicks in $7 million for bioscience research

The provincial government has committed $7 million in funding to a new commercialization strategy for bioscience companies in the province. The money is aimed at aiding companies in getting their research to market.

The move came in response to a report from the Ontario Bioscience Industry Organization, "Industry Generated Recommendations for Sustainability and Growth of Ontario's Bioscience Industry in 2010 and Beyond." The group, which represents the private sector players in bioscience research and marketing, welcomed the investment from Queen's Park. "By providing this immediate support the province is recognizing the challenges facing Ontario bioscience companies," says OBIO president and CEO Gail Garland. "By giving these companies a shot in the arm, it will allow them to bring innovative technologies to market -- which benefits the health of Ontarians, the wealth of the province, and the health of the whole world."

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Gail Garland, President & CEO, Ontario Bioscience Industry Organization

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Hill & Knowlton adds 2 experts to growing health branch

Canadian public relations and communications giant Hill & Knowlton has announced significant growth in its health communications operation in Toronto, with the hiring of two new senior staff and a revised mandate for one of its executives.

In a statement, company president and CEO Michael Coates said that the moves are in response to significant growth in the company's business with health, medical and pharmaceutical companies. Francine Beck brings a background as a kinesiologist and journalist and 18 years of health marketing experience to her role as vice-president and national director, consumer health and pharmaceutical marketing. Gina DeBenedetti, the company's new vice president and national director, medical communications, is a certified public health inspector and has worked in both the communications and healthcare industries. Meanwhile, Toronto public affairs manager Jason Grier has been reassigned to the role of vice president and national director, health policy.

According to Ann-Marie Koumettou of Hill & Knowlton, responding to questions by email, the new additions to the company's staff bring the number of new hires in the past six months to 17. She says a number of factors have led to the growth: "We are very fortunate that we were not severely impacted by the recession in 2009, but we were cautious about expansion. To that end, now that we are into 2010 and in some strong, stable client relationships, we were well positioned to add the capability to both serve our clients' growing needs, but also to help us continue that expansion through new business activities."


Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Ann-Marie Koumettou, Hill & Knowlton Canada

Munk Centre at U of T expands, gets $25 million more for global affairs research, will hire

Last month, a $35 million gift from philanthropist Peter Munk -- the largest in the history of the University of Toronto -- was added to $25 million from the province of Ontario to set up the Munk School of Global Affairs at U of T. This week Prime Minister announced that his government would be chipping in an additional $25 million to create a centre for global security at the school.

According to the federal government's website, Prime Minister Stephen Harper says, "This new Centre will help us develop deeper expertise in addressing global security concerns."

The new school is expected to employ top researchers from around the world at a newly constructed downtown facility to study issues around terrorism and global security. In a separate statement, school director Janice Gross Stein said the Munk School of Global Affairs is in an excellent position to tackle the mandate. "Issues of global security will be a defining framework for our country over the next decade and beyond, and Canada needs a strong publicly supported research centre to put the Canadian voice on the international stage," said Stein. "Given our strengths, the Munk School is the natural place to house this new Centre.

Although numbers were not immediately available, there are significant employment implications to the recent announcements, as the total of $85 million in funding will, according to University of Toronto representatives, construct new facilities and hire new faculty and administrators.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Sources: Janice Gross Stein, Munk School of Global Affairs; Office of the Prime Minister of Canada; University of Toronto Media Relations; Glob and Mail

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Cloud backup innovator Asigra grows by 20% this year, will add 20 new positions in months ahead

Asigra Inc. was essentially a cloud backup company before the cloud existed. Founded in 1986, the University-Heights-area privately held company was the first in the industry to provide an online backup and recovery platform. Founder David Farajun was frustrated with the loss of his own information, and set up a solution to the common problem. Since then, the company claims to have constantly led the market with innovations, and today it is among the largest backup enterprises in the world. And it is continuing to grow.

Last month, the company announced a new partner, NetApp, which is among the larger of their roster of several hundred. That and other new accounts have seen the company's staff swell by 20% this year, and according to Director of Marketing Programs Amrita Chandra, the company expects to add another 20 positions -- mostly in sales and sales engineering -- in the immediate future.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Amrita Chandra, Director of Marketing Programs, Asigra Inc.

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Avante Security demonstrates innovative Smartboxx -- a remote control for energy usage

When he founded Avante Security in 1996, company President and CEO Emmanuel Mounouchos was dedicated to helping ensure people's safety through innovative security devices. But in recent years, his company has expanded its focus to help people secure not just their immediate environment but the global environment as well, through innovations that have drawn notice.

Last year the company was named one of Canada's "Clean 15" green technology companies, and last week the Ontario's minister of the environment, Brad Duguid, visited the company's Don Mills office to see the Smartboxx Energy Monitor in action. Apparently, he was impressed. "
Energy Conservation is a key priority under Ontario's landmark Green Energy Act," Duguid said in a statement after the visit. "Innovations led by private sector companies, such as Avante can help lead a culture of conservation through the creation of consumer friendly products to manage the energy we use in our daily lives."

The Smartboxx monitor allows people to remotely monitor and control their energy usage using the web or a smartphone. According to the company's website, they are always on the lookout for new staff.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Emmanuel Mounouchos, President and CEO, Avante Security

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My Green City game app gets $25K seed money as 1 of 3 winners at Innovation Awards

At the inaugural Green Innovation Awards presented by the Toronto Community Foundation on April 23, three winners received chunks of the $50,000 prize pool as start-up money for their proposed environmentally innovative business ideas.

The biggest cheque was for $25,000 to Robert Kori Golding, who proposed a Facebook and iPhone game application that would see people build Green Cities in the game, and earn carbon credits tradeable in the game environment by completing real-world missions such as attending farmer's markets or changing light bulbs.

Golding says that the project is in its infancy, but he plans to work with a team of advisors to use the prize money to raise further capital to turn the game idea into a reality.

$10,000 went to Olivier Trescases for his Green Gym idea that would harvest energy from workout equipment to feed the electrical grid. And former Torontoist editor Sarah Lazarovic picked up $15,000 in support of her GreenHouseTO idea to build a website and mobile application that would give homeowners, builders and renovators access to information about green building.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Sources: Robert Kori Golding, My Green Toronto; Toronto Community Foundation

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$35 million government investment pays off with jobs, new Humber Arts & Media Studios

The former Lakeshore Lions Arena reopened April 23 with lots of fanfare after a renovation project that employed trades workers over the past year and will employ knowledge workers in the years to come, according to Humber public relations spokesperson Andrew Leopold.

The official opening of the Humber College Arts & Media Studios at the school's Lakeshore campus represented the payoff on $35 million in federal and provincial stimulus spending. The new building will be home to a host of arts, trades and media-related classes and programs, and will also house a gymnasium.

The federal government kicked in $5 million towards construction under its Knowledge Infrastructure program, while the province anted up another $30 million under its Open Ontario program in the 2009 budget. The money also funded the construction of Humber's Centre for Justice Leadership, which opened last November.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Andrew Leopold, Humber College

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Mississauga-based Arclin introduces innovative new green product for rail cars

Most people in the GTA probably missed the news about Arclin's new environmentally friendly dust suppression product for rail car topping. In fact, most people in the GTA have likely never heard of Arclin. And who could blame them, since the company's activities -- it is a world leader in paper overlays technology and a supplier of bonding and surfacing materials -- are hardly an everyday household concern.

But the company is one of those hidden Toronto success stories, a market leader owned by Teachers Private Capital (putting them in the more famous company of the Toronto Maple Leafs) and based in Mississauga. Arclin employs 700 people and owns satellite plants around the world, and also has a demonstrated dedication to both innovation and the environment.

That environmentalism was extended this week with the introduction of a new dust suppression product for topping rail cars that are transporting coal. Traditionally such products are made of emulsified, petroleum -based products, while this new topper is made of organic raw materials.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Kevin Griffin, Arclin

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Markham-based Redline brings on 3 senior staff after announcing 2 multi-million-dollar deals

You could say that Markham-based Redline Communications is on a bit of a roll. Last month, the broadband company announced their part in a US$50 million contract to supply wireless infrastructure across Romania. Earlier this month, they announced they'd won a $1.8 million contract for the "Digital Rio" program in Brazil. And just this week, on April 23, Redline announced the appointment of three senior management staff to help lead the company in its growth.

As of May, Bruce MacInnis will be joining the company as Chief Financial Officer, Robert Williams as Senior Vice President of Operations and Engineering and Lynda Partner as Vice President, Marketing. "I am pleased to welcome Robert, Lynda and Bruce to the Redline management team," acting CEO Eric Melkasaid said in announcing the appointments. "We are excited to have three seasoned executives who, through their extensive experience and unique perspectives, will enhance our ability to execute on our strategic vision and drive our success over the long-term."

Redline was founded in 1999 and set up headquarters just north of Toronto. In just over 10 years of operation, they claim more than 50,000 installations in 80 countries, making it a world leader in broadband technology and innovation.

Writer: Edward Keenan
Source: Duval Yeager, Redline Communications
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