Black Business Initiative (BBI)
A Dynamic and Vibrant Black Presence
within the Nova Scotia Business Community
WE'VE MOVED
June 29, 2009 our new office address is:
Centennial Building, Suite 1201
1660 Hollis Street
Halifax, NS
B3J 1V7
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The Black Business Initiative (BBI) is a Province-wide business development initiative committed to fostering the growth of businesses owned by members of the Nova Scotia Black Community. The BBI places priority on educating Black business owners in the operation of their business - from marketing to budgeting to securing funding.
July 1-8, 2009
Royal NS International Tattoo, Halifax Metro Centre
July 16-20 , 2009
Tall Ships 2009 Call for Volunteers, Halifax
July 30- Aug 3, 2009
Africville Reunion Festival
The BBI is committed to growing the Black presence in a diverse range of business sectors including high-tech, manufacturing, tourism, and the cultural sector.
In 1995, the Government of Canada and the Province of Nova Scotia set up the BBI to address the unique needs confronting the Black business community in Nova Scotia. For the first five years of its existence, BBI was funded under the COOPERATION Agreement for Economic Diversification, a joint agreement between the Federal and Provincial Governments. The BBI is currently funded by the federally administered Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA) and the Provincial Department of Economic Development.
BBI Vision
A dynamic and vibrant black presence within the Nova Scotia business community.
BBI Mission
To positively influence the Nova Scotia business culture by promoting and assisting in the development of Nova Scotia Black-owned businesses.
The BBI accomplishes this within a cohesive framework to achieve a number of overall goals including:
- Economic independence of individuals;
- Improved standards of living;
- Career options for youth;
- Pride in communities.
The BBI works toward these overall goals by concentrating its efforts in one specific area: business development.
The BBI believes that helping individuals create and grow healthy businesses will provide economic self-sufficiency and a better future for Black youth looking for career options while creating jobs within a community that traditionally experiences extremely high unemployment (currently above the provincial average).
Principles
- Every Black person who expresses an interest in starting a business is important to this Initiative;
- The Black community needs business know-how, information and skills development - not charity;
- The Black business community should be fully integrated with the larger business community in order to access the necessary resources;
- Direct financial assistance is only one component of the BBI;
- The merits of a project depend on the viability of the business case.
Featured Business
Lower Sackville Wellness Centre
Steve Oliver the director of the Sackville Wellness Centre says the role of his centre is to assist its clients to “have a sense of well-being, feeling good about themselves, and happy with their lives.”


