Marc Pharand, CPA, CA

Marc Pharand

Marc Pharand , CPA, CA

Partner

Marc is a member of MNP’s Assurance and Accounting team in Hawkesbury. Marc works closely with his clients to help them meet new challenges and achieve their business goals.

He delivers tailored audit and assurance and tax compliance services, taking the time to get to know his clients and understand their needs.

Marc helps a wide range of organizations, from small privately owned firms to multinational companies. He works with private companies in the agri-food, manufacturing, gas, construction and retail sectors; credit unions, not-for-profit organizations and municipal governments.

Marc earned a Bachelor of Commerce (BComm) in accounting from the University of Ottawa in 2004. He is a Chartered Professional Accountant (CPA), qualifying as a Chartered Accountant (CA) in 2007.

Prior to joining MNP, Marc was a senior manager at a Big Four firm.

Marc is a member of the United Way East Ontario Prescott-Russell Community advisory committee.


Contact Marc Today

This field is required.

This field is required.

Phone or Email field is required.

Please enter a valid email.

Phone or Email field is required.

Please enter a valid phone number.

This field is required.

This field is required.

 

reCaptcha Validation Failed. Please try again!

Please complete the highlighted fields.

Insights

  • Agility

    July 04, 2025

    Modernizing the core How energy and utilities can move on from legacy finance and billing systems

    Legacy platforms are expiring. Discover how energy and utilities organizations can choose the right finance, billing, and customer systems to reduce risk and unlock long-term value.

  • Agility

    July 03, 2025

    Capital Regional District

    The Capital Regional District faced challenges with outdated IT systems, a siloed department, and fragmented project management processes.

  • July 03, 2025

    Cyber security on the farm: The gap between concern and preparedness

    Many farmers are concerned about cyber attacks — but few are prepared to respond to an incident. How can you bridge the gap between concern and preparedness?