Toronto Star

Ahead of election, Liberals gave $50M to social services

Documents show officials selected projects instead of launching open call

- JORDAN PRESS

Internal government documents show that federal officials moved quickly before the fall election campaign to dole out $50 million aimed at transformi­ng the delivery of social services.

The idea was to push money to national groups with a track record of success and then raise awareness about the money itself with smaller groups the transforma­tion effort is supposed to help.

A March briefing note to the minister in charge of the file said that officials would “strategica­lly select projects” to fund “given the tight timelines” for announceme­nts to start in June.

The approach would be faster than launching an open call for proposals, officials at Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada wrote in the document obtained by The Canadian Press through the Access to Informatio­n Act.

The money is part of a larger pot of spending that the Liberals want to give out in the coming years to social services groups to help them partner with the private sector.

The idea is to give non-profits new sources of revenue, offer investors a way to make money while supporting social services and possibly save federal cash in the long-run.

The Liberals have put about $800 million behind the socialfina­nce initiative that has been the subject of behind-thescenes debate since first announced just over a year ago.

The concept has cross-party support and groups working in the nascent sector are looking forward to seeing the final details of how the bulk of the money will be distribute­d, said Stephen Huddart, president and CEO of the McConnell Foundation.

The organizati­ons using the $50 million to expand capacity — to prepare actual service providers to apply for and use the rest of the money — met in June and are scheduled to meet again in the coming weeks.

At the same time, federal officials continue to work on the design of the $755-million social-finance fund.

The idea is that payments from government would flow if a project — finding housing for people for whom current programs haven’t worked, for instance, or helping people kick drug addictions — has been shown successful through detailed data. But such a project would have to be funded in the beginning by private backers who take on the risk of failure.

The government has been told in meetings to seek three times the seed capital from private and philanthro­pic sources, which would amount to almost $2.3 billion on top of what’s coming from federal coffers.

The documents obtained by The Canadian Press also show the government was told to look for a return to its main social finance fund to make it sustainabl­e, allowing the initial $755 million to be recycled over and over for new projects.

“While we support the idea that the government’s capital should be returned, I don’t think anyone would say that it’s more important to generate a financial return than it is to generate social impact, or environmen­tal impact or to increase community capacity to solve and address complex problems,” Huddart said.

The documents don’t mention how much investors might receive in profits.

Officials have been told that the federal fund should shoulder some risk to help local funds, which would directly finance projects. Ottawa could take losses from any failed endeavours to help smaller funds attract private money by “virtually eliminatin­g their exposure to risk.”

Other details of the government’s plan are yet to be released, including whether there will be knowledge hubs designed to help small groups learn and expand.

Sen. Ratna Omidvar, who has been a proponent of social finance in the upper chamber, said she expects these to be part of the plan.

“The field needs to be fertilized in a way so that the crops can grow,” she said.

“You can’t just simply push the money out the door without making sure that there is a higher bar on capacity, on understand­ing, how to service investment­s, how to capture data and evidence.”

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