Toronto Star

Funding sought for Black-led charities

Ottawa asked to commit $200M to support community groups

- ANGELYN FRANCIS LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE With files from Nicholas Keung Angelyn Francis is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering equity and inequality. Her reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative.

As the 2021 Canadian federal budget is drafted, the Foundation for Black Communitie­s (FFBC) has submitted a proposal to have money set aside for Blackled charities.

During an open call for prebudget recommenda­tions from the Department of Finance, the foundation submitted a proposal for the federal government to allot $200 million to FFBC, to kick start an endowment.

The organizati­on plans to supplement it by raising $100 million from the private and philanthro­pic sector, and with an endowment model, be able to provide sustainabl­e resources to Black community organizati­ons.

Working group member Liban Abokor said he hopes their proposal will be considered, especially with the rise in commitment to support Black Canadians and anti-racism efforts.

“If we think about Canada’s plan to build back better, (we want to ensure) that includes Black communitie­s,” Abokor said.

In addition to funding anti-racism efforts through a four-year plan, much of the funding provided to support Black Canadians federally has been for business and entreprene­urship loans. Just over $220 million was earmarked by Ottawa and financial institutio­ns to offer business loans to the Black community.

Abokor acknowledg­ed that what has been done so far are important steps, but “I think there’s additional investment­s needed.”

There have also been some hiccups fulfilling the current offers. Recently, hundreds of Black-led groups were denied Black community initiative funding by Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada, with a response that the groups were not sufficient­ly Blackled.

The Foundation for Black Communitie­s was founded by Abokor and other Black people involved in the philanthro­pic and charitable sector to provide a foundation dedicated to empowering Black-led and Black-focused non-profit organizati­ons.

A report it authored late last year found that Black-led charities and non-profit organizati­ons have been getting the short end of the stick when it comes to funding.

It found that for every $100 of grant funds dispensed by 15 of the leading foundation­s in Canada, only 30 cents goes to Black community organizati­ons.

Social worker Ken Williams has seen the way funding models can be a barrier to effectivel­y serving Black communitie­s. Grants and funding are often provided on a project-by-project basis, which can be unstable.

“Young people’s lives don’t work in a one-year cycle or a three-year cycle … a lot of times, you know, you need supports that are ongoing,” Williams said.

He added it can take time for groups to get up and running, build community connection­s and “a lot of the times … the funding doesn’t actually assist in that process.”

FFBC plans to remove some of these barriers to make funding more accessible to grassroots organizati­ons.

The lack of diversity in charitable leadership is significan­t.

Last month, a Statistics Canada survey revealed there is a “diversity deficit” among board members in Canadian charities and not-for-profit organizati­ons, even though government funding and public donations are their main source of revenue.

Sen. Ratna Omidvar challenged the sector to begin keeping demographi­c data after the racial uproar that began last summer.

With the effect the pandemic has had on the country, the 2021 budget will be vital to planning an effective recovery.

A Department of Finance official reiterated that the government acknowledg­es that systemic racism is an issue in Canada and these communitie­s have been disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic.

Abokor has seen how local groups have pivoted to support racialized communitie­s, and how needed they will be in the recovery.

But, he asks, who is going to help Black youth who have had their education upended over the past year? Or help women who have disproport­ionately lost work re-enter the job market? Or support seniors who have had to stay home more out of caution.

“Without investment in Black-led, community organizati­ons, those services aren’t going to be available,” Abokor said. “And if they’re not available … then I think we should be worried about our community being left in actually a worse off position than we were prior to this pandemic.”

 ?? RENÉ JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR ?? Liban Abokor, left, Joseph J. Smith and Rebecca Darwent co-founded the Foundation for Black Communitie­s.
RENÉ JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR Liban Abokor, left, Joseph J. Smith and Rebecca Darwent co-founded the Foundation for Black Communitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada