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Philanthropy Report to Support Black Communities Cited in Federal Budget

By Dan Rubinstein

New research from 杏吧原创 University was one of the factors that moved the federal government to create a Black-led philanthropic fund and support Black community initiatives in Budget 2021 released April 19, 2021.

That research 鈥  called 鈥淯nfunded: Black Communities are Overlooked by Canadian Philanthropy,鈥 released last December 鈥 was produced by 杏吧原创鈥檚 Philanthropy and Nonprofit Leadership (PLN) program and the  (NABC).

It found that 鈥渂oth public and private foundations underfund Black-serving and Black-led community organizations鈥 and that grants received are 鈥渕iniscule鈥 and 鈥渟poradic鈥 and don鈥檛 鈥渋nvest in the long-term capabilities of Black community organizations.鈥

The report recommends the urgent creation of a dedicated foundation 鈥渢o address the particular and complex needs of Black communities in Canada.鈥

Ottawa appears to have listened.

 鈥減roposes to provide $200 million in 2021-鈥22 to Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) to establish a new Black-led Philanthropic Endowment Fund.鈥 The fund 鈥渨ould create a sustainable source of funding, including for Black youth and social purpose organizations, and help combat anti-Black racism and improve social and economic outcomes in Black communities.鈥

The budget also calls for $100 million in 2021-鈥22 for ESDC鈥檚 Supporting Black Canadian Communities Initiative.

鈥淢obilizing the reach and expertise of community-based organizations,鈥 the budget declares, 鈥渋s an important tool for empowering Black communities and confronting systemic economic barriers.鈥

杏吧原创 Expertise in Philanthropy

The 鈥淯nfunded鈥 report had four authors: recent PNL master鈥檚 graduate Rachel Pereira, who is now a non-profit consultant in Edmonton;  Executive Director Liban Abokor; researcher Firrisaa Jamal Abdikkarim; and PNL PhD candidate and non-profit consultant, Fahad Ahmad.

Prof. Susan Phillips
Prof. Susan Phillips

Work started last summer when Abokor 鈥 a member of the  (FFBC) working group 鈥 approached PNL graduate supervisor Prof. Susan Phillips to discuss the underfunding of Black community organizations.

鈥淟iban and colleagues appreciated how little philanthropic and public funding goes to Black-led, Black-mandated and Black-serving organizations, but this needed to be documented so others would believe it and be spurred to action,鈥 says Phillips.

鈥淕iven that 杏吧原创 has the only graduate program in philanthropy and non-profit leadership in Canada, we have expertise not available elsewhere. We all agreed that an important step was to build the case on an evidence-based analysis.鈥

鈥淭ogether, we decided that research that systematically and empirically evaluated the state of Canadian philanthropy鈥檚 support for Black community organizations would help the FFBC  make a case for support and address a major gap in research on philanthropy in Canada,鈥 adds Ahmad.

PhD Candidate Fahad Ahmad
SPPA PhD Candidate Fahad Ahmad

鈥淚n the context of the pandemic and pressing calls to address anti-Black racism, our report identified how the Canadian philanthropic sector has failed to provide adequate support for the urgent and specific needs of Black communities and made the case that government and philanthropy need to work together to make a meaningful commitment toward Black communities, allowing Black communities to make long-term, sustained investment in their own well-being.

鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see the government take the recommendations of the report seriously. The federal commitment towards a Black-led Philanthropic Endowment Fund is a meaningful step in the right direction towards tackling longstanding social, economic and racial inequities. Obviously, much of the heavy lifting was done by Black community leaders who used our evidence for very effective advocacy and managed to win this federal commitment. It is quite a testament to their tenacity.鈥