Ottawa slashing red tape for charities operating abroad in bid to smooth foreign aid system - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:55 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Ottawa slashing red tape for charities operating abroad in bid to smooth foreign aid system

The federal government is set to reform how it approaches the funding of foreign aid, with an eye to making the process more efficient.

Avoiding embarrassment prioritized over empowering local groups, critics say

A woman stands and speaks in front of a crowd of people.
Foreign Affairs Minister Mlanie Joly speaks at the Global Heads of Mission Meeting, where the government's Future of Diplomacy Initiative was discussed, in Ottawa on June 7. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

Global Affairs Canada is reforming its bureaucratic system for funding foreign-aid initiatives in a bid to approve funding requests faster and eliminate multiple layers of red tape.

Charities say Canada's international aid system is notoriously cumbersome. The system provides more than $6.5 billion a year in development aid for everything from education and climate-change adaptation to gender equality, in addition to humanitarian funding for emerging crises.

"They know they've been risk-averse. They know that the systems are outdated. They know that the administrative burdenis too high," said Shannon Kindornay, head of operations atCooperation Canada, whose group represents more than 95 non-profits.

The overhaul, referred to as the "grants and contribution transformation initiative," includes updating how Global Affairs staff assess funding applications from Canadian and foreign aid groups, as well as the reporting requirements Ottawa includes to track outcomes.

The initiative is also meant to change a culture that critics say prioritizes avoiding embarrassment over empowering local groups.

"The [grants and contribution transformation initiative]is an important aspect of [the department's]Future of Diplomacy initiative, for which the objectives are to build new policy expertise while investing in new tools and systems, and ensuring the most innovative and efficient investments for years to come," said Genevive Tremblay, a spokespersonfor Global Affairs Canada.

International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen has so far not agreed to an interview.

Forms, rulesupdated multiple times: groups

Groups working in the sector say the current system is often a bureaucratic nightmare, with Ottawa issuing vague directions for accessing funding, and then updating the reporting forms and requirements multiple times over the course of a project.

In some cases, a project operating on two different continents will be reviewed by separate geographical teams using the same criteria, because the department does not centralize all of its processes.

Kindornay saidthe paperwork stems in part from a culture that began under the former Conservative government, where bureaucrats put an emphasis on avoiding any situation that could lead to unflattering media reports that suggest foreign aid is being misused.

"That chilling definitely remains. The culture is risk-averseness for sure," she said. "The department is actually being pretty transparent and knows what the problems are."

WATCH | Government cuts some foreign aid in spring budget:

Trudeau pitches fighting poverty at UN despite cuts to foreign aid

1 year ago
Duration 1:52
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is at the United Nations to mark the halfway point of reaching the UN's 2030 Sustainable Development Goals for climate change, clean water and ending extreme poverty. Critics are calling for the government to do more.

Kindornay said Global Affairs Canada funds foreign organizations thatrun the gamut from global charities and organizations that have operated for decades in a single country, to small grassroots groups operating under dictatorships.

Funding the latter can involve "literally briefcases of money being sent over a border to a women's rights organization," she said, making it hard to give Ottawa receipts showing how the money has been spent.

"Particularly in certain countries where safety and security is a risk, asking someone to hold on to a taxi receipt that shows they went somewhere can be a real-life danger for that person."

Navigating these situations requires countries sending funds to "accept that you might lose a little bit of money in a riskier place, but you might also have huge gains, because you've taken that risk," Kindornay said.

The president and CEOof Save the Children Canada saideven large, long-standing charities struggle to cope with Ottawa's paperwork. "It's a complex system, and there are different processes and expectations between branches," Danny Glenwrightsaid.

"If an organization like ours has troubles and challenges in navigating that, I think local partners, small teams in the countries which we want to work with which is critical to being as efficient with foreign aid as possible are going to really struggle."

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Your weekly guide to what you need to know about federal politics and the minority Liberal government. Get the latest news and sharp analysis delivered to your inbox every Sunday morning.

...

The next issue of Minority Report will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.