Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals Prepare To Spend $50M On Social-Finance Plan, But No Strategy For Now

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2019 06:57 PM

    OTTAWA — The Liberals are taking their first $50-million step in a plan to finance experimental ways to deliver social services.


    The money will be spent to help small social-service organizations understand how to apply for a much bigger pot of money starting next year.


    Federal officials have been working on a strategy for social finance, as it's known, for years, hoping to bring private funding, incentives and discipline into social services governments provide themselves or directly fund.


    Private backers partner with a group or organization to fund new ways of helping people improve their job skills or health, for instance, with public dollars flowing in if the partnership produces measurable results — shifting the financial risk off the public purse.


    The Liberals have promised $755 million over 10 years to help groups that provide services such as housing the homeless or training hard-to-employ people with new skills. There is also the $50 million over two years to teach those organizations about a process that they have rarely, if ever, had any experience with.


    The government said Wednesday it is turning to 17 existing social-finance organizations, which will move the $50 million to smaller groups to make sure the larger fund, when it launches in 2020, doesn't sit idle because no one knows how to apply.


    "These large organizations will provide expert services and will provide funding to help other, smaller organizations those that do the real work on the ground develop their expertise and their ability to be innovative and strong," said Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos.


    "These organizations are looking for ways to make a difference not only from an economic, but also from a social and environmental, perspective. I am very hopeful and very confident that they will."


    But a larger strategy that would align various government regulations, including tax rules, is not being set. Instead, the government announced a new advisory council Wednesday to help guide federal efforts.


    Internal work to make federal rules friendlier to the sector has taken a rocky path, according to multiple sources with knowledge of the behind-the-scenes talk who have spoken to The Canadian Press under condition of anonymity to detail private events.


    "It's never been done before so the federal government has no experience in doing these things," Duclos said. "It's natural that people are talking about different mechanisms. That's not only natural, but it's a great thing because it's going to make sure that these historic investments are going to be very impactful across Canada."


    Problems appeared to arise late last year when officials from Employment and Social Development Canada and the Finance Department disagreed sharply about how the government should use the $755 million.


    The last version of the plan suggested a fund manager and secretariat be housed inside ESDC with an advisory council of external experts making funding recommendations. Duclos said the government is considering different options, with conversations taking place with outside organizations.


    Sources say the Canada Revenue Agency also quickly rejected any rewrite of the tax code to allow non-profits to run socially motivated companies that would turn profits, which could then be reinvested, without fear of losing their tax-exempt status.


    Documents previously obtained by The Canadian Press under the access-to-information law suggested such a change would put small, for-profit businesses at a competitive disadvantage.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Telus to offer low-cost internet to eligible B.C. families and youth

    Telus to offer low-cost internet to eligible B.C. families and youth
    It means as many 25,000 eligible B.C. families will receive a letter from the Ministry of Social Development allowing them to purchase internet at a cost of $9.95 a month for two years

    Telus to offer low-cost internet to eligible B.C. families and youth

    Crews battle grass fire west of Kamloops, B.C., as dry conditions continue

    Crews battle grass fire west of Kamloops, B.C., as dry conditions continue
    The blaze, which is believed to have been started by humans, broke out near Savona Wednesday, severing Highway 1 between Kamloops and Cache Creek

    Crews battle grass fire west of Kamloops, B.C., as dry conditions continue

    Five injured in alleged random assaults in Vancouver

    Police say they received several reports of a man randomly punching people near Waterfront Station on May 28.

    Five injured in alleged random assaults in Vancouver

    Stringent measures to help improve Metro Vancouver's air quality by 2035

    Stringent measures to help improve Metro Vancouver's air quality by 2035
    Greenhouse gases are estimated to fall by 35 per cent and smog-forming pollutants by 70 per cent by 2035 because of more stringent standards for fuel and vehicle emissions.

    Stringent measures to help improve Metro Vancouver's air quality by 2035

    Rapid response to B.C.'s overdose crisis saved thousands, report finds

    Rapid response to B.C.'s overdose crisis saved thousands, report finds
    Researchers looked at a 20-month period from April 2016 to December 2017 when 2,177 people died of an overdose, concluding that the number of deaths in B.C. would have been two and a half times higher.

    Rapid response to B.C.'s overdose crisis saved thousands, report finds

    Trudeau worried China could target imports of other Canadian products

    Trudeau says he will see if it's appropriate to have a conversation directly with China's President Xi Jinping about a number of bilateral difficulties later this month at the G20 summit in Japan.

    Trudeau worried China could target imports of other Canadian products