Could there be a wave of charity mergers post-COVID?

New research shows that one in four Canadian charities is concerned about their ability to survive the year. These financial woes are leading some to consider a merger for the first time.

Why It Matters

Many charities are facing a COVID-19 drop in donations and an increase in service needs from their communities. While many feel able to survive the next six months, their long-term future is more uncertain, posing a risk for communities who rely on their services.

This story is part of the Future of Good editorial fellowship covering the social impact worldโ€™s rapidly changing funding models, supported by Community Foundations of Canada and United Way Centraide Canada.

In June in British Columbia, as COVID-19 case counts were steadily dropping after a lethal second wave, United Way British Columbia was born.

The new organization โ€” serving a population of more than 4 million Canadians โ€” was the product of a massive amalgamation of six United Ways from across the lower half of the province. And while to some, the move may have looked like a financial-crisis-inflicted โ€˜pandemic merger,โ€™ the CEO of the new organization, Michael McKnight, says that it was anything but.

โ€œ[It took] 20 years,โ€ he says, with a laugh, of the length of time from first conversation between the organizations to the completion of mer

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