Tired of “siloed” conversations, Justice Fund protest brings disbursement quota advocacy to the street

Advocacy both for and against a disbursement quota hike has mostly taken place within the sector, and not engaged the public — until now

Why It Matters

Grassroots groups and community-led organizations receive miniscule percentages of Canadian philanthropic dollars. Many in the philanthropic and charitable sectors want to change that — but the question of how remains.

var TRINITY_TTS_WP_CONFIG = {"cleanText":"Tired of \u201csiloed\u201d conversations, Justice Fund protest brings disbursement quota advocacy to the street. This story is part of the Future of Good editorial fellowship covering the social impact world\u2019s rapidly changing funding models, supported by Community Foundations of Canada and United Way Centraide Canada. On Thursday, the Justice Fund hosted a demonstration at Toronto\u2019s city hall, calling on Canadian charities to \u201cmove the money\u201d and stop \u201choarding\u201d more than $85 billion in resources.\u00a0 \u201cWe're tired of these pompous, self-serving, pseudo-intellectuals within the philanthropic community [who] feed us virtue signaling and incrementalism,\u201d said Yonis Hassan, CEO of the Justice Fund, a Toronto-based or

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