Foreign aid: Ottawa overhauling ‘risk-averse’ red tape for charities operating abroad
OTTAWA — 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 They know that the systems are outdated.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 burden … is too high,” said Shannon Kindornay, the head of operations for Cooperation 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.


