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Federal cabinet ministers have called registered charities criminal organizations and terrorist organizations and the government has set aside $13 million for stepped up audits of charity activities by Canada Revenue Agency. This panel explores the effects on charities and their ability to pursue their societal Missions, the “best practices” that charities can pursue to minimize their risk of losing their charitable status, and the implications for society and democracy of the government’s actions. The panel will include a charity lawyer and a researcher whose thesis jump-started a national conversation on these issues. There will be time for questions.
Citation preview
Charities Under ThreatResponding to Federal Charity-Bashing
and CRA Audits
NetSquared November 14, 2014
Gareth KirkbyBased On Findings From My
Master’s Thesis
M.A. in Professional Communication
Royal Roads University
GarethKirkby.ca
Contact: @GarethKirkby (Twitter)
I Interviewed• 16 charity leaders
o in 5 provinces & 5 charity sectors• 5 charity-sector “experts”
Almost all wanted to be kept anonymous.
I also read widely and deeply in the academic literature on the Canadian volunteer sector, related government regulations, social movement and contention theories, resource mobilization for social change theory, and framing theory for social change.
Post-2006 Political EnvironmentGroups defundedGroups shut out of policy consultationWomen’s & development groups major target2,000 federal scientists laid offScience programs eliminatedEnvironmental regulations much weakenedSee Voices-Voix website for very long list
Natural Resource Minister’s Jan. 9, 2012 ‘Open Letter’
“For our government, the choice is clear: we need to diversify our markets in order to create jobs and economic growth for Canadians across this country. We must expand our trade with the fast growing Asian economies.”
— Oliver, J. (2012, January 9). An open letter from Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver. The Globe and Mail. Retrieved from
http://www.theglobeandmail.com
Framing an Internal Enemy“These groups threaten to hijack our regulatory system
to achieve their radical ideological agenda. They seek to exploit any loophole they can find, stacking public hearings with bodies to ensure that delays kill good projects. They use funding from foreign special interest groups to undermine Canada’s national economic interest.”
— Oliver, J. (2012, January 9). An open letter from Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver. The Globe and Mail. Retrieved from
http://www.theglobeandmail.com
New Political EnvironmentInterviewed Charities Had Experienced:Rhetoric: being labeled money-launderers, criminal
organizations, terrorist organizationsChanged regulations and reporting requirementsStepped up “political activity” audits by Canada
Revenue Agency
Government Shapes Spaces“Governments have a big role to play in delimitating
spaces for political action” including shaping terms of access and opportunities for participation, access to resources, and empowering certain actors as more legitimate than others.”
— Laforest, 2013a, p. 235
My Research QuestionHow are the rhetoric, changed regulations, and the
threat of “political activity” audits affecting charitable organization and their ability to pursue their Missions
Culture of Fear
“Why are you asking me these questions?”
Political ActivityPolitical activities seek to pressure the government on
an issue related to the charity’s purpose. Activities are permitted if they are non-partisan and if the charity devotes substantially all of its resources to other, charitable, activities.
—Lasby & Vodarek, 2011, p. 545
Can be up to 10% or 20% of organizations resources, depending on size.
Answer: How Affecting CharitiesImpacts on Charities that Advocate:Targeted charities: Energy oriented environmental,
development-human rights, union-fundedCharities “muffled” and “distracted”Charity “chill” affecting communications, internal
processesCommunications: content, tone, channel, frequencyCharity leaders express strong emotions – fear, anger,
bullied
Muffled“We’re much, much more cautious than we used to be.
We’re taking on different issues and we’re taking them on in different ways.”
“Some [organizations are] more cautious than others but all of us are more cautious than is healthy.”
Distracted“So, yes, it takes up time, and money, and
energy, and resources to be able to gather all the documentation and you know, it takes you away from the other good work that you would otherwise be able to do.”
Muffled and Distracted“Canadian environmental charities get less than [3%] of
charity giving. They’re the bottom feeders of the charitable funding. The resources are too tight to risk them, and so I bet a lot of charities are doing a cost-benefit analysis on their communications and the risk posed by CRA audits and the revocation of their status and saying, ‘This isn’t worth our scrutiny.’ I’m sure there are lots of charities . . . keeping their head down.”
Affects on Charities
Additional Impacts on CharitiesReputation damage affects donationsLong-term health of charities threatenedSocial contribution of charities reducedEffectiveness of service-delivery charities reducedIncreasing internalization of “advocacy” as a “bad
thing” by charity-volunteer sector
Key Findings – Charity ResponsesCharities try to focus on Mission activitiesIn reality, many are “distracted” from their Missions
o Learning regulations, workshops, peer trainingo Changing internal processeso Considering new structures — nonprofit arm
Muffling communicationsWorking through umbrella organizations
o Upbeat communications campaign?
Contention
Sharing “Best Practices”Detailed tracking of all activitiesIncreasing “political activity” where deficientLegal training of staff & boardOngoing peer training to keep and advance knowledge of
regulations and practicesInforming supporters of complaints, actionsAdding non-profit arm with fewer limitations
Note: Many charities are over-reacting and altering communications more than they need to. Contact Gareth Kirkby if your organization wants to align their responses to their actual level of risk tolerance.
Contentious ResponsesMaking a point of not changing anythingAvoiding diversion of resourcesConsidering a lawsuit for abuse of power etc?Building same-sector, cross-sector links & joining
sectoral umbrellas and Imagine CanadaAdding nonprofit arm and transferring programmingRunning Voices-Voix websiteOpposition Party outreach for 2015 election platformsDoor to door ‘education’ in vulnerable ridings
Key FindingsAdvocacy chill is affecting charitiesGovernment is attempting to narrow policy
conversationso With some success
Government is corrupting democratic processeso By treating as political enemies and enemies of the state,
those civil-society groups with different public-policy preferences from government
o By politicizing CRA to fight the government’s policy battles
How Government Corrupted CRAGovernment created “funnel” to channel CRA to
audit certain charitieso Rhetorico $8 million, now $13.4 million fundingo Directions to audit for “political activities”o Conservative political staffer created Ethical Oilo EO filed complaints, Sun TV encouraged complaints
(political staffer returns to government, promoted to PMO)o CRA staff target charities with complaints about political
activities or similar process
How: Government Created ‘Funnel’
But Why?“The priority of this government is to push through a
fairly aggressive resource extraction agenda. Um, you know, boost the oil and gas industry and the resource-extracting sector in order to maximize the profits in those sectors. And create jobs in those sectors, supposedly. And . . . where it finds opponents, where it finds points of opposition, points where it does not fancy what it’s hearing, then it will remove them.”— Anonymous, personal communication, April 15,
2014
Implications for SocietySociety losing input of experts re vital issuesPoor public policy decisions could resultCollateral damage to non-target charitiesAccumulating damage to civil societyPolarization of the body politic
Government Actions Post-2012Charity reputations damaged by rhetoric, auditsCharities distracted from missionCharity voices muffledNow: Unions ‘defanged’ with Bill C44Next: Some charities lose tax status?2015: Nonprofits?
Can Charities Fight Back?
“What [the government is] doing is making it easier for them to drive an agenda without scrutiny, and that’s problematic. But there’s also much greater capacity for the public to mount opposition to that because of where we’ve gone technologically.”
Align Activities to Acceptable RiskMany charities are over-reacting and altering
communications more than they need to. Contact Gareth Kirkby if your organization wants to align their responses to their actual level of risk tolerance.
Contact Me
Website: GarethKirkby.caTwitter: @GarethKirkby
Find me on LinkedIn
ReferencesCharmaz, K. (2006). Constructing grounded theory: A practical guide through
qualitative analysis. London: Sage Publications.Falk, B.J. (2008). Learning from history: Why we need dissent and dissidents.
International Journal, 64(1), 243-253. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.royalroads.ca/stable/40204467
Hit list. (n.d.). Voices-Voix. Retrieved from http://voices-voix.ca/en/hit-listLaforest, R. (2013a). Shifting scales of governance and civil society participation
in Canada and the European Union. Canadian Public Administration, 56(2), 235-251. doi: 10.1111/capa.12016
Lasby, D., & Vodarek, L. (2011). Public awareness and policy activities of charities. The Philanthropist, 23(4), 545-550. Retrieved from http://thephilanthropist.ca/index.php/phil/article/view/888
McCarthy, J. D., & Zald, M.N. (1977). Resource mobilization and social movements: A partial theory. American Journal of Sociology, 82(6). 1212–1241. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/2777934
Muttart Foundation. (2013b). Talking about charities 2013: Charts compiled. The Muttart Foundation. Retrieved from http://www.muttart.org
Oliver, J. (2012, January 9). An open letter from Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver. The Globe and Mail. Retrieved from http://www.theglobeandmail.com
Tilly, C. (2004) Social movements, 1768-2004. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers.Tilly, C. (2005). Regimes and contention. In T. Janoski, R. Alfort, A. Hicks & M.A.
Schwartz (Eds.), The handbook of political sociology: States, civil societies, and globalization (pp. 423-440). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. Retrieved from http://lib.myilibrary.com.ezproxy.royalroads.ca/Open.aspx?id=43069