Until We Are All Equal
Watch our 2023 Annual Report Highlight Video
Plan International Canada 2023 Annual Report
The world’s determined optimism powers us!
Anyone engaged in what’s happening in the world can quickly lose heart. That’s what a steady stream of economic turmoil, climate crises and war does to a person. Unless you’re a determined optimist.
Determined optimists know that change is possible. When reality throws up barriers, they dream up solutions. We can spot determined optimists because that’s who we are – and so are the children, young adults and partners we work with. And so are our supporters.
In this year’s Annual Report, you will read about and watch mini-documentaries that celebrate determined optimists who share our commitment to creating a world where children’s rights are respected and there is equality for girls. We’re forever grateful for your support. And you know what? None of us will stop until we’re all equal.
Watch our 2023 Annual Report Highlight Video
Messages from the CEO and Board Chair
The Power of Determined Optimism
World crises caused life-changing shifts for the communities we serve, but together we persevered, says CEO Lindsay Glassco.
People ask me all the time: “How do you stay positive and passionate when the world is in a state of perma-crisis?” Fair question. Not just for me, but for our staff, youth activists, fundraisers, board members and donors alike – and, above all, for the communities and children we work with.
It was a year of constant change: conflicts, climate crises, the lingering effects of COVID-19, economic uncertainties, digital transformations and the redefining of traditional power structures. While the global landscape presents ongoing complexities, it also brings opportunities for innovation and positive change.
Looking back on fiscal year 2023’s milestone achievements, we can see that each one is a testament to the power of determined optimism.
We achieved unprecedented impact
We completed the first year of our impact-focused All Girls Standing Strong strategy and reached 6.2 million children across our five areas of expertise. And with the launch of our Children in Crisis Response Fund, the strength of our humanitarian response will only continue to grow.
We amplified the voices of youth
We engaged more than 500,000 young people – in all their diversity – in Canada and supported youth leadership in several global forums, including the 2022 United Nations Transforming Education Summit in New York City and the 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt.
We future-proofed our organization
On the heels of launching our new global brand, we raised $289 million this year – a record level of financial support for our international programs! On the innovation front, GEOP (Ghana Education Outcomes Project), our first project to be financed through a results-based approach, represents a new way of working with partners to achieve impact. In Ghana, we brought together government funders, investors and education organizations to pursue the common goal of giving girls and boys access to education.
We put people at the centre
All of this progress is a testament to the passion and persistence of our engaged and enterprising staff. We continued to focus on putting people at the centre, resulting in an all-time-high staff-engagement score of 94%. Our achievements would not have been possible without our dedicated board of directors, our loyal and generous supporters and the communities and children we work with. We all believe that a world where children’s rights are respected and girls are equal is possible. And we work together to make it happen. Because that is who we are, and that is what determined optimists do.
Lindsay Glassco
President & CEO
Plan International Canada
Social Justice = Economic Justice
Following her six-day board visit to Ghana, Rona Ambrose reflects on how the next generation is defining — and pursuing — equality.
To a roomful of delegates and youth activists, a thoughtful young man delivers a PowerPoint presentation. He fields questions as he goes, never breaking a sweat. The topic: menstruation.
It’s not the sort of thing you see every day. But seeing it for myself during our board trip to Ghana last May was a dramatic reminder that getting boys and men involved in creating and benefiting from a world where girls are equal is a game changer.
The purpose of this six-day trip was to witness how Plan’s work is experienced by participants. The menstruation presentation, part of an incredible day of meetings with youth-led organizations in Accra, was just one example of young people leading change, often in unexpected ways.
In round-table discussions attended by young women and men, our hosts spoke candidly about sexual and reproductive health and rights, mental health and education. While their subject-matter knowledge was impressive, their passion for sharing it was nothing short of extraordinary. With extremely limited funds, they had created learning materials, expanded their programs into schools and recruited and trained volunteers to run them.
In Ghana, where approximately three quarters of unemployed adults are considered “young,” the next generation defines “equality” as getting an education, finding a good job and earning an income to help support their family and community. This is the dream, and it speaks to the intrinsic link between gender justice, social justice and economic justice.
At times, it felt like every young person we encountered was, in their own way, an activist, pushing to secure their family’s future or make a change in their community. In the northern region of Tamale, we met Ayisha, who had participated in job training via PASEWAY, a locally administered Plan program. Determined to prove that women could work in a male-dominated field, Ayisha mastered the craft of tile laying, started a business and went on to hire and train nine people – six of whom are women!
Reflecting on Ghana and my first year as chair through the lens of our five-year strategy, All Girls Standing Strong, I am awed by the ripple effect our programs have. For every Ayisha who steps into her potential, the lives of the people around her change for the better too. Over time, these ripples will be nothing short of transformational.
Hon. Rona Ambrose
Board Chair
Plan International Canada
Stories and Impact Highlights from 2023
Our Mission
At Plan International Canada we strive to create a world where children, especially girls, learn, lead, decide and thrive. We tackle the root causes of gender inequality. We work with local governments and partners to advocate and develop programs that support children in their right to get an education and be healthy and protected from violence. We develop children’s leadership skills and their ability to earn a living. We’re also there for them when crises strike. And we stay with them to help build a healthy, safe and sustainable life.
To achieve these goals, click on our five priority areas of expertise.
Discover What We Do
Health
46.5% of our program expenditures supported health initiatives.
Humanitarian Response & Resilience
21% our program expenditures supported humanitarian response & resilience projects.
Education
16.4% of our program expenditures supported education initiatives.
Protection from violence
6.7% of our program expenditures supported Protection From Violence projects.
Youth leadership & economic empowerment
9.4% of our program expenditures supported Youth Leadership & Economic Empowerment projects.
Financials
Our goal at Plan International Canada is to build trust and a long-term presence in the communities where we work by partnering with children, families and local organizations and governments. With financial support and donations from a broad range of individuals, corporations and institutions, we delivered sustainable solutions to more than 9.3 million people (6.2 million children) last year.
Sponsorship contributions go toward community development projects that support children and their communities. This builds trusting relationships that lead to sustainable change. (Read about the Plan Effect on page 14.)
Designated contributions such as major financial donations, Gifts of Hope and ongoing contributions go to specific projects identified by our supporters. In all cases, donated funds support projects developed in partnership with community members – including children, especially girls – that address inequality and create a more just world.
We keep a close eye on the efficiency of our operations to ensure that the maximum proportion of donations goes directly to the program participants.
Revenue
Where does our support come from?
Government & other Institutional Grants | 53.4% | |
Investments & other Income | 1% | |
Gifts in Kind | 10.1% | |
Contributions, Gifts & Bequests | 14.2% | |
Child Sponsorship | 21.3% |
REVENUE INCREASE: We received $289 million in support in fiscal 2023, up from $274 million in fiscal year 2022.
Program expenditures
What areas of work did this funding support?
Health | 46.5% | |
Protection from Violence | 6.7% | |
Youth leadership & Economic Empowerment | 9.4% | |
Education | 16.4% | |
Humanitarian Response & Resilience |
21% |
Expenditures
What percentage of donations went to Plan International Canada programs?
83 cents of every dollar went toward programming for children and their communities worldwide. We focused on improving education, health, protection from violence, humanitarian response and resilience, and youth leadership and economic empowerment. This also includes Canadian-based youth and advocacy programs.
17 cents of every dollar went toward fundraising and operations to ensure that our programs are run efficiently and effectively. These funds go toward marketing, developing and administrating our program-related services, and fundraising initiatives. We also invest in rigorous child-safeguarding and risk-management protocols training.
Total FY23 expenditures: $290 million
Our fiscal year ran from July 1, 2022, to June 30, 2023. This number includes the purchase and amortization of capital or intangible assets.
Plan International’s Global Impact in 2023
Click here to see the collective impact in 2023 of Plan International’s 1,610 active projects in 83 countries. Plan International’s work reached 41.6 million children, including 22.2 million girls. Plan International Canada’s programs in Health, Humanitarian Response & Resilience, Education, Youth Leadership & Economic Empowerment, and Protection from Violence reached 9.3 million people, including 6.2 million children (3.2 million of them girls).
Powerful Stories and Powerful Points of View
Our Embedded Storytellers program puts local perspectives behind and in front of the camera. We work with local videographers and photographers to share powerful stories from around the globe. Check out our most recent mini-documentaries.
Watch nowOur Supporters and Champions
Our Supporters
Thanks to our supporters, including the following donors who contributed over the past three years and whose lifetime giving has exceeded $100,000.
“Thank you for your generous support and for joining a community of global citizens whose determined optimism powers our collective momentum. Together, we won’t stop until we’re all equal.”– Lindsay Glassco, president and CEO of Plan International Canada
Legacy Donors
We are incredibly grateful to recognize these thoughtful and generous individuals who have contributed to Plan International Canada through a gift in their estate. Their legacy continues to improve the lives of children, especially girls, all over the world.
IMPACT REPORTS
We provide supporters with regular updates on the projects they help fund.
Read our Impact Reports
BARBARA FERGUSON:
Donor Profile
When our donor relations department reached out to Barbara and Keith Ferguson about an emergency fund that helps women and children in desperate situations, the Calgary couple was all ears. As long-time donors who support our education and poverty reduction programs through their family legacy fund, the Fergusons have an appreciation for multi-year projects that work with participant communities over time to create change that endures.
But The Children in Crisis Response Fund (CICRF) was something different.
Rather than years, it focused on hours. Specifically, the first 72-hours of a crisis: the window when a child’s risk of being trafficked or kidnapped skyrockets if they get lost or separated from their families.
For the Fergusons, the value proposition was clear. “Lobbying and campaigning for donations takes weeks, but in a disaster, people need help right away. If the funds are already there, Plan International, with staff on the ground in countries around the world, can respond in real time,” Barbara explains.
With the Fergusons generous inaugural pledge comes the hope the fund will resonate with other donors who want to make a meaningful difference, confident their dollars are getting to the right place.
“This fund is for anyone who has ever seen a crisis in the news and wanted to help but didn’t know how. It provides the opportunity to make the biggest difference, immediately, to children whose world has been turned upside down. From a donor’s point of view, it’s a clear choice,”
– Barbara Ferguson
We would also like to thank our institutional partners, without whom our work wouldn't be possible:
Thank you for supporting girls and children around the world
We are proud of what we have accomplished during a challenging year. With your support, we helped make a difference in the lives of children, especially girls. We are determined optimists, and we won’t give up on our efforts until we are all equal.
Plan International Canada is grateful for your commitment to this work and for sharing our vision to create a world where children’s rights are respected, and there’s equality for girls.
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