Community
Never Grow Up! Celebrating the 12th Annual Central Alberta Children’s Festival
Join Family Services of Central Alberta in celebrating the 12th Annual Central Alberta Children’s Festival on June 1st and 2nd at the beautiful Recreation Park, Red Deer. In the 12 years since its inception, the Central Alberta Children’s Festival has been dedicated to providing a fun and exciting outlet for children and people of all ages to let loose and celebrate the kid in all of us.
This year is looking to be our biggest festival yet with over 7000 guests anticipated to attend with school groups from across Central Alberta. The festival’s mission is to bring thrilling entertainment to children and families through performing arts, and allow our guests to be involved and engaged at the lowest possible cost. With the support of our many community partners the park will be full of lots of new interactive fun!
Admission is $6.00 per person or $20.00 for a family of four, with weekend family passes also available at $30.00. Tickets will be purchased at the gate and include access to all of the festival’s fun activities and excellent live entertainment. In addition to the FREE Family Barbeque Night on Friday June 1st that is included with admission, there will be plenty of healthy snacks and water available throughout the festival.
The Central Alberta Children’s Festival welcomes kids ages 0 – 99!
The festival’s wide variety of activities and entertainment includes: jumbo size games, huge inflatables, face painting, plenty of healthy snacks and water (bring a bottle!), as well as featured entertainers and special guests like the Juno Award winning Peter Puffin’s Whale Tales, The Purple Pirate, the Triple HS Band, the Red Deer Royals, and many more.
The 12th Annual Central Alberta Children’s Festival is made possible by the wonderful support of our generous donors and sponsors.
Come on out to The Central Alberta Children’s Festival to celebrate the wonder of childhood!
For more information on the festival visit www.centralalbertachildrensfestival.ca? ?FSCA Executive Director, Judy Scott can be contacted at 403-309-8222 or by email at [email protected]
For more stories visit Todayville.com
Community
Charitable giving on the decline in Canada
From the Fraser Institute
By Jake Fuss and Grady Munro
There would have been 1.5 million more Canadians who donated to charity in 2023—and $755.5 million more in donations—had Canadians given to the same extent they did 10 years prior
According to recent polling, approximately one in five Canadians have skipped paying a bill over the past year so they can buy groceries. As families are increasingly hard-pressed to make ends meet, this undoubtedly means more and more people must seek out food banks, shelters and other charitable organizations to meet their basic necessities.
And each year, Canadians across the country donate their time and money to charities to help those in need—particularly around the holiday season. Yet at a time when the relatively high cost of living means these organizations need more resources, new data published by the Fraser Institute shows that the level of charitable giving in Canada is actually falling.
Specifically, over the last 10 years (2013 to 2023, the latest year of available data) the share of tax-filers who reported donating to charity fell from 21.9 per cent to 16.8 per cent. And while fewer Canadians are donating to charity, they’re also donating a smaller share of their income—during the same 10-year period, the share of aggregate income donated to charity fell from 0.55 per cent to 0.52 per cent.
To put this decline into perspective, consider this: there would have been 1.5 million more Canadians who donated to charity in 2023—and $755.5 million more in donations—had Canadians given to the same extent they did 10 years prior. Simply put, this long-standing decline in charitable giving in Canada ultimately limits the resources available for charities to help those in need.
On the bright side, despite the worrying long-term trends, the share of aggregate income donated to charity recently increased from 0.50 per cent in 2022 to 0.52 per cent in 2023. While this may seem like a marginal improvement, 0.02 per cent of aggregate income for all Canadians in 2023 was $255.7 million.
The provinces also reflect the national trends. From 2013 to 2023, every province saw a decline in the share of tax-filers donating to charity. These declines ranged from 15.4 per cent in Quebec to 31.4 per cent in Prince Edward Island.
Similarly, almost every province recorded a drop in the share of aggregate income donated to charity, with the largest being the 24.7 per cent decline seen in P.E.I. The only province to buck this trend was Alberta, which saw a 3.9 per cent increase in the share of aggregate income donated over the decade.
Just as Canada as a whole saw a recent improvement in the share of aggregate income donated, so too did many of the provinces. Indeed, seven provinces (except Manitoba, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador) saw an increase in the share of aggregate income donated to charity from 2022 to 2023, with the largest increases occurring in Saskatchewan (7.9 per cent) and Alberta (6.7 per cent).
Canadians also volunteer their time to help those in need, yet the latest data show that volunteerism is also on the wane. According to Statistics Canada, the share of Canadians who volunteered (both formally and informally) fell by 8 per cent from 2018 to 2023. And the total numbers of hours volunteered (again, both formal and informal) fell by 18 per cent over that same period.
With many Canadians struggling to make ends meet, food banks, shelters and other charitable organizations play a critical role in providing basic necessities to those in need. Yet charitable giving—which provides resources for these charities—has long been on the decline. Hopefully, we’ll see this trend turn around swiftly.
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