In truth, many of these institutions are, let's put it this way, in limbo. They will have difficulty returning to an agreement with the Government, they will have their CNPJ registered in the Union's Active Debt, they will have to return resources with interest and correction and the CPFs of the Directors and technicians responsible for the legal and accounting part who signed the documents, will respond jointly for the misuse of public money.
The Brazil 2020 Donation Survey, coordinated by IDIS – Institute for the Development of Social Investment, and carried out by Ipsos, also included the participation of professionals and activists from the Culture of Donation in Brazil. The most comprehensive study on the donation habits of individuals in Brazil, it was carried out for the first time in 2015 and is expected to be repeated every five years, to monitor the evolution of the donation culture in the country.
This documentation that will present to the potential financier, let's say, “the business card” of who your institution is, what it has already done, how it did it, with what resources, in what period of time and the results arising from these activities, aiming to convince the funder why it is important to indicate resources for your project or your institution.
Starting on July 14th, civil society organizations (CSOs) can present projects to be financed with resources from the Elderly Rights Fund between 2021 and 2023. Registration continues until August 13th, by email or by mail. The public call was opened by the Federal District Elderly Rights Council (CDI-DF), linked to the Secretariat of Justice and Citizenship (Sejus) and responsible for managing the fund.