Deadline: 24-Nov-21
The British Columbia has announced the applications for Restorative Justice to provide one-time funding to organizations from across British Columbia (BC) for the implementation of crime prevention and remediation projects.
The Civil Forfeiture Office was established in 2006 with the purpose of removing the tools and proceeds of unlawful activity and returning a portion of the related funds back to communities in B.C. Through the Civil Forfeiture Act, property can be forfeited where it has been proven that it has been acquired as a result of unlawful activity or has been used for unlawful activity. Proceeds from the sale of assets (e.g., houses, cars, or boats) are paid into a special account which can be used for various specified purposes, including actions which support the prevention or remediation of criminal activity.
Priority Areas
Proposals may include activities and expenses related to the following areas:
- Capacity development
- Participant supports including supports that prevent victim re-traumatization
- Awareness building
- Partnership development
- Service delivery
Funding Information
This stream provides up to $40,000 in one-time funding to proposals that will support or enhance current restorative justice program delivery in communities across British Columbia, in particular those that focus on improving capacity to serve victims.
Eligibility Criteria
Eligible organizations include:
- Local governments
- Community-based not-for-profit organizations
- Schools and school districts
- Health authorities
- Academic institutions
- Police departments
- Indigenous organizations (e.g. First Nations Bands or Tribal Councils, First Nations organizations incorporated as a not-for-profit society or registered charitable organization, urban/off reserve First Nation organizations such as Friendship Centres, Métis chartered communities and Métis service providers)
Mandatory Criteria
Applicants must be a current restorative justice service provider (including Community Accountability Programs and Indigenous Justice Programs).
For more information, visit British Columbia.
For more information, visit https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/safety/crime-prevention/community-crime-prevention/grants









































