Thank you for the question.
One of the fundamental flaws that we see is the application process itself. A lot of the people who can do the most effective work in the most affected communities may not be educated in writing a grant or even understanding the language.
From what we understand, at least in Ontario or in Toronto, when you are applying for a grant or something along those lines, the application goes through an algorithm that looks for key phrases and keywords before it ever hits human eyes.
If they can't speak the language—and many of the most affected groups that we've encountered cannot—unfortunately, they're never heard. I'm speculating here, but lots of times it seems that the squeaky wheel gets the worm. Organizations that may have “name capital” for whatever reason tend to receive a lot of the funding. I think maybe where that money's going is comfortable for a lot of people who make the decisions.