FPA launches Future2 charity

fpa-members/financial-planning/FPA/financial-planning-industry/trustee/

22 May 2007
| By Glenn Freeman |
image
image image
expand image

Corinna Dieters

The Financial Planning Association (FPA) will officially launch a new charitable foundation called Future2 in November, combining existing initiatives and new projects undertaken by FPA members under a single structure.

Speaking at a Sydney chapter event marking the start of Financial Planning Week 2007, FPA chair Corinna Dieters pointed to an association study that showed 70 per cent of Australians had experienced financial hardship at some time in their lives.

“A small number — but too many — are among society’s most marginalised or under-privileged. These are the people that Future2 will support,” she said.

The initiative was driven by a taskforce of FPA members headed by Ray Griffin, a former FPA chair who first introduced the concept in 2000.

After a lengthy period of planning and refining ideas, the Future2 foundation received FPA board approval in November 2006, and in April 2007 the taskforce established the foundation’s board of trustee’s led by FPA-nominated trustee David Haintz.

The next step is the official granting of charitable status under New South Wales law, which is expected to be finalised and announced at the FPA National Conference in late November 2007.

In anticipation of this, funds are now being raised for the foundation through the financial planning industry, including licensees and funds management groups, and also through clients who may donate funds or in some cases bequeath them as part of their estate.

According to Griffin, pro-bono work by FPA members will form part of the community support the charity will provide, which he said is already quite prevalent but often goes unrecognised.

“We are hoping to harness some of that in order to help those [in financial hardship] organise their financial resources.

“There’s already a lot happening but it’s uncoordinated. We are looking to co-ordinate this through the foundation,” he said.

Between now and November, the board will set the criteria for individuals and groups to make applications for assistance to Future2.

“We are tremendously excited by the potential of this initiative, and convinced of its capacity to enlarge the pool of philanthropic giving for the good of Australians who are in need,” Dieters said.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

The succession dilemma is more than just a matter of commitments.This isn’t simply about younger vs. older advisers. It’...

1 month 4 weeks ago

Significant ethical issues there. If a relationship is in the process of breaking down then both parties are likely to b...

2 months 3 weeks ago

It's not licensees not putting them on, it's small businesses (that are licensed) that cannot afford to put them on. The...

3 months ago

ASIC has canceled the AFSL of Sydney-based asset consultant and research firm....

4 weeks ago

BlackRock Australia plans to launch a Bitcoin ETF later this month, wrapping the firm’s US-listed version which is US$85 billion in size....

3 days 2 hours ago

ASIC has banned a Melbourne-based financial adviser for eight years over false and misleading statements regarding clients’ superannuation investments....

2 weeks 2 days ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND
moneymanagement logo