CFAR 2018 Fundraising and Leadership Update
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This is a 2018 update from CFAR (Center for Applied Rationality), an organization that trains rationality skills partly to support AI safety work, announcing a successful fundraiser and a leadership transition from the outgoing Executive Director to Timothy Telleen-Lawton.
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Summary
CFAR announced its most successful fundraiser to date, raising $768,000 from individual donors plus an Open Philanthropy Project grant and $800,000 from BERI for a permanent venue. The post also announces the transition of Executive Director from the author to Timothy Telleen-Lawton, a former GiveWell employee and CFAR instructor, with Anna Salamon continuing as President and Board Chair.
Key Points
- •CFAR raised $768,000 from individual donors in its most successful fundraiser ever, plus renewed institutional support from Open Philanthropy Project.
- •BERI provided $800,000 as a downpayment on a permanent venue, enabling year-round programs at reduced cost.
- •The outgoing Executive Director is transitioning out, with Timothy Telleen-Lawton (former GiveWell employee and CFAR instructor) taking over.
- •Anna Salamon, CFAR co-founder, continues as President and Chair of the Board.
- •The leadership change is framed as a shift from 'scrappy survival' to 'stable, honing output' phase for the organization.
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I have a bunch of good news to share from CFAR today.
Fundraising & Venue
I’ll start by reporting that we recently completed the most successful fundraiser in our history. First, we raised
$768,000 from individual donors, which is an amazing outpouring of support that I think is justified by our case for
this year. In addition, the Open Philanthropy Project renewed our institutional grant for this year and next. In
addition, BERI has generously provided $800,000 which we will use as a downpayment on our permanent venue. That was the
last major piece of the puzzle for finally acquiring a venue that we can operate from year-around; that allows more
programs at drastically reduced cost, permanently.
All that is to say, it’s almost the best case scenario for us this year: we have the funding and resources we need to do
our best work. The only piece that isn’t as good as the ideal scenario I laid out in the fundraising post is that we
would have liked to close on the venue and moved into it near the beginning of the year to maximize the number of
programs we run in it, but we’re actually not going to be able to have the property in our possession and ready to host
workshops until around the beginning of June or July.
Still, this is an unexpectedly excellent world in the space of possible worlds we were facing at the beginning of
December, and we’re thrilled.
Leadership Change
I joined CFAR with the intention of strengthening and streamlining the organization. I intended to support the team to
become strong and stable, plus to make our impact per dollar ridiculously great.
With the organization healthy, well-funded, and on track to have more impact per dollar than we ever have, the time has
come for me to move on from my role as Executive Director.
Taking my place is Timothy Telleen-Lawton. I met Tim at his CFAR workshop a little over two years ago, and I’ve come to
love and admire him in many ways. Tim has been a CFAR instructor for over a year now, and he was an early GiveWell
employee and manager. He is thoughtful, courageous, and rigorously open-minded. He also brings a management discipline
to CFAR at what I believe is the perfect time: we are poised to cement our transition from “scrappy, fighting for our
life’ to “stable, honing our output,” and Tim has an unusual mix of process obsession and open-hearted exploration that
I think is ideal to lead CFAR toward robustness without compromising its core, pre-paradigm exploration.
I’ll be continuing at CFAR in a reduced capacity as an advisor to Tim and the rest of the team, and I’ll be staffing
workshops when my talents are particularly useful.
Anna Salamon, cofounder of CFAR and former Executive Director herself, will continue in her role as President and Chair
of the Board.
I was in an unusually privileged and difficult position when deciding how the transition would go to have a substantial
portion of my team ready, willing, and able to take over total lea
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