Raised to date (CAD)
Contributors
Last updated

This figure is reconciled every Monday from our bank and payment platform. The full transaction list is at /transparency.

Where every dollar goes

Specific, not aspirational.

Each row on this table corresponds to a real expense category on the public ledger. When your contribution funds one of these line items, you will be able to see the matching entry on /transparency within a week.

Amount What it funds
$50 One month of Cloudflare hosting plus the database that stores every confirmed signature.
$200 One week of email delivery at the campaign’s peak volume.
$1,200 Legal review of the corporation’s bylaws and the petition terms.
$5,000 One month of a paid team member’s time (Founder’s Associate or Lead Engineer) on outreach and execution.
$10,000 A printed briefing kit hand-delivered to every Member of Parliament we are engaging.
$25,000 One week of regional TV advertising in the moment a major AI story breaks.
$100,000 A national advertising push across digital, radio, and out-of-home for a full month. English and French.

Who runs this

The public face of the campaign.

Joshua Han

Joshua Han, CFA

Chair & Director

Fifteen years in wealth management. Left full-time finance to run the campaign. Takes zero salary from donor funds.

Operation Imaginal is a federal non-profit corporation under the Canada Not-for-profit Corporations Act. The CNCA requires a three-director board. Joshua Han is Chair and the publicly named Director. Two additional directors satisfy the CNCA formation requirement so the corporation could be stood up quickly; both have asked to remain unnamed on this page at this stage, and their particulars are on file with Corporations Canada.

The current three-director board is a bootstrap structure, not the long-term governance model. As the campaign grows, the board is expected to expand and transition to hands-on directors selected for campaign strategy, execution, and sector expertise. Those directors will be publicly named on this page the day they join.

A note from Joshua

I’m not taking a salary for this. Salaries are not wrong, I just want the work to speak for itself, and the cleanest way to do that is to separate my pay from your money. Every hour I put in is donated. That part is firm.

The team around me is a different story. We’re hiring a Founder’s Associate and a Lead Engineer, and eventually a researcher, and we plan to pay them properly. You cannot ask exceptional people to do exceptional work for free, and this campaign is going to need exceptional people. Staff compensation shows up as a line on the public ledger, classified openly, same as every other expense.

The cap: no one on the team earns more than $120,000 CAD per year. The ceiling is published here so you can hold us to it. When a paycheque clears, it lands on the public ledger under Staff compensation, role by role.

So: no salary for me. Real pay for the team, capped. All of it on the books. If the campaign succeeds, I’ll have done what I set out to do, and that’s what I want to be paid in.

Joshua Han
Thornhill, Ontario

The rules on money

What we accept, and what we refuse.

  1. No money from frontier AI labs, their subsidiaries, or their parent companies. The campaign is calling for binding oversight of the firms in question. Accepting money from the companies we are asking to be regulated would destroy the credibility of the ask. Some lab leaders have publicly called for regulation; that is their right, and it does not change our answer. This rule is permanent and has no exceptions.
  2. No money from cryptocurrency projects, tokens, or token-based entities. Crypto’s entanglement with AI hype is adjacent to the problem the campaign exists to address. Reputational distance is required.
  3. No money from PACs, political parties, or partisan-affiliated entities. The campaign is non-partisan by design. Partisan-coded money destroys that frame.
  4. No anonymous contributions above $10,000 per donor per year. Below that threshold, anonymous giving is allowed and bucketed on the public ledger (for example, “Anonymous contributions (count: 17) · $422 total”). Above $10,000 a donor must appear named on the ledger within seven days, or the contribution is declined and refunded. The rule exists so that no single anonymous source can quietly steer the campaign.

If you want your name listed with your gift at any amount, tell us at checkout or email corrections@operationimaginal.org. Your entry will appear on the next monthly reconciliation.

Back the campaign

If you have read this far, the case you are looking for is the case we have already made.

Every contribution goes to the work. The founder takes nothing. The books are public.