Transparency

Trust should be visible.

If money enters the project, the numbers should be easy to see and easy to understand.

Current Status

The project is still in draft status.

This page starts the reporting structure before donations begin, so the expectations are clear from the beginning.

$0

Total received

$0

Total distributed

0

People helped

Draft

Treasury status

Public Reporting

The numbers should tell a plain story.

Public reporting should show what came in, what went out, what kind of practical support was provided, and what remains draft, uncertain, or still being formalized.

The goal is not complicated paperwork for its own sake. The goal is simple: people should be able to see whether the project is doing what it says it is doing.

When help is provided, reports should protect private personal details while still making the use of funds understandable.

What Should Be Visible

Clear enough to trust. Careful enough to protect people.

Total money received.

Total money distributed.

Support categories, such as work readiness, stability, mobility, or recovery.

Administrative costs, if any.

Decisions or limitations that are still being worked out.

Stories only with permission, and only in a way that protects privacy.

Boundaries

Transparency does not mean exposing private stories.

Chapter Two Initiative collects personal stories so it can understand where small, practical help may matter most. Those stories are not a public ledger.

The ledger should show money and decisions clearly. Personal details should be handled with care.