Wednesday 16 January 2013

Environmental groups and their funders


Environmental charities depend on large annual donations from various sources to exist. The audited financials for one group in the Kootenays, Wildsight, suggests it relies heavily on US foundations. Wildsight, Sierra Club, Canadian Parks and Wilderness (CPAWS), all registered charities, are media savvy groups that continually challenge all levels of government to change. They often make statements backed up by their “experts” or “science”, hardly ever revealing their source of information. Take one fact and stretch it as far as the media will allow until they are challenged where they become eerily silent. The US foundations listed below are spending millions in BC for campaigns that range from Atlin in the northwest  to the Flathead valley in the Southeast. Are they driven by other agendas such as the ones Vivian Krause has identified? Are there larger issues at play that groups like Wildsight have become pawns to? Is Wildsight  facing an identity crunch due in part to their general acceptance of “change or else” preaching’s of David Suzuki and Al Gore?


One has to wonder who Wildsight represents. From 2001-2011 Wildsight revenue totals of 6.2 million dollars with a membership that fluctuates between 200 and 500. From 2004-2012 CPAWS revenue topped 38 million. These are just two of the 100’s of groups being funded. It’s time for US and Canadian funders to Thinktwice about funding groups that are built on misinformation and political interference. David Suzuki recently commented on his website Environmentalism has failed” but it certainly isn’t because of a lack of money.
The figures below are from the audited financials that Wildsight recently posted to their website. This includes the Regional Wildsight audited financials from 2001-2011 not the other 5 branch offices that have to fund themselves from other sources. The monies that Regional Wildsight brings in pales in comparison with Suzuki Foundation or the Sierra Club of Canada. Environmentalism is big business in BC; maybe the provincial government should replace the carbon tax with a  green tax on the environmentalists. They seem to always want action from the government; its only fair they pay their way.  
Paul Visentin
Member of ThinkTwice group




Government and Taxpayer Grants 2001-2011

$1,438,959

BC Gaming Commission

$ 127,396

City of Fernie

$ 6,010

Columbia Shuswap Regional District

$ 14,350

District of Invermere

$ 9,957

Government of Canada

$ 176,786

Province of British Columbia

$ 32,131

Regional District of Central Kootenay

$ 24,479

Regional District of East Kootenay

$ 37,195

BC Hydro

$ 26,000

Columbia Basin Trust

$ 975,655

Columbia Power Corp

$ 8,000

Village of Radium Hot Springs

$ 1,000

US Grants 2001-2011

$3259391

444's Foundation

$ 231,635

The Brainerd Foundation

$ 321,552

The Bullitt Foundation

$ 247,621

Confluence Fund

$ 15,616

Conservation Alliance

$ 16,103

Conservation Northwest

$ 3,039

Endswell Foundation

$ 39,767

Global Nature Fund

$ 79,768

Henry P Kendall Foundation

$ 201,126

LaSalle Adams Fund

$ 189,923

National Parks Conservation Assoc

$ 1,010

Norcross Wilderness Foundation Inc.

$ 13,029

Patagonia Inc.

$ 28,795

The Lazar Foundation

$ 182,184

Unilever Foundation

$ 484,215

Wilburforce Foundation

$ 968,877

Yellowstone to Yukon

$ 235,131

Canadian Grants 2001-2011

$ 1,514,728

Art Twomey Memorial

$ 15,284

Banff Centre

$ 1,000

BC Cattlemans Association

$ 5,000

Candian Products Forest

$ 5,000

Canadian Mountain Holidays

$ 1,500

The Chawkers Foundation

$ 10,000

CPAWS

$ 30,750

Community fund - North Kootenay Lake Society

$ 600

Columbia Valley Foundation

$ 7,535

Columbia Wetlands Stewardship

$ 16,939

Crowsnest Conservation Society

$ 10,685

Ducks Unlimited

$ 1,000

East Kootenay Invasive Plant Council

$ 500

Encana Foundation

$ 45,000

The Eleanor Luxton Historical Society

$ 60,000

Federation of Canadian Municipalities

$ 22,445

Fortis BC

$ 15,000

Fraser Basin Council

$ 15,000

The Kimberley Nature Park Society

$ 3,807

Kicking Horse Coffee

$ 20,945

Lever Ponds Foundation

$ 18,050

Lush Handmade Cosmetics

$ 5,000

Lake Windermere District Lions Club

$ 1,264

The MacLean Foundation

$ 50,972

George Cedric Metcalf Foundation

$ 5,000

Mountain Equipment Coop

$ 56,011

Nature Canada

$ 19,000

Nature Conservancy Canada

$ 1,000

Nature Trust BC

$ 1,000

Osprey Community Foundation

$ 2,634

Pembina Institute

$ 1,500

RBC Foundation

$ 106,585

Real Estate Foundation

$ 116,000

Yves Rocher Amerique Du Nord Inc.

$ 7,000

The Rockies Institute Fernie Chamber of Commerce

$ 1,200

Sea Change Marine Conservation

$ 417

Shell Environmental Fund

$ 120,200

Sierra Club of BC Foundation

$ 101,137

Snowy Owl Management Inc.

$ 1,000

The Habitat Conservation Trust Fund

$ 14,000

The Sage Foundation

$ 2,000

The Richard Ivey Foundation

$ 150,150

TD Friends of the Environment

$ 13,600

Tembec Industries Inc.

$ 96,197

Tides Canada

$ 81,902

Transcanada Pipelines Ltd.

$ 15,000

Vancouver Foundation

$ 159,357

Van City Credit Union

$ 5,000

Waste Management

$ 1,000

West Coast Environmental Law

$ 32,398

Western Canadian Wilderness Committee

$ 1,500

Terasen Gas

$ 10,000

Wildsight Golden

$ 3,767

World Wildlife Fund

$ 25,717

Total Grants 2001-2011

$ 6,283,647

Canadian Gov't Grants

$ 1,508,898

American Grants

$ 3,260,021

Canadian Non Gov't Grants

$ 1,514,728

11 year average % of total grants

Canadian Gov't Grants

23%

American Grants

54%

Canadian Non Gov't Grants

24%

11 year average %Total Non-Government Grants

 

Canadian Grants

31%

American Grants

67%

Membership revenue 2001-2011

Membership @ $20/person average 2001-2011

Membership revenue as % of total grants

$87,522

382

1.28%

Source - Wildsight Audited Financials 2001-2011

 

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