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http://www.ruralcleansing.com/articles/article018greengrabbers.htm
File #1010199
Title: Green Land Grabbers
Organization(s) Featured: The Wildlands Project, The Nature Conservancy, The Conservation Fund, The Wilderness Society.
Source: The Lexington Institute
Author: Bonner R. Cohen
Date: January 2002
"My father made him an offer he couldn't refuse," Michael Corleone tells his girlfriend Kay in perhaps the most famous line from "The Godfather. " Three decades after Mario Puzo's fictional saga of a New York crime family first captured the public's imagination, the expression "to make someone an offer he can't refuse" has come to characterize those less than voluntary decisions people sometimes are forced to make.
Sadly, such "offers" have long been a staple of U. S. environmental policy. For years, property owners in rural America have been confronted by unpleasant choices in which the thing they least want to do-sell their land-becomes the only option open to them. Selective enforcement of the Endangered Species Act, arbitrary application of wetlands regulations, massive government land purchases, or protracted disputes over grazing and water rights-these are the things that traditionally pit powerful federal bureaucrats against unsuspecting farmers, ranchers, and other property owners.
In this unequal battle, federal agencies not only have hordes of government lawyers at their disposal, they also have powerful, well-funded allies in the environmental movement who have mastered the art of putting the squeeze on the hapless landowner. Cloaking themselves in the mantle of environmental protection, these groups know how to turn environmental laws against property owners, coordinate their land-grabbing schemes with friendly federal regulators, and employ their vast financial resources to intimidate landowners.
The tactics these organizations use vary widely. Some purchase private land and sell most of it to the government for a profit - a lucrative practice for some environmental organizations that creates a perverse incentive to target private property. Others promote direct government purchases of private land in the guise of "protecting" it. Some bring suit either against the government or against the property owner with the goal of forcing the landowner to sell his property. Still others allow property owners to keep their land but seek restrictions on its use. But regardless of the approach taken, the big environmental groups' wealth enables them to attack property owners from different directions.
Indeed, the amount of money pouring into the nation's roughly 8,000 environmental organizations is nothing short of staggering. In his landmark five-part series for the Sacramento Bee, appropriately titled "Environment, Inc. ," Tom Knudson reported that U. S. green groups took in $3. 5 billion in 1999, up 94 percent since 1994, and that individuals, companies, and foundations gave an average of $9. 6 million a day to environmental organizations in 1999. Knudson, whose series appeared in the April 22-26, 2001 editions of the Bee, pointed out that such is green largess that the salaries for CEOs at the ten largest environmental groups averaged $235,918 in 1999, the latest year for which figures are available.
Something else Knudson's exhaustive research turned up is the unequal distribution of the money flowing into the coffers of environmental organizations. Citing data on file with the IRS, he found that 20 of the nation's 8,000 green groups took in 29 percent of all contributions to environmental groups in 1999. Indeed, the top 10 environmental groups earned spots on the Chronicle of Philanthropy's list of America's wealthiest charities.
Because space does not allow for consideration of the tactics and strategies of all key players, this article will focus on the activities of three of the most successful organizations: the Nature Conservancy, the Conservation Fund, and the Wilderness Society.
The Nature Conservancy
Of the most powerful green organizations, none is more flush with cash-or more astute at using its wealth in the service of its political agenda-than the Nature Conservancy. Founded in 1951, the Nature Conservancy has grown from modest beginnings to become what property-rights advocates Ron Arnold and Alan Gottlieb have correctly labeled "the richest of all environmental groups. " In the fiscal year ending June 30, 2000, the Conservancy reported total revenue and other support of $786. 8 million. In addition to its headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, the group has eight regional offices, along with 50 state chapter offices.
The Nature Conservancy boasts a membership of 1,029,012 people who pay a minimum annual membership fee of $25. In addition to the membership dues and contributions that generated $357. 4 million in fiscal year 2000, the Nature Conservancy earned $60 million from government awards, $14 million from private contracts and $161 million from investment income. The Nature Conservancy also reports that it received "gifts of land" in 2000 worth $90 million.
The group is certainly not exaggerating when it describes itself as "the world's largest private international conservation group. "Working with communities, businesses and people like you, we protect millions of acres and waters worldwide. " To date, the Conservancy has acquired more than 12 million acres of land in the U. S. that is organized into more than 1,400 preserves. There is no reason to doubt that the Conservancy will be able to continue its aggressive acquisition of land. Last year alone, donations increased more than $60 million, helping it add more than 500,000 acres to its network of sanctuaries. The Nature Conservancy is currently waging a "Campaign for Conservation" to raise $1 billion to "save the world's Last Great Places. " As of September 2001, the Conservancy was well on the way to meeting that goal, having raised $817. 5 million.
The group is certainly not exaggerating when it describes itself as "the world's largest private international conservation group. "Working with communities, businesses and people like you, we protect millions of acres and waters worldwide. " To date, the Conservancy has acquired more than 12 million acres of land in the U. S. that is organized into more than 1,400 preserves. There is no reason to doubt that the Conservancy will be able to continue its aggressive acquisition of land. Last year alone, donations increased more than $60 million, helping it add more than 500,000 acres to its network of sanctuaries. The Nature Conservancy is currently waging a "Campaign for Conservation" to raise $1 billion to "save the world's Last Great Places. " As of September 2001, the Conservancy was well on the way to meeting that goal, having raised $817. 5 million.
Philanthropies, corporations and individuals are major donors to the Conservancy. Charities donating between $10-20 million to the Campaign for Conservation, for instance, include the Doris Duke Foundation, Wolf Creek Charitable Foundation and the Morgridge Family Foundation. The $5-10 million donors include the Paul G. Allen Forest Protection Foundation, the Mary Flagler Chary Charitable Trust, Central & South West Corporation and the George S. & Delores Dore Eccles Foundation. Charities and corporations donating $1 million or more include the Ahmanson Foundation, the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, Georgia Pacific Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the Victoria Foundation and the William Penn Foundation.
The Nature Conservancy has extensive support from corporate America. Since 1994, General Motors Corporation has donated more than $4. 7 million and more than 100 trucks to the organization. Likewise, Canon U. S. A. has contributed $10. 3 million and equipment since 1990 while the Southern Company has given $2. 6 million since 1996.
For years the Conservancy also has worked closely with the federal government-and it has enjoyed great financial benefits from that relationship. One letter from the Deputy Director of the U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service to the Conservancy dated August 30, 1985, underscores the long-standing arrangement under which the Nature Conservancy has served as a conduit for government purchases of private land. "We are appreciative of the Nature Conservancy's continuing effort to assist the Service in the acquisition of lands for the Connecticut Coastal National Wildlife Refuge," it read.
It is worth noting that in this and other correspondence, the government agreed to pay the Conservancy "in excess of the approved appraisal value. " In one celebrated case, the Nature Conservancy was found by the Department of Interior's Inspector General in 1992 to have sold property to the Forest Service that had been donated to it. Arnold and Gottlieb report the organization's profit on this transaction, after deducting expenses, was $877,000.
According to the most recent figures available, in 1996 TNC received $37,853,205-or 11 percent of its total income-from the sale of private land to federal, state and local governments for use as parks, recreational areas, and nature preserves. Arnold and Gottlieb report that TNC sells about two-thirds of the private land it purchases to the federal government. In this way, tens of thousands of acres of private land, and the tax revenues that land generates for local governments, disappear each year and become part of the growing federal estate.
http://www.ruralcleansing.com/articles/article018greengrabbers.htm
File #1010199
Title: Green Land Grabbers
Organization(s) Featured: The Wildlands Project, The Nature Conservancy, The Conservation Fund, The Wilderness Society.
Source: The Lexington Institute
Author: Bonner R. Cohen
Date: January 2002
"My father made him an offer he couldn't refuse," Michael Corleone tells his girlfriend Kay in perhaps the most famous line from "The Godfather. " Three decades after Mario Puzo's fictional saga of a New York crime family first captured the public's imagination, the expression "to make someone an offer he can't refuse" has come to characterize those less than voluntary decisions people sometimes are forced to make.
Sadly, such "offers" have long been a staple of U. S. environmental policy. For years, property owners in rural America have been confronted by unpleasant choices in which the thing they least want to do-sell their land-becomes the only option open to them. Selective enforcement of the Endangered Species Act, arbitrary application of wetlands regulations, massive government land purchases, or protracted disputes over grazing and water rights-these are the things that traditionally pit powerful federal bureaucrats against unsuspecting farmers, ranchers, and other property owners.
In this unequal battle, federal agencies not only have hordes of government lawyers at their disposal, they also have powerful, well-funded allies in the environmental movement who have mastered the art of putting the squeeze on the hapless landowner. Cloaking themselves in the mantle of environmental protection, these groups know how to turn environmental laws against property owners, coordinate their land-grabbing schemes with friendly federal regulators, and employ their vast financial resources to intimidate landowners.
The tactics these organizations use vary widely. Some purchase private land and sell most of it to the government for a profit - a lucrative practice for some environmental organizations that creates a perverse incentive to target private property. Others promote direct government purchases of private land in the guise of "protecting" it. Some bring suit either against the government or against the property owner with the goal of forcing the landowner to sell his property. Still others allow property owners to keep their land but seek restrictions on its use. But regardless of the approach taken, the big environmental groups' wealth enables them to attack property owners from different directions.
Indeed, the amount of money pouring into the nation's roughly 8,000 environmental organizations is nothing short of staggering. In his landmark five-part series for the Sacramento Bee, appropriately titled "Environment, Inc. ," Tom Knudson reported that U. S. green groups took in $3. 5 billion in 1999, up 94 percent since 1994, and that individuals, companies, and foundations gave an average of $9. 6 million a day to environmental organizations in 1999. Knudson, whose series appeared in the April 22-26, 2001 editions of the Bee, pointed out that such is green largess that the salaries for CEOs at the ten largest environmental groups averaged $235,918 in 1999, the latest year for which figures are available.
Something else Knudson's exhaustive research turned up is the unequal distribution of the money flowing into the coffers of environmental organizations. Citing data on file with the IRS, he found that 20 of the nation's 8,000 green groups took in 29 percent of all contributions to environmental groups in 1999. Indeed, the top 10 environmental groups earned spots on the Chronicle of Philanthropy's list of America's wealthiest charities.
Because space does not allow for consideration of the tactics and strategies of all key players, this article will focus on the activities of three of the most successful organizations: the Nature Conservancy, the Conservation Fund, and the Wilderness Society.
The Nature Conservancy
Of the most powerful green organizations, none is more flush with cash-or more astute at using its wealth in the service of its political agenda-than the Nature Conservancy. Founded in 1951, the Nature Conservancy has grown from modest beginnings to become what property-rights advocates Ron Arnold and Alan Gottlieb have correctly labeled "the richest of all environmental groups. " In the fiscal year ending June 30, 2000, the Conservancy reported total revenue and other support of $786. 8 million. In addition to its headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, the group has eight regional offices, along with 50 state chapter offices.
The Nature Conservancy boasts a membership of 1,029,012 people who pay a minimum annual membership fee of $25. In addition to the membership dues and contributions that generated $357. 4 million in fiscal year 2000, the Nature Conservancy earned $60 million from government awards, $14 million from private contracts and $161 million from investment income. The Nature Conservancy also reports that it received "gifts of land" in 2000 worth $90 million.
The group is certainly not exaggerating when it describes itself as "the world's largest private international conservation group. "Working with communities, businesses and people like you, we protect millions of acres and waters worldwide. " To date, the Conservancy has acquired more than 12 million acres of land in the U. S. that is organized into more than 1,400 preserves. There is no reason to doubt that the Conservancy will be able to continue its aggressive acquisition of land. Last year alone, donations increased more than $60 million, helping it add more than 500,000 acres to its network of sanctuaries. The Nature Conservancy is currently waging a "Campaign for Conservation" to raise $1 billion to "save the world's Last Great Places. " As of September 2001, the Conservancy was well on the way to meeting that goal, having raised $817. 5 million.
The group is certainly not exaggerating when it describes itself as "the world's largest private international conservation group. "Working with communities, businesses and people like you, we protect millions of acres and waters worldwide. " To date, the Conservancy has acquired more than 12 million acres of land in the U. S. that is organized into more than 1,400 preserves. There is no reason to doubt that the Conservancy will be able to continue its aggressive acquisition of land. Last year alone, donations increased more than $60 million, helping it add more than 500,000 acres to its network of sanctuaries. The Nature Conservancy is currently waging a "Campaign for Conservation" to raise $1 billion to "save the world's Last Great Places. " As of September 2001, the Conservancy was well on the way to meeting that goal, having raised $817. 5 million.
Philanthropies, corporations and individuals are major donors to the Conservancy. Charities donating between $10-20 million to the Campaign for Conservation, for instance, include the Doris Duke Foundation, Wolf Creek Charitable Foundation and the Morgridge Family Foundation. The $5-10 million donors include the Paul G. Allen Forest Protection Foundation, the Mary Flagler Chary Charitable Trust, Central & South West Corporation and the George S. & Delores Dore Eccles Foundation. Charities and corporations donating $1 million or more include the Ahmanson Foundation, the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, Georgia Pacific Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the Victoria Foundation and the William Penn Foundation.
The Nature Conservancy has extensive support from corporate America. Since 1994, General Motors Corporation has donated more than $4. 7 million and more than 100 trucks to the organization. Likewise, Canon U. S. A. has contributed $10. 3 million and equipment since 1990 while the Southern Company has given $2. 6 million since 1996.
For years the Conservancy also has worked closely with the federal government-and it has enjoyed great financial benefits from that relationship. One letter from the Deputy Director of the U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service to the Conservancy dated August 30, 1985, underscores the long-standing arrangement under which the Nature Conservancy has served as a conduit for government purchases of private land. "We are appreciative of the Nature Conservancy's continuing effort to assist the Service in the acquisition of lands for the Connecticut Coastal National Wildlife Refuge," it read.
It is worth noting that in this and other correspondence, the government agreed to pay the Conservancy "in excess of the approved appraisal value. " In one celebrated case, the Nature Conservancy was found by the Department of Interior's Inspector General in 1992 to have sold property to the Forest Service that had been donated to it. Arnold and Gottlieb report the organization's profit on this transaction, after deducting expenses, was $877,000.
According to the most recent figures available, in 1996 TNC received $37,853,205-or 11 percent of its total income-from the sale of private land to federal, state and local governments for use as parks, recreational areas, and nature preserves. Arnold and Gottlieb report that TNC sells about two-thirds of the private land it purchases to the federal government. In this way, tens of thousands of acres of private land, and the tax revenues that land generates for local governments, disappear each year and become part of the growing federal estate.