"Welcome to The TNC* Connection"

*(The Nature Conservancy®)

Updated 01-13-2004

 

 

 

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Exposing the real agenda behind all the environmental paranoia, and what TNC's doing in their particular areas.

Environmentalism as a religion by Michael Crichton  12-23-03
Jim Beers Take Advantage or Miss 12-23-03
Conservationists to restore major Illinois wetland 12-23-03
Key Documents of the Ramsar Convention (Outside Link)

Wandering in the wilderness 02-21-02

"Few groups have been more critical of the U.S. Forest Service than The Lands Council, which calls itself a 'front-line activist-based forest conservation group' that favors a ban on commercial timber sales on public forests. Recently, the council received a $30,000 grant -- about 10 percent of its budget -- from the Forest Service."

Taxpayer dollars help fund many environmental groups


By Tom Knudson
Bee Staff Writer
(Published Oct. 21, 2001)

A major investor is helping The Nature Conservancy -- America's largest environmental group -- buy land and protect species across the United States.

The same benefactor is providing financial aid to the World Wildlife Fund for international conservation. It is spending heavily to help other groups, from the American Farmland Trust to Trout Unlimited, hold conferences, post Web pages, restore habitat and sway public opinion in favor of protecting the natural world.

Few philanthropists, in fact, have ever showered money so broadly across the environmental community.

Who is this conservation-minded patron?

You -- and every other taxpayer in the United States, that's who.

It's well-known that the government dispenses billions for foreign aid, medical research and other socially desirable activities. It's not common knowledge that it also distributes financial assistance to environmental organizations, including activist groups that seek to influence, and even sue, the government.

"When the federal government subsidizes one side of a public policy debate, it undermines the very essence of democracy," said Randal O'Toole, a senior economist at The Thoreau Institute, a free-market environmental think tank in Oregon.

Those who receive such funds have a different view.

"This is part of the give and take of democracy," said Michael Replogle, transportation director at Environmental Defense, a nonprofit advocacy group. "Government agencies have a role to play" in reaching out to the environmental community, he said.

Just how much public money flows to environmental groups has never been calculated, partly because it springs from so many sources. More than two dozen federal entities, from the State Department to the Fish and Wildlife Service, make awards to environmental groups. But no government agency charts the total spending, identifies trends or assesses what taxpayers are getting for their money.

Information gathered by The Bee, though, shows the volume of federal support for environmental groups is substantial, and growing.

Last year, about $137 million flowed to 20 major environmental nonprofit groups -- an average of $377,000 a day -- up 27 percent from 1999. Since 1998, more than $400 million in federal money has been granted to environmental groups.

Four groups -- The Nature Conservancy, Ducks Unlimited, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, and the World Wildlife Fund -- have gotten more than two-thirds of the money since 1998. More than 15 nonprofits received $1 million a year or more.

Most large environmental groups take government grants, but some -- such as the Sierra Club and Greenpeace -- do not.

More than half of the money is used to help groups purchase, restore or protect land and species. That process, which often involves mingling federal and private dollars to maximize their impact, has achieved dramatic results for fish, wildlife and open space across the United States.

Conservationists say such teamwork is vital to preserving the biological diversity of life on Earth.

"When you look at what it is going to cost to protect biodiversity, it far exceeds our capability, even as one of the wealthiest conservation groups," said Mike Horak, a spokesman for The Nature Conservancy, which last year received $37.3 million in federal funds -- the most of any group.

The rest of the federal money is channeled to hundreds of projects and purposes, worldwide. It trains park rangers in Central America, pays for mollusk monitoring in Tennessee and funds anti-poaching programs in Africa. It underwrites pro-nature radio ads in Ohio, condor recovery efforts in California and water pollution control efforts in the Appalachians.

But federal audits, reports and records show public money also trickles into more controversial activities, such as lobbying and advocacy. Some also helps fund government adversaries.

Few groups have been more critical of the U.S. Forest Service than The Lands Council, which calls itself a "front-line activist-based forest conservation group" that favors a ban on commercial timber sales on public forests. Recently, the council received a $30,000 grant -- about 10 percent of its budget -- from the Forest Service.

"How can the Forest Service justify funding an organization whose mission is to prevent management on federal lands?" asked Chris West, vice president of the American Forest Resource Council, which represents timber companies and sawmills. "Clearly, there needs to be some better checks and balances in terms of how this money is spent."

The Forest Service defended the award.

"The grant is not paying them to market their no-commercial-cut philosophy," said Bob Swinford, staff assistant to Forest Service chief Dale Bosworth. Rather, it will be used for workshops on fire safety in rural communities.

Fire safety "is something we actually agree with the Forest Service on," said Mike Peterson, conservation program director for the Spokane-based council. "We've made a commitment to stay on message."

But it's not the first time Forest Service grants have kindled controversy.

A 1998 federal audit found numerous problems, including "expenses which appeared unreasonable" at the National Forest Foundation, a congressionally chartered private nonprofit organization funded in part by the Forest Service. Among the expenses drawing attention were consulting fees of $82,700 for "a retired Forest Service employee and to an ex-Foundation board member"; luncheon, dinner and banquet tabs of $10,108; and $123,500 spent trying to recruit members, which brought in only $13,000 in membership fees.

Such problems have since been resolved, said Doug Crandall, the group's new vice president. "Basically, we're starting over. We have a new board, new direction and a lot more focus."

The Environmental Protection Agency has run into trouble, too.

In April, the General Accounting Office noted "wide-ranging problems" with EPA grants, including the use of EPA funds "for unallowable activities such as lobbying." In May, the agency's inspector general observed the EPA "does little to promote competition" when awarding grants. And in June, the GAO said EPA's "oversight of nonprofit grantees is not likely to ensure that funds are spent as intended or allowed."

The EPA did not respond to any of those findings, despite repeated requests from The Bee.

Federal funding for environmental groups may not be secret, but it's certainly not well-publicized. Much of the supporting information is squirreled away in obscure places -- such as financial summaries in annual reports and IRS nonprofit tax returns. That drought of data can lead to confusion and surprise.

One day in 1998, for example, Peter Samuel, publisher of Toll Roads Newsletter, which serves toll road managers and consultants, was scrolling through a Web site of The Smart Growth Network, www.smartgrowth.org -- a coalition of nonprofit groups that seeks to curb urban sprawl.

Curious, Samuel sent an e-mail to the Webmaster.

"Please inform me who controls the content of this Web site and give me their phone number," he wrote.

Not long after, he got a reply -- from the Environmental Protection Agency.

"The Smart Growth Network is an EPA initiative," an agency employee wrote. "The Web page is written and funded by the EPA."

Samuel was stunned.

"Government money should not be used for activist groups," he said. "It should be used for genuine, impartial research."

A senior EPA official said the agency funds the Web site because "it provides information about different development options." EPA does not control the content, the official said, and many groups contribute to it. The official said the EPA would not allow him to be quoted by name.

Since 1998, the EPA has awarded more than $5 million to nonprofit groups that pursue so-called smart-growth objectives, which include working with state and local governments to promote conservation-friendly urban development.

"Working together really is quite a natural," said Betsy Garside, spokeswoman for the American Farmland Trust, a member of the Smart Growth network and a recipient of EPA and other federal funds. "If we can help the government be more efficient, and they can help us be more far-reaching, the public benefits."

But O'Toole -- a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley -- contends such alliances shortchange democracy.

As he put it in "The Vanishing Automobile," a new book about urban sprawl: "EPA funding creates the appearance of a grass-roots movement against sprawl when in fact much of the 'movement' is supported by a federal agency."

The senior EPA official disagreed. "There is widespread concern about the impacts of growth and development," he said. "We are responding to people's concerns."

Concern about taxpayer-funded advocacy is a recurring theme in Congress, where at least five hearings have addressed the subject since 1995.

"Organizations have every right to advocate and advance their point of view. What they don't have a right to is taxpayer dollars," said Jonathan Adler, who testified at one hearing. Adler is a well-known critic of the environmental movement and author of "Environmentalism at the Crossroads: Green Activism in America."

The issue is not that simple, according to Replogle, who works for Environmental Defense, an advocacy group that receives federal grants.

"Environmental groups represent tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of ordinary citizens," he said.

"Efforts to tie a gag around (environmental) groups, to cut them off from any access to government grants seeks to undermine essential parts of public involvement in the democratic process," Replogle said.

Federal funding of environmental advocacy is at the heart of concerns about the $30,000 federal grant to The Lands Council, which has repeatedly attacked Forest Service timber policies. Members of Congress have complained to the agency.

"This is a little uncomfortable," said Mark Rey, a Department of Agriculture undersecretary who oversees the Forest Service. "But getting people together and finding consensus (on wildfire issues) requires a certain amount of discomfort."

Some say such funding aids advocacy indirectly.

"When the government funds a group to do things you may not disagree with, it frees up resources for it to do things you do disagree with," said O'Toole.

But Peterson said it works the other way. The grant "is actually diverting resources out of our regular program. I'm spending a lot of hours trying to interpret long documents and figure out how to comply" with federal rules. "And I'm not funded to do that."

Sometimes federally funded environmental groups also sue the government.

On July 1, 1997, the National Wildlife Federation sued the EPA over water quality. The same day, it applied for a $70,000 EPA clean-water grant, records show. A few weeks later, it got the money.

The federation succeeded with its suit as well, eventually getting the federal government to pay its $14,000 legal costs.

"The government is doing a lot of good work. ... And we work with them wherever possible," said Philip Kavits, vice president of communications for the federation. "By the same token, that does not, in any way, insulate the government from (legal action) where we feel they are doing the wrong thing."

Some lawmakers have raised concerns about the EPA's "practice of providing grants to organizations that have initiated legal action against the agency," according to the GAO.

Most federal support for environmental groups is put to work in a more pragmatic manner: to buy land and protect habitat.

One such arrangement is unfolding along a stretch of the Sacramento River in Northern California where The Nature Conservancy purchased 67 acres -- then sold a piece to the government.

A mix of orchards and cropland, the place is no scenic wilderness. But a 27-acre piece of forest and savannah along the river is vital habitat for many species, including migratory songbirds.

That is what drew the attention of the Fish and Wildlife Service, which is seeking to expand its holdings in the heavily farmed Sacramento Valley.

But last year, when the parcel came up for sale, the Fish and Wildlife Service didn't have the cash. Nor did it want the farmland. Enter the conservancy. "We stepped in and held the property as an interim owner," said Sam Lawson, director of the conservancy's Sacramento River project.

Today, the conservancy has sliced and diced the land into saleable units. For $71,980 in federal funds, the river section will soon become part of the Sacramento River National Wildlife Refuge. The farm portion is to be sold to a local grower.

"It's a win-win for everyone," said Glenn County Supervisor Denny Bungarz. "Land suitable for habitat goes into habitat. Land that should stay in agriculture stays in agriculture."

Yet such transactions generate suspicion among conservatives.

"Land purchases are an extremely political matter and an increasingly controversial policy," said Christopher Morris, who scrutinizes environmental groups for the Capital Research Center, a conservative think tank in Washington.

"There is nothing inherently wrong about The Nature Conservancy wanting to preserve scenic places," Morris said. "But the scope of its efforts ... come at the expense of private landowners.

And, he charged, "the conservancy also makes money" by selling land to the government.

Lawson insisted that that's not the case.

"We have a 'no-net-profit' rule, which says we are not allowed to sell (land) to a government agency for more than we paid for it," he said.

On the Sacramento River property, records show the conservancy sold the 27 acres to the Fish and Wildlife Service for just what it paid for it: $71,980.

International conservation is another huge ticket item. Last year, more than $37 million in federal funds were routed, through environmental groups, to programs outside the United States. A small portion -- $1.7 million -- ended up in the lowland rain forests of northern Guatemala where Conservation International is using it to establish sustainable farming practices, set up health clinics and jump-start a new industry, eco-tourism, in the Mayan Biosphere Reserve.

"People are willing to pay big money to hike into the forest and camp out and explore the Mayan ruins with somebody who knows something about it," said James Nations, a Conservation International vice president.

One 1997 foreign award to the Natural Resources Defense Council even had links to a prominent politician: then-Vice President Al Gore.

The goal of the $20,000 Department of Energy grant was to support Peter Miller, an NRDC scientist, in testing an ultraviolet water purification system in South Africa. The low-cost process has potential for improving public health in developing nations.

After the work was complete, NRDC sent a billing letter to the government, which said, "DOE requested that we initiate the effort at this time in order to have a site ready for the visit of Vice President Al Gore and the meeting of the U.S./South Africa Bi-national Commission in February."

In the end, though, Gore didn't show up.

"We would have hoped to get some nice publicity but, frankly, it was more of a pain," said Miller. "We kind of scrambled around trying to get the thing set up in time for him to visit so he can get the photo op -- and he went to some other project."

The Bee's Tom Knudson can be reached at (530) 582-5336 or tknudson@sacbee.com.


The Green Land-Grabbers:
It's Not Just the Feds Who Are After Your Land

By Bonner Cohen

Summary: Major environmental organizations such as the Nature Conservancy are working closely with the federal government to buy large tracts of private land, frequently at the expense of private property owners' rights. These environmental organizations often then sell the land to the government -- at a profit. Most disturbing, land purchases reflect the long-term goal of some green groups to turn up to fifty percent of U.S. land into wilderness.

"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.

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.

The Conservation Fund

While the Nature Conservancy specializes in serving as a conduit to funnel private land into government hands, the Conservation Fund engages it what it calls "land preservation initiatives" with partners, which include "county, state, and federal land stewardship agencies, foundations, non-profit organizations, and interested citizens." On its web site, the group boasts that, "The Conservation Fund and its partners have protected more than 3 million acres of the nation's natural and cultural heritage." "The Fund's success at leveraging support is measured in dollars of land purchased," the organization explains. "The estimated market value of the 3 million acres is $1.4 billion-but we paid only $850 million."

One of the Conservation Fund's most innovative and effective projects is the Conservation Leadership Network. The Network, a collaborative effort involving the Conservation Fund, the Land Trust Alliance, and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, is a training center that brings together activists and government officials who share a common interest in transferring private property to government ownership or control. It offers an array of courses on such topics as "Land Conservation Strategies" and "Conserving Land Through Conservation Easements."

Most of the courses are taught at the posh mountaintop National Conservation Training Center in Shepherdstown, West Virginia. More specialized classes are held at other locations around the country. "The facilities were spectacular," commented one former student on the training center in Shepherdstown. "I was really impressed with the physical layout. It's good to see our tax dollars at work in such positive ways."

Among the Conservation Fund's many activities is the "preservation" of Civil War battlefields. But "preservation" often means expanding battlefield boundaries and gobbling up private land in the process. In one ambitious land-grabbing effort near Antietam Battlefield National Park, the Conservation Fund joined forces with the National Park Service and the State of Maryland.

Ann Corcoran, a former employee of the Nature Conservancy and the Audubon Society, owns a farm adjacent to Antietam park. She and her neighbors understand the tactics of the Conservation Fund - what she calls "squeezing landowners" - because they experienced it first-hand in the 1990s. At a Competitive Enterprise Institute roundtable discussion on "What Makes for a Good Land Trust'," Corcoran explained what happened to her. "Once land trusts start working hand in glove with governments, then what they're doing is my business," she said.

Corcoran elaborated: "The Conservation Fund, working with the Park Service, decided they were going to start picking up properties outside the boundary of the park. The Park Service did not have the right to tell them to pick up private properties outside the legislated boundary, for the purpose of selling them to the National Park Service."

"One of those properties would have surrounded me and put my farm in the park, and we purchased the property to save ourselves from being included with a national park boundary expansion. Once private property comes inside the boundaries and becomes an inholding, it is eligible to be condemned by the Park Service."

Corcoran noted that Conservation Fund lobbyists made repeated attempts in Congress to find a senator who would support an expansion of the park's boundary. "But there are sixteen homeowners who would get stuck as inholders inside the park, and they're scared to death." Fortunately, Corcoran and her neighbors banded together and blocked the Conservation Fund's maneuvers at Antietam.

The Wilderness Society

Founded in 1935, the Wilderness Society says its mission is "to protect America's wilderness and to develop a nationwide network of wild lands through public education, scientific analysis, and advocacy." Headquartered in Washington, DC, the Wilderness Society has eight regional offices and over 200,000 members. In 1999, it had a budget of $14.3 million and generated more than $18.8 million in revenue, almost all from donors. Individuals accounted for $14.8 million of the revenue, foundations for $2.5 million and corporations for $265,000. Leading philanthropic donors to the Wilderness Society include the Ford Foundation ($225,000 in 1998), the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation ($150,000 in 1998), the David and Lucile Packard Foundation ($50,000 in 1999), and the Town Creek Foundation ($75,000 in 1998).

The Wilderness Society occupies a unique position. "It has steadfastly rejected the acquisition and ownership of private property for its own self-management, unlike the Audubon Society, the Nature Conservancy, and the National Farmland Trust," note Arnold and Gottlieb. "Instead, the Wilderness Society prefers to advocate only government ownership and management of natural resources."

In keeping with its pledge to "develop a national network of wild lands," the Wilderness Society is one of many environmental organizations involved in the "Wildlands Project." Described by Science magazine (June 25, 1993) as "the most ambitious proposal for land management since the Louisiana Purchase of 1803," the Wildlands Project calls for "a network of wilderness reserves, buffer zones, and wildlife corridors stretching across huge tracks of land-hundreds of millions of acres, as much as half of the continent."

According to Science, the long-term goal of the Wildlands Project "is nothing less than a transformation of America from a place where 4.7 percent of the land is wilderness to an archipelago of human-inhabited islands surrounded by natural areas." Quietly launched in 1991, the Wildlands Project has been guided by David Foreman, formerly with the Wilderness Society and founder of Earth First!; Michael Soule, professor emeritus at the University of California at Santa Cruz and a man considered the father of "conservation biology"; and Reed Noss, an Oregon-based scientist and prominent conservation biologist. By 1999, the Tucson, Arizona-based organization had a full-time staff of eight and a budget of $1.6 million.

The project aims to return fifty percent of the continental United States to a "natural" state. It calls for establishing systems of core wilderness areas where human activity would be prohibited. Biological "corridors" would link the "core areas," serving as highways allowing nonhumans to pass from one core to another. And buffer zones would be established around the core areas and their interlocking corridors. Only outside the buffer areas would human activities such as agriculture and industrial production be permitted. The goal is to overcome what conservation biologists Soule and Noss refer to as the "fragmentation of habitat." In this ecocentric view of the world, the survival of flora and fauna takes precedence over all other considerations. "Our goal is to create new political realities based on the needs of other species," the Wildlands Project's Foreman told Science News in 1993.

The project is so audacious that it easily could be dismissed as little more than a green pipe dream. Yet the Los Angeles Times took the Wildlands Project seriously enough to do a feature on it in September 1999, even reproducing a map courtesy of the Wildlands Project. As the Times noted, the Wildlands Project goes beyond setting aside land. "[T]he group also envisions rewilding parts of the West by winning government approval to bring back major carnivores like mountain lions, wolves and grizzlies to maintain ecological checks and balances." Needless to say, introducing carnivores into rural areas might so frighten local residents that many would leave-exactly what Wildlands Project supporters want.

To launch the scheme, the Bullett Foundation gave the Oregon Natural Resources Council, a Wildlands Project member, $95,000 in 1993 and 1994 for "advocacy work based on good science, agency monitoring, and appeals." The Pew Charitable Trusts also gave the project a boost. In 1993, it named Noss its Pew Scholar for Conservation and Environment, providing him with $150,000 for the next three years.

Many donations have gone directly to the Wildlands Project, but others are made to one or more of three dozen organizations that are part of the project's grassroots network. Friends of the Bow/Biodiversity Associates, for example, is dedicated to "protecting" and connecting the Medicine Bow National Forest of Wyoming and Colorado, the Black Hills of South Dakota, and the northern portion of Colorado's San Juan Mountains. The group vigorously opposes logging and mining activities in the region and supports U.S. Forest Service attempts to mandate roadless areas in the national forests. Its donors include the Wilderness Society, Sierra Club, Foundation for Deep Ecology, National Rivers Coalition, Fund for Wild Nature, Harder Foundation, and Reraam Foundation.

The Wildlands Project has enjoyed the enthusiastic support of the Wilderness Society. "It's the right vision, it's the vision we have to pursue or say good-bye to Mother Nature," said Mark Shaffer, the group's former vice president of resource planning and economics. In this spirit, the Wilderness Society in July 2001 joined the Sierra Club and the Colorado Wilderness Network to urge Congress to designate for wilderness protection 1.6 million acres of "wildlands" held by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and adjacent U.S. Forest Service land. The proposal, they explained, "offers a balanced alternative to the threats to these special places from increased oil and gas development, mining, logging, and unregulated off-road vehicle use."

Such proposals should not be viewed in isolation. Each acre of land so "protected" becomes part of a larger mosaic that activists put together piece by piece. They have a vision of where they want to go and how to get there. Supporters of the Wildlands Project may never realize their goal of creating interlocking cores, corridors, and buffers across the North American continent. But enough private land is lost in the United States to pose a threat to our nation's character. Every bureaucratic land grab undermines the right to own property and produce wealth-wealth that sustains philanthropy.

The Human Cost of Land Grabbing

Dave Fisher is a third-generation cattle rancher at Ord Mountain, near Barstow, California. Fisher's ranch has been in his family for 75 years, and he has permits from the BLM that allow him to graze cattle on government-owned lands adjacent to his property. Fisher's ranch, located in the California Desert Conservation Area, is subject to unique climatological conditions prevailing in that part of the Mojave Desert. It's also subject to federal regulation. Like other ranchers in the area, Fisher's livelihood depends on his ability to use his own land and to acquire the grazing allotments he leases from the BLM.

In 2000, three environmental groups-the Center for Bio-Diversity, Sierra Club, and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility-sued the BLM in federal court over its conduct relating to threatened or endangered species protection in Southern California.

The BLM settled the case out of court. Without consulting its inholders-the landowners whose property is surrounded by government-owned land-or its lease holders who hold BLM grazing permits, the BLM declared its lands and those under private ownership in the affected area to be "critical habitat" for the desert tortoise. It also agreed to a series of stipulations on how critical habitat could be used. Especially onerous to ranchers like Fisher, the BLM drastically reduced the number of days cattle could graze on BLM allotments. On May 15, 2001, Fisher was given 15 days to remove his 307 head of cattle from the BLM land for which he had grazing permits. He was also told to remove the cattle from his own land. Fisher appealed the decision.

The drastic BLM action prompted San Bernardino County Sheriff Gary Penrod to revoke a three-year-old Memorandum of Understanding between his office and BLM's law enforcement branch. In an April 17, 2001 letter, a copy of which was provided by Fisher's lawyer Karen Budd Falen, Sheriff Penrod told the federal agency that it was acting in an "arbitrary and unreasonable fashion in threatening to remove cattle from grazing lands situated within the County of San Bernardino."

"This action," he wrote, "will directly and negatively impact the very livelihood of California cattlemen, and may result in physical resistance by cattlemen attempting to preserve their stock." Penrod added: "I do not wish to be associated with any Bureau of Land Management Law Enforcement personnel who may be precipitating possible violent range disputes."

On August 24, Administrative Law Judge Harvey C. Sweitzer ruled that the BLM violated its own regulations by failing to engage in "consultation" with Fisher and six other ranchers affected by its order. Judge Sweitzer remanded the BLM order back to the agency and instructed it to afford Fisher and the other ranchers "a real opportunity to contribute information and shape the actions to be taken for the future benefit of all parties."

However, on September 7, the agency simply resurrected its May 15 decision and slapped strict limits on Fisher's use of his land and lands within his grazing allotment. When the decision goes into effect, Fisher will have just 48 hours to remove his cattle from the 154,848-acre allotment he leases from the BLM. What's more, if Fisher's livestock stray into the closed areas, even though there are no fences, he could be charged with trespassing and lose all or parts of what is left of his grazing privileges.

Because there isn't enough private pasture to feed his herd, it's ruinous to Fisher to have the BLM reduce by 44 percent the number of days he is permitted to graze livestock on his allotment. And it's physically impossible for Fisher to remove his cattle from the huge area in 48 hours. Moreover, by including some of his own land in the exclusion area, BLM denies Fisher the use of his property without compensation. If these actions stand, Fisher will lose his ranching operation.

Judge Sweitzer's instruction that BLM allow Fisher to participate in the grazing decision is less supportive than it at first appears. His only opportunity to participate was a BLM "workshop" scheduled for September 6-7. Fisher was given less than one week's notice and because of a prior commitment could not attend. BLM ignored his request to reschedule it for the following week.

Ironically, it was rancher stewardship of the land that attracted the desert tortoise. It was not until the Fisher family drilled water wells on its own land that the desert tortoise became prevalent in the California Desert Conservation Area. The tortoise attracted the attention of the environmental groups, and they used it and their influence with federal officials to push Fisher and his neighbors off the land.

Ending a Way of Life

Sadly, the tragedy befalling Dave Fisher is duplicated across the country. As these lines are written, 1,400 farmers and ranchers along the California-Oregon border are facing a similar disaster. A severe drought has prompted the Bureau of Reclamation to divert water intended to irrigate crops in the arid region, called the Klamath Basin, to rivers and lakes that are home to two species of sucker fish, which the Fish & Wildlife Service considers endangered species. Without the life-sustaining irrigation, the farmers' potato crop will wither in the field.

In a pattern that has become all too familiar in rural America, environmental organizations, among them the Oregon Natural Resources Council and Water Watch, filed the lawsuits that triggered the federal government's decision to cut off the farmers' water.

Like Fisher, the Klamath Basin farmers and ranchers are on the verge of losing their livelihood because the Endangered Species Act protects a species other than their own. Many of the Klamath Basin's residents are descendants of World War I and World War II veterans who settled the region after the government promised them they would have water for irrigation. Indeed, many veterans had deeds -- signed by various U.S. presidents -- granting them and their heirs water rights into perpetuity. As their prospects for economic survival dwindle, there is talk of having the federal government or environmental groups buy them out. But the proud residents of the Klamath Basin don't want to be bought out; they want to farm and ranch just as their grandparents did.

Farmers and ranchers are being urged to accept an offer they can't refuse. They may have little choice but to salvage what they can. But if it comes to that, another bit of rural America will have surrendered the promise of prosperity and forcibly be returned to the wild.

 


Bonner R. Cohen, Ph.D, is a senior fellow at the Lexington Institute in Arlington, Va. A former editorof EPA Watch, he currently serves as Washington editor for the Earth Times.

This article was published by the Capital Research Center.

 


 Henry Lamb

Tightening the screws

© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com

More than 1,400 farm families in the Klamath Basin have been targeted for economic extinction by environmental extremists. Nearly 90 percent of the 210,000 acres of farmland will get no water from Upper Klamath Lake because Steve Lewis, a biologist, rendered an opinion for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which said a sucker fish in the Upper Klamath Lake, and Coho salmon in the Klamath river need the water more than the farmers. In an appeal, U.S. District Judge Ann L. Aiken agreed, saying, "... while it is clear that the farmers face severe economic hardship, the threat to the survival of the fish is greater."

A "Bucket Brigade" is scheduled for May 7, where thousands of supporters will physically lift buckets of water from Klamath lake and hand them, person-to-person, down the brigade, all the way to an irrigation canal. The demonstration may draw attention to the farmer's plight, but it is not likely to change anything in the long run. The Klamath Basin is in the path of a coveted Bio-region -- the fish problem is simply a tool being used to achieve a much bigger objective.

The underlying legal authority is the Endangered Species Act (ESA), which has been used excessively by environmental extremists to drive people off their land and into economic oblivion.

Ironically, the ESA was enacted in response to a very emotional appeal to protect the American Bald Eagle. The decision to protect the Klamath sucker fish will deprive the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge the runoff from area farms, which will jeopardize as many as 1,000 eagles that feed there.

Attorneys for the Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund (formerly Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund) are fighting for the sucker fish. This same extremist outfit sued the federal government on behalf of the Coho salmon, then submitted a bill to the Justice Department for $439,053. Most of the bill represented 931 hours by a single attorney -- at $350 per hour.

This fight, though, is not about attorney's fees, as obnoxious as they may be. This fight is not about the sucker fish, as repulsive as they may be. This fight is about the land.

It would be a mistake to laugh off the vision held by some, to convert as much as half the land in North America to core wilderness reserves, devoid of humans, connected by corridors of wilderness, all surrounded by buffer zones. This vision was advanced initially in the United States by Dave Foreman, co-founder of Earth First!, founder of the Cenozoic Society, the Wildlands Project and, recently, a member of the board of the Sierra Club.

Foreman's vision was elevated into a legitimate plan when The Nature Conservancy and the Audubon Society funded the efforts of Dr. Reed Noss, who actually drafted the Wildlands Project plan. The United Nations Environment Program legitimized the vision when it published the Global Biodiversity Assessment (GBA), a massive 1,140-page instruction book for implementing the U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity. Section 13 of the GBA is a detailed description of how biodiversity should be preserved under the Convention (treaty) and, on page 993 (Section 13.4.2.2.3), the Wildlands Project is named explicitly as being "central" to successful implementation.

When the plan first appeared in 1992, it drew rave reviews from deep ecologists and environmental extremists -- and rounds of robust laughter from everyone else.

Al Gore did not laugh. Bruce Babbitt did not laugh. Carol Browner did not laugh.

Immediately upon taking office in 1993, the Clinton-Gore administration began restructuring the resource agencies of government around an "Ecosystem Management Policy" that elevated the protection of ecosystems to the same level as human health and considered humans to be a "biological resource." When the Democrat-controlled U.S. Senate failed to ratify the Convention on Biological Diversity in 1994, the shocked and bewildered administration decided to implement the Ecosystem Management Policy anyway.

From day one, Gore, Babbitt, and Browner set out to impose and enforce every rule possible to keep people from using federal land -- even private lands. A lawsuit filed by the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund to "save" the spotted owl, took out the loggers in the northwest and eventually, in the southwest as well. A red-legged frog froze commercial activity on vast stretches of land in California. Monument designation removed ranchers and prohibited mineral production on nearly two million acres of the Escalante Staircase, and millions more acres in and around Clinton's rash of additional National Monuments.

On and on it goes. Following the Clinton-Gore administration around the United States is a trip through tragedy for people who love the land and depend upon its natural resources.

Now, it is the farmers in the Klamath Basin who must pay. They must pay with their land. Had the federal government just ordered the farmers to move, there would have been a rebellion.

No, no. No one would be so brazen. A more subtle, indirect approach was contrived. In Ohio, The Nature Conservancy, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service would never "force" people off their land -- they would, instead, proclaim the virtue of a new wildlife preserve and insist that the farmland owned by nearly 200 families must be protected for future generations -- and, therefore, the taxpayers should buy the land from the residents of the Darby and return the land to its pre-settlement condition.

In Maine, environmental extremists want to convert most of the state into wilderness. In the northwest, there are several simultaneous, indirect tactics underway, all of which have the effect of forcing people off the land -- or severely limiting what people may do -- who are allowed to stay on the land. The Columbia River Basin has been a burning-barrel for tax dollars, wasted in plan after plan to remove or control the people. The Columbia River Gorge Commission is a classic example of government controlling people's activity on their own private property.

The Y2Y project envisions wilderness from Yellowstone to the Yukon, and the Cascadia Bioregion vision adds the forests and river bottoms from Washington to northern California -- including the Klamath Basin. All across the land, policies and programs are being implemented that have the effect of forcing people off their rural land to achieve some imagined environmental benefit.

If the Klamath farmers get no water, they can't farm. If they can't farm, they will have to move somewhere and find work. It's as simple as that. Sympathy will be dispensed and tax dollars offered but, in the end, if farmers can't get water, they can't farm. If they can't farm, they must move off the land.

Ask any congressman or federal officer what the Klamath water decision has to do with the Wildlands Project and the reply will be an indignant "nothing!" Sadly, most of them will think they speak the truth. The field officers of the federal agencies are just following orders. Their bosses, however, were selected by the Clinton-Gore team directly from the very environmental organizations that dreamed up and promoted the Wildlands Project. Many of the second- and third-tier officials remain in the Bush administration.

The elected officials have little time to be bothered with wild, scatter-brained "conspiracy theories" about U.N. land grabs. "Hogwash," they say. Anytime the U.N. is mentioned in less than glowing terms, elected officials tend to throw up the "black helicopter" defense and listen no more.

Nevertheless, look around. If the Klamath farmers get no water, they must move. The loggers in the northwest found that owls and salmon are valued higher than the needs of loggers and they were forced to close the mills and move off the land. The ranchers throughout the west are finding it increasingly difficult to keep their herds at profitable levels because of ever tightening rules and regulations.

Miners are now a distinct endangered species, but they are not on the EPA list for help. Private land owners from Maine to Ohio to Florida are finding "growth limits" blocking economic expansion and forcing land into open space instead of productive usage. Slowly, project by project, law by law, rule by rule, the United States is being transformed into the bizarre vision advanced by Dave Foreman more than a decade ago, which, incidentally, is precisely the objective of the U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity.

The screws are tightening now on the Klamath farmers. It is a sad day in the United States when the government officially places the value of a sucker fish above the needs of its citizens. The Endangered Species Act, as onerous as it is, does provide a mechanism for a so-called "God Squad" to overrule the federal agency and the sucker fish.

It is worth noting that when the snail darter stopped construction of a major dam in Tennessee, it was none other than Al Gore who demanded that the God Squad step in and overrule the ESA. Of course, this was before Al's green baptism, when he really was concerned about the people who elected him.

The Convention on Biological Diversity was not ratified by the United States. Clinton and Gore are no longer in charge. But the drive to push people off the land continues, powered by foundation and corporate-funded environmental extremist organizations and their former officers who remain entrenched in government.

This foolishness must stop. Perhaps the new administration will listen to the people. The last one certainly didn't.



Henry Lamb is the executive vice president of the Environmental Conservation Organization and chairman of Sovereignty International.

LAND GRABBING SECRETS OF THE NATURE CONSERVANCY

TNC American Policy Center Article
Date: Wednesday, August 04, 1999 10:51 PM

Never heard of The Nature Conservancy? Well, that's probably no accident. It keeps a low profile by design. When you run scams like it does, you don't want to be notorious.

So let's lift the rock off these slugs and shine a very bright spotlight on a few of their most outrageous games.

The Nature Conservancy is the richest, most powerful environmental colossus in the world. It claims 680,000 individual members and 405 corporate members operating out of eight regional offices and fifty chapter offices across the nation. The Nature Conservancy has assets of almost $1 Billion and has an annual operating budget of over $300 million and a staff of 1150 people.

THE SCAM - real estate. THE HOOK - "conservation through private action." According to the party line, The Nature Conservancy simply buys land with private money and sets up nature reserves, thereby helping the environment without infringing on anybody. What a wonderful, charitable idea. Ah, if only it were true.

THE VICTIMS - unsuspecting property owners (many times elderly). THE METHODS - hide behind phony corporations; serve as a shill for government agencies; work behind the scenes with more visible environmental groups to intimidate property owners into selling. THE GOAL - money and power.

The Nature Conservancy frequently uses phony front companies to get land from owners who wouldn't knowingly sell to an environmentalist group.

It used this tactic to purchase most of the islands off the coast of Virginia, containing 40,000 acres and sixty miles of coastline. In doing so The Nature Conservancy was able to stop all private development and control the use of the land, damaging the tax base, killing thousands of jobs, and severely curbing the locals from hunting, fishing, camping and joy riding on the islands.

But don't think the purpose was to preserve these beautiful, pristine islands for nature. The Nature Conservancy did bar others from developing the land - but not itself. Far from it. At a huge profit, the Conservancy developed up-scale homes for the rich.

But how is that bad? If they do it with private money what's wrong with it? Isn't that just free enterprise?

The problem is The Nature Conservancy is a non-profit organization with tax exempt status and they maintain that status because of their tightly protected image as benevolent conservationists. Moreover, property owners on the islands wanted to invest in development and thought they were selling their land to developers. They were aware of and frightened by the Nature Conservancy and would never have sold to the group. That's why the Conservancy hid behind a phony land company, grabbed power, foiled the development and made a huge profit on tax-exempt money. Today much of the coast of Virginia is off-limits to tourists and other development.

Other times, The Nature Conservancy acts as a shill to a government agency to acquire land cheaply and sell it to the government at a huge profit. Again, conservation is not the goal.

One of its favorite scams goes something like this. Your grandmother owns land close to a historic site or a wilderness area. The government wants the land to expand a park but grandmother won't sell.

One day a representative of the Nature Conservancy shows up, well dressed, smiling, but concerned. He tells your grandmother that he's just learned that the government intends to take her land after she passes away. She won't be able to sell it or give it to her children. However, he can offer a solution.

If Grandmother will sell her land to The Nature Conservancy he can assure her that the land will stay in private hands and not be taken by the government.

Well, a relieved grandmother is much happier and she agrees to sell. However, says the nice man from The Nature Conservancy, because the government has threatened to take the land, its value is now only about half its reported market value. That's all he'll be able to pay her. Well, thinks grandmother, half is better than nothing, so she sells.

The next day our friend from The Nature Conservancy makes a call to the Department of the Interior informing them that their plan has worked. The whole thing had been pre-arranged between them before anyone ever knocked on Grandmother's door. As arranged, The Nature Conservancy then sells the land to the Interior Department FOR FULL MARKET VALUE PLUS OVERHEAD, FINANCING AND HANDLING CHARGES.

Hundreds of complaints have been recorded concerning the practices of the Conservancy's land grabbing operation. One family in Indiana had to sue to get back their father's land that was signed over to The Nature Conservancy when he was very old and mentally incompetent to handle his affairs. Agents of the Conservancy had helped him in changing documents that left his entire estate to The Nature Conservancy. The family won back their property but only after being forced to spend a fortune in legal fees.

Unfortunately space allows only a minor look at the mammoth operation of The Nature Conservancy. Its power, wealth and control is almost beyond comprehension. Yet it is able to maintain an image of idealism and concern for the environment.

The truth is The Nature Conservancy is really little more than a massive, ruthless real estate machine using its tax exempt status and ties to the government to create wealth for itself.

So If ever you receive a knock on the door from a smiling representative of The Nature Conservancy, slam it in his face and rush to you neighbors to sound the alarm, or the saying "there goes the neighborhood" could take on a completely different meaning. $

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" We must act as though it is impossible to fail."

"You would be surprised how much we can get done if we don't care who gets the credit."