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Holding HSUS Accountable for Deceptive Fundraising

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011 at 9:44 AM

Holding the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) Accountable for Deceptive Fundraising

[Editor's Note: The National Shooting Sports Foundation's Larry Keane recently updated NSSF members as follows: "The non-profit watchdog group Humanewatch.org has gone on the offensive with two full page advertisements running in the LA Times, educating the public that the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) gives less than one percent of its budget to local animal shelters. Last year, Humanewatch issued a challenge to Humane Society of the United States CEO Wayne Pacelle: "Share just half of HSUS's income with hands-on pet shelters, and we'll shut this website down for good." A year later...it looks like Humanewatch still has a job." The following has been published at Humanewatch.org in response to a LA Times editorial defending HSUS, which is a rabid anti-hunting group.]

HumaneWatch.org

HumaneWatch.org

Washington, D.C. – -(Ammoland.com)- If you’re hearing from HumaneWatch for the first time today because you saw an editorial that criticized us in today’s Los Angeles Times, welcome!

It seems our hard-hitting national ads, including a recent one in the Times, have struck a nerve.

Tinseltown is fast becoming the Humane Society of the United States’s power center, so we’re not surprised to learn that its leaders apparently persuaded the Times to take a closer look at our campaign to keep them honest.

The Times Editorial Board told its readers two important facts about the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). Commenting on our recent ads in the paper, they wrote:

One of the current ads features a photo of dogs looking wide-eyed in shock under the caption “SURPRISED to hear the Humane Society of the United States shares only 1 percent of your donations with local pet shelters?” The ad goes on to state that the Humane Society “is NOT your local animal shelter.

The ad is true on both counts.

Too few Americans are aware of HSUS’s misplaced priorities and the Times’ reiteration of our central message is an important step in educating more Americans about HSUS’s deception. But alas, the newspaper’s editors couldn’t stop there. They go on to write:

But [the ad is] also misleading. The Humane Society has never claimed that its mission is to fund local animal shelters… While some people may mistakenly believe that the Humane Society of the United States does the same job local humane societies do, it should not surprise anyone who has looked at the organization’s website that only a small percentage of its money goes to local shelters.

Here we disagree—strongly.

There is an important distinction between HSUS’s claims and public perception. Although the Humane Society of the United States never explicitly claims to support local hands-on pet shelters, it does go out of its way to perpetuate the myth that its primary focus is helping homeless dogs and cats. The result? Robust national polling shows that 71 percent of Americans believe HSUS is an umbrella organization for the nation’s hands-on pet shelters.

It’s frustrating to see the Los Angeles Times papering over HSUS’s intentional public misrepresentation of its own mission. Whether you love us or hate us, we encourage you to make up your own mind about this wealthy animal rights group.

Just take the Times’ own challenge and visit HSUS’s website. Three of the four primary images on its home page today feature dogs and cats. Better yet, take a look at HSUS’s fundraising page. It’s wall-to-wall pets. Now try to find HSUS’s disclaimer explaining that it doesn’t fund local shelters. Can you find it? Good luck.

For the record, though, here are a few things today’s editorial didn’t tell you.

  1. The Times suggests that we are “dragging shelter pets into the fight” over HSUS’s duplicity. But it’s HSUS that has been throwing shelters (and their furry charges) under the bus for years, mainly by poaching unsuspecting donors from their communities. The State Humane Association of California has already publicly complained about similar misbehavior by the ASPCA, so this problem is certainly on shelters’ collective radar screens. (HSUS CEO Wayne Pacelle’s response has been to suggest that the Association should fire its employees who are pointing out the truth.)
  • The Times observed that a public affairs firm with which HumaneWatch’s parent organization contracts for services runs another organization that questions some policies of MADD. Today’s editorial blurs an important distinction, in the way an unscrupulous commentator might hold one attorney responsible for the way another lawyer in the same firm defends his clients. That organization and this one are separate, although the management firm in question provides services to both.

The Los Angeles Times concludes:

If [HumaneWatch.org] don’t like the Humane Society’s positions, they are entitled, of course, to make their case. But don’t drag shelter pets into the fight.

It is the Humane Society of the United States—not us—who is guilty of dragging dogs and cats into this debate. We’ve tirelessly engaged the HSUS toe-to-toe on numerous issues affecting companion (and other) animals. We’re happy to debate the group’s leaders on the merits of their proposals, but we refuse to allow them to cloud the debate by falsely insinuating that it has the moral authority of representing the nation’s struggling animal shelters.

About:
HumaneWatch.org is a project of the Center for Consumer Freedom, a nonprofit watchdog group supported by a unique combination of consumers and American businesses. Visit: www.humanewatch.org

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Congress May Axe Subsidies for Extremist & Animal Rights Groups

Thursday, May 26th, 2011 at 10:04 AM

Congress May Axe Subsidies for Extremist & Animal Rights Groups

Boone and Crockett Club

Boone and Crockett Club

MISSOULA, Mont.--(Ammoland.com)- Legislation to be introduced in Congress could axe what has amounted to federal subsidies for environmental extremist and animal rights groups making big business out of suing the U.S. government.

The legislation, a House Resolution and companion version in the Senate titled Government Litigation Savings Act, would amend the existing Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA).

Though well intended, abuses of EAJA have escalated into a serious conservation issue with long-term consequences. Costs of defending unnecessary lawsuits against federal agencies such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are an increasing drain on conservation funding and agency personnel today.

The Government Litigation Savings Act was prompted by a coalition (member list below) of wildlife, agriculture, energy, mining and other resource-based groups led by Boone and Crockett Club.

Club President Ben Wallace said, “We take very seriously the fact that taxpayer money and sportsmen-generated funding intended to support conservation are being wasted. We thank Senator John Barrasso (R-WY) and Representative Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) for introducing a bill that offers hope for reforming EAJA back to its original purpose–and relief for the most successful wildlife conservation system in the world.”

Lawmakers held a press conference at noon 5/25/11 (ET) to announce the legislation.

The coalition formed following a Boone and Crockett Club investigation of federal statutes that enable ongoing litigation at a high cost to wildlife and the American taxpayer. Club President Emeritus Lowell E. Baier, a Maryland-based attorney, led the effort over the past year. His preliminary findings are reported in two articles available free at www.boone-crockett.org. Baier also employed two full-time attorneys to research EAJA’s initial Congressional intent, its judicial interpretation and application, abuses, loopholes and possible remedies by Congress.

EAJA was written to reimburse legal costs incurred by private citizens and small business that successfully sue federal agencies for non-compliance with federal law and regulation. Recipients were to include private citizens whose net worth was less than $2 million, and for-profit organizations with net worth of less than $7 million. Non-profit 501(c)(3) organizations were totally exempt from these limits. However, America’s two largest animal rights groups, with 2009 combined net assets exceeding $209.6 million and cash balances exceeding $44.5 million, now enjoy significant subsidies through EAJA by taking advantage of their exemption loophole.

For example: In 2008, an animal rights group won a legal ruling regarding wolves and petitioned a federal court in Missoula, Mont., for $388,370 in attorney fees. The judge awarded $263,099, which was based on an hourly rate of $300–even though the EAJA limit is $125 per hour.

In 2007, the same plaintiff was awarded $280,000 following a similar case in the Great Lakes area.

The defendant in both cases was the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, whose budget–regardless of whether it’s spent on wildlife or lawyers–is financed by a combination of sportsmen fees and tax dollars.

Taxpayers bear all EAJA reimbursements to plaintiffs.

Indirect costs are considerable, too. Nearly all resource management proposals are now subject to ever-higher hidden fees as federal agencies spend more and more time and resources on elaborate environmental impact statements and other attempts to “suit proof” their decision-making processes. In some cases, where the intent of the lawsuit is to stop a proposed federal action, the delays and costs to a federal agency can derail time sensitive projects even if the eventual court ruling goes against the plaintiffs.

Coalition members (to date) endorsing the Government Litigation Savings Act:

  • American Farm Bureau Federation
  • American Sheep Industry
  • Archery Trade Association
  • Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies
  • Bighorn Mountain Coalition
  • Boone and Crockett Club
  • Bowhunting Preservation Alliance
  • Campfire Club of America
  • Catch-a-Dream Foundation
  • Coalition of Arizona/New Mexico Counties
  • Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation
  • Dairy Producers of New Mexico
  • Dallas Safari Club
  • Delta Waterfowl Foundation
  • Family Farm Alliance
  • Hawaii Cattlemen’s Association
  • Houston Safari Club
  • Idaho Farm Bureau
  • Idaho State ATV Association
  • Intermountain Forest Association
  • Masters of Foxhounds Association of America
  • Montana Logging Association
  • Montana Wood Products Association
  • Mule Deer Foundation
  • National Association of Conservation Districts
  • National Association of Forest Service Retirees
  • National Cattlemen’s Beef Association
  • National Farmers Union
  • National Rifle Association
  • National Shooting Sports Foundation
  • National Trappers Association
  • National Union of Land and Water Rights
  • New Mexico Cattlegrowers Association
  • New Mexico Federal Lands Council
  • New Mexico Wool Growers Inc.
  • North American Bear Foundation
  • North American Grouse Partnership
  • Oregon Cattlemen’s Association
  • Orion-the-Hunters’ Institute
  • Pheasants Forever/Quail Forever
  • Pope and Young Club
  • Public Lands Council
  • Quality Deer Management Association
  • Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
  • Ruffed Grouse Society
  • Safari Club International
  • Sixtieth Legislature of the State of Wyoming
  • South Dakota Department of Agriculture
  • Stewards of the Sequoia
  • Sustainable Forest Action Coalition
  • Texas Wildlife Association
  • The Society of American Foresters
  • Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership
  • Tread Lightly!
  • U.S. Sportsmen’s Alliance
  • United States Cattlemen Association
  • Utah Cattlemen’s Association
  • Western Business Roundtable
  • Western Institute for the Study of the Environment
  • Western Legacy Alliance
  • Wild Sheep Foundation
  • Wildlife Forever
  • Wildlife Management Institute
  • Women in Timber
  • Wyoming Association of Conservation Districts
  • Wyoming Farm Bureau

About the Boone and Crockett Club
Founded by Theodore Roosevelt in 1887, the Boone and Crockett Club promotes guardianship and visionary management of big game and associated wildlife in North America. The Club maintains the highest standards of fair-chase sportsmanship and habitat stewardship. Member accomplishments include enlarging and protecting Yellowstone and establishing Glacier and Denali national parks, founding the U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service and National Wildlife Refuge System, fostering the Pittman-Robertson and Lacey Acts, creating the Federal Duck Stamp program, and developing the cornerstones of modern game laws. The Boone and Crockett Club is headquartered in Missoula, Mont. For details, visit www.boone-crockett.org.

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