The Conservation Alliance sent grants totaling $900,000 to 22 organizations working to protect wild places throughout North America. This is the organization’s single largest grant disbursal since The Conservation Alliance was founded in 1989. The grants put the organization on track to contribute $2 million in 2019, another record.
The Conservation Alliance membership includes more than 250 outdoor and related businesses that come together around a shared purpose to protect wild places for their habitat and recreation values. Each member company contributes annual dues to a central grant fund. The Conservation Alliance made donations to 22 grassroots conservation organizations as follows:
Organization | Project | Amount |
Alachua Conservation Trust | Rise Up for the Santa Fe River Campaign | $ 35,000 |
Audubon Alaska | Protect the Arctic Refuge Campaign | $ 50,000 |
Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society – National | Seal River Watershed Indigenous Protected Area Initiative | $ 50,000 |
Conservation Colorado | CORE Act Campaign | $ 50,000 |
Conservation Lands Foundation | Campaign for the Gila River, Wild and Scenic | $ 45,000 |
Ducks Unlimited | Grayland Acquisition and Protection Project | $ 35,000 |
Grand Canyon Trust | Campaign to Protect the Grand Canyon from Uranium Mining | $ 50,000 |
Greater Yellowstone Coalition | Yellowstone Gateway Land Acquisitions Campaign | $ 50,000 |
Idaho Conservation League | Protecting the High Divide Campaign | $ 10,000 |
Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Center | Oregon Wildlands 2.0 Campaign | $ 50,000 |
Montana Wilderness Association | Blackfoot Clearwater Stewardship Project | $ 45,000 |
New Mexico Wilderness Alliance | Greater Chaco Protection Campaign | $ 45,000 |
Oregon Natural Desert Association | Protecting Oregon’s Owyhee Canyonlands | $ 50,000 |
San Juan Citizen’s Alliance | San Juan Mountains Wilderness | $ 35,000 |
Save Our Canyons | Wild Forests and Connected Watersheds Education Program | $ 20,000 |
Save the Redwoods | Protecting the Giants of Giant Sequoia National Monument | $ 50,000 |
The Trust for Public Land | Spence Mountain | $ 40,000 |
The Wilderness Land Trust | Little Castle Lake-Castle Crags Wilderness Project | $ 30,000 |
Trout Unlimited | Sportsmen for the Ruby Mountains | $ 45,000 |
Wallowa Land Trust | Campaign for the East Moraine | $ 40,000 |
Washington Wild | North Cascades and Puget Sound Headwaters Campaign | $ 40,000 |
Wilderness Workshop | Thompson Divide and CORE Act Campaign | $ 35,000 |
“In our 30th anniversary year, we are excited to make our largest grant disbursal ever,” said John Sterling, executive director of The Conservation Alliance. “Thanks to the generous support of our members, we’re on track to award a record $2 million in 2018.”
Each project funded during this grant cycle was nominated to submit a grant proposal by a Conservation Alliance member company. The Conservation Alliance staff and board evaluated 53 proposals and placed 25 projects on a ballot. The 22 grants awarded in this grant cycle represent the projects that received the most votes from Conservation Alliance member company employees. Collectively, these projects seek to protect more than 19 million acres and 1,046 river miles. The grants cover projects in the U.S. and Canada.
Two of the 22 organizations received funding from The Conservation Alliance for the first time: Alachua Conservation Trust and Ducks Unlimited.
For a complete overview of each grant, visit conservationalliance.com/seasons.