Landmark
Calls for Probe into EPA Grants to Nature
Conservancy
May 15, 2003 11:54
HERNDON, Va., May 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Landmark
Legal Foundation has asked the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) to investigate whether
millions of dollars in agency grants to the
Nature Conservancy and its state affiliates --
the nation's largest environmental organization
with assets of more than $3 billion -- were
misused. The Foundation has also asked the
agency to suspend current and future grant
payments to the group pending the outcome of the
investigation.
Landmark asked EPA to ensure that none of the
more than $10 million in EPA grants received by
the Conservancy between 1993 and 2002 were used
for purposes other than those for which they
were originally intended. According to a recent
series of articles in the Washington Post, the
Nature Conservancy spent millions to purchase
parcels of undeveloped land and then resold the
land to Conservancy backers and officials at
greatly discounted prices, in exchange for
limitations on future development of the land.
The Conservancy also spent tens of millions of
dollars on commercial and residential land
development projects, oil and gas drilling and
other ventures.
"It's becoming increasingly apparent that one of
the resources the Nature Conservancy actually
conserves is questionable behavior," explained
Landmark President Mark R. Levin. "And as one of
the EPA's most frequent grant recipients, we
want the agency to ensure that taxpayer funds
aren't finding their way into sweetheart deals
for Conservancy directors or other losing
business ventures."
Landmark maintains the most comprehensive,
searchable database of information on federal
environmental grants to nonprofit organizations
on the Internet. Since 2001, the Foundation has
gathered information from the EPA, the Bureau of
Land Management (BLM), the Forest Service and
the Fish and Wildlife Service on grants made by
those agencies to 501(c) nonprofit groups since
1993. Landmark's database can be accessed at
http://www.landmarklegal.org .
"In compiling our database we've learned a
number of startling things about the EPA's
grants to nonprofits," Levin explained. "First,
the EPA did not competitively bid these grants.
Second, there were no outside review panels to
determine the merit of grant applications; and
third, there was no effective system to oversee
the proper management of these grants. The EPA
needs to determine whether taxpayer funds were
used properly by the Nature Conservancy."
Founded in 1976, Landmark Legal Foundation is
one of the nation's top conservative public
interest law firms. The Foundation has won
precedent- setting legal victories in the areas
of environmental accountability, education
reform and holding public officials accountable
for their actions. Landmark has offices in
Kansas City, MO and Herndon, VA.
SOURCE Landmark Legal Foundation
/CONTACT: Eric Christensen of Landmark Legal
Foundation, +1-703-689-2370,
fax: +1-703-689-2373, info@landmarklegal.org/
/Web site:
http://www.landmarklegal.org/
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