Welfare Environmentalism: The Center for Biological Diversity

Report by Protect the Harvest

Who Is the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD)?
Heavily influenced by the radical eco-terrorist group Earth First!, the Center for Biological Diversity has a very confusing and often hard to follow history. This organization has incorporated several times in three different states, changed names, and merged into a holding company. CBD’s proposed mission is to protect the environment; however it has past donors like Goldman Sachs and ExxonMobil Foundation and connections with the Tides Foundation. As of March 2019, it had at least 160 employees, including more than 40 attorneys.
Based in Tucson, Arizona, CBD has 16 satellite offices, including one in the District of Columbia. CBD was created in Arizona in 1991 as the Greater Gila Biodiversity Project. It was renamed the Southwest Center for Biological Diversity in 1994, and finally the Center for Biological Diversity in 1998. The co-founders of CBD are Kieran Suckling, Peter Galvin, Todd Schulke and Robin Silver. As of 2017, the combined total compensation from CBD for the four co-founders was nearly $950,000.


Center for Biological Diversity – Their Money Information
The Center for Biological Diversity is a multimillion-dollar nonprofit with a substantial portion of their income coming from government grants. The government gives these organizations taxpayer money, which they use to sue the government. In many cases, fees are partially or fully reimbursed to them upon winning a case under EAJA.
In fact, in 2009 the Center for Biological Diversity raised $7.5 million dollars, $1.7 million of which was labeled as “legal returns.”
By 2016, total revenue had increased to $14.7 million, Salaries and employee benefits were $9.9 million (up from $8.1 million in 2015). Net assets at the end of 2016 were $19 million.
Total revenue for 2017 exceeded $20.1 million, $1.3 million of that listed as legal returns and settlements. Page 10 of the 2017 Form 990 showed total compensation of their employees of $9.5 million and another $1.7 million for 401(k) and other employee benefits. Net assets at the end of 2017 were $21 million.

The Endangered Species Act 
The Endangered Species Act, like so many other laws, was born from a noble beginning. Below is a definition of the Endangered Species Act as outlined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency:
“The Endangered Species Act (ESA) provides a program for the conservation of threatened and endangered plants and animals and the habitats in which they are found. The lead federal agencies for implementing ESA are the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries Service. The FWS maintains a worldwide list of endangered species. Species include birds, insects, fish, reptiles, mammals, crustaceans, flowers, grasses, and trees.
The law requires federal agencies, in consultation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and/or the NOAA Fisheries Service, to ensure that actions they authorize, fund, or carry out are not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any listed species or result in the destruction or adverse modification of designated critical habitat of such species. The law also prohibits any action that causes a “taking” of any listed species of endangered fish or wildlife. Likewise, import, export, interstate, and foreign commerce of listed species are all generally prohibited.”
A 1978 U.S. Supreme Court ruling made the ESA more important than progress, jobs, property rights, and in some ways, the Bill of Rights. A quote from that ruling states: “Congress intended endangered species to be afforded the highest of priorities”. Unfortunately, the Act’s power, citizen suit provisions, and lack of a cap on appropriated funds make it a very easy weapon to wield when the primary goal is to coerce government agencies to isolate the natural world from human activity and fleece the government of taxpayer dollars.
The ESA is mostly about habitat – land and waters, not the listed plants and animals. “Habitat” covers all lands and waters, government owned and private property. “Critical Habitat” is a designation that empowers agencies to impose severe measures to enforce the Endangered Species Act.


Abuse of the Endangered Species Act by the Center for Biological Diversity
The Center for Biological Diversity exploits the Endangered Species Act for their own agenda – to remove public land from public use by making unsubstantiated claims that one species or another would be threatened by commercial activity on public lands, such as grazing, mining, and logging. Like with organizations they often partner with, for example the Western Watershed Project and WildEarth Guardians, CBD follows a formula. They “beat the bushes” searching for species so they can petition to have them listed under ESA. The tactic these groups employ overwhelms the Fish and Wildlife Service with requests that they are not able to timely process. When the agencies can’t make deadlines, CBD then files suit to force the various agencies to act on their petition and declare “critical habitat,” usually using unproven science. Then the land and waters that the species occupies or even could occupy becomes protected by the government, stopping all human activity there.
There have been several instances where CBD’s chosen species are actually plentiful in other areas, giving them access to shift larger pieces of public land away from human use. The sad fact is that legitimate, needed protection of truly endangered species gets lost in the shuffle of hundreds of frivolous petitions filed by these groups.


Litigious “Nature” and Why “Sue and Settle” Works 
As taxpayers, most of us hope our money is spent in a way that benefits the county as a whole or at least provides some quantifiable improvements. Non-Governmental Organizations, like Center for Biological Diversity, use the combination of their 501c3 status and the Equal Access To Justice Act (EAJA) to suck millions of taxpayer dollars from government agency budgets in both lawsuit settlements and expenses. CBD is proud of the fact that they have filed 132 lawsuits just against the Trump Administration since March 15, 2017.
Regardless of political affiliation, these lawsuits, the vast majority frivolous and unfounded, have cost taxpayers millions and accomplished little beyond padding CBD’s bank accounts to help fund future lawsuits.
From January 2000-July 2012 CBD filed 549 environmental related lawsuits. This does not include their challenges to administrative orders or administrative hearings, such as their joint lawsuit with Western Watersheds Project and WildEarth Guardians surrounding the Hammond family grazing permits.
Even a ballpark guess is difficult when trying to figure out how much money has been paid to CBD throughout the nearly 30 years of lawsuits. If the settlement is paid out of judgement funds for the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Air Act, or Clean Water Act there is no cap on money appropriated to fulfill that act and it is an off-budget item. Regardless, it all starts as taxpayer money.


Common Goals and Influences Form Lucrative Long-Standing Relationships 
Earth First!, a group that came to be well known for ecoterrorist tactics, is a common influencer of various environmentalist NGOs. As we shared in the Western Watersheds Project article, a founder of Earth First!, Dr. Bruce Hayse, sits on their board of directors.
Kieran Suckling, CBD co-founder and director, got his start in environmental “non-profiteering” – for lack of a better term – as a member of Earth First!
The Center for Biological Diversity and WildEarth Guardians (formally Forest Guardians) have been teaming up since at least 1997 when they sued to force the Forest Service to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services (FWS) regarding endangered species on 158 grazing allotments in Southern Arizona.
The groups teamed up again in 2010-2011 for an extremely large lawsuit against the U.S Fish and Wildlife Services involving over 1000 species petitioned to be added to the Endangered Species List. These two settlement agreements are the culmination of what is known as the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”) multidistrict litigation. The case was formed in 2010 by combining 13 federal court cases filed by one of the two. The cost to taxpayers for FWS to just complete the required paperwork was $206,098,920. This does not include WEG & CBD’s attorneys’ fees or any other expenses.


“No Need for Science or Environmental Conservation Degrees” and Other Disturbing Suckling Quotes
2009 High Country News Interview with Kieran Suckling – Co-Founder of the Center for Biological Diversity
As confusing as CBD’s history is, executive director, Suckling, is very clear on his stance when it comes to “environmental campaigning” using “psychological warfare” and his feelings on the role of science in the environmental movement. Below are some excerpts from the High Country News Interview with Suckling:
HCN: “What role do lawsuits play in your strategy to list endangered species? “
SUCKLING: “They are one tool in a larger campaign, but we use lawsuits to help shift the balance of power from industry and government agencies, toward protecting endangered species. That plays out on many levels. At its simplest, by obtaining an injunction to shut down logging or prevent the filling of a dam, the power shifts to our hands. The Forest Service needs our agreement to get back to work, and we are in the position of being able to powerfully negotiate the terms of releasing the injunction.
New injunctions, new species listings and new bad press take a terrible toll on agency morale. When we stop the same timber sale three or four times running, the timber planners want to tear their hair out. They feel like their careers are being mocked and destroyed — and they are. So they become much more willing to play by our rules and at least get something done. Psychological warfare is a very underappreciated aspect of environmental campaigning. “
HCN: “Were you hindered by not having science degrees?”
SUCKLING: “No. It was a key to our success. I think the professionalization of the environmental movement has injured it greatly. These kids get degrees in environmental conservation and wildlife management and come looking for jobs in the environmental movement. They’ve bought into resource management values and multiple use by the time they graduate. I’m more interested in hiring philosophers, linguists and poets. The core talent of a successful environmental activist is not science and law. It’s campaigning instinct. That’s not only not taught in the universities, it’s discouraged.”

You can read the full report at Protect the Harvest

3 thoughts on “Welfare Environmentalism: The Center for Biological Diversity

  1. Both Uncle Sam and the folks in the legal system Love these groups that are on the govt teat.

    It creates lots more govt and legal jobs and Fees.

    That’s the system we’ve all made over time….soooo just have to laugh and live w it.

  2. Maybe some nonprofit grazing companies are needed?

    The lands need grazed to cut wildfires.

    Just pay all the help big and treat nonprofit grazing as a jobs center.

    And sooner than later the environment groups will even want to help out with grazing..

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