The Alliance, and how it Protects the Climate

I got to reading about Al Gore today, and started wondering about his Climate Reality Project (CRP). So I looked up the background of the company on Guidestar.

The official name of the CRP is the Alliance for Climate Protection. The purpose of the Alliance is as follows:

The Alliance’s single purpose is to ignite public action to solve the climate crisis.

Now, of course this raises questions, like what is the evidence for the climate “crisis” of which they speak, and how does one “protect” a climate, but let’s leave those questions to sleep in peace. I wanted to look at the public accounts of the CRP, the most recent set of which (2010) I’ve posted up here (PDF, 1.7 Mb). I’ve usually found it fruitful to “Follow the Benjamins”, as the saying has it, which means to follow what is happening with the money.

Figure 1. An old-school Benjamin, in this case showing a certain John J. Knox, from 1902. The current US $100 bill features a picture of Benjamin Franklin. Photo Source: WSJ Article 

So what do the accounts of the Alliance for Climate Protection, also called the Climate Reality Project, tell us? No great revelations, but a few interesting things.

First, the accounts show that protecting the climate pays quite well. The CEO of the Alliance makes over a quarter million dollars a year. There are six other officers of the company making over $160,000 per year.

Al Gore is the Chairman of the Board of the CRP. He serves without a salary, although I assume that they pay his expenses if he is fronting for the company. Some of the company documents call him “Chairman Gore”, which I found hilarious … but I digress.

Now, people talk a lot about the mythical “Big Oil” money that is supposed to inspire and impel and motivate us climate skeptics. Me, I’ve never seen any Big Oil bucks. I’ve done all of this on my own dime, just like Steve McIntyre and many of the major players on the skeptical side. Anthony got some money for one specific scientific research project, but other than that it’s been funded out of his own pocket. Money is simply not a factor on the skeptic side.

But I will assure you that if I were getting a quarter of a million dollar salary, and my job was based entirely on the idea that we are headed for thermal meltdown, I would defend that idea with everything I had. People say that the skeptics are motivated by the money? Pffft. At most that’s a few bucks here or there. But if you are making a quarter of a million per year based on the idea that CO2 is dangerous, you are very strongly motivated by the money to spread that meme to as many people as possible. If people stop believing that CO2 is the magical control knob for the climate, you’re out of a job. At that point, you are committed, you have to shout about the impending long-rumored but somehow not yet visible Thermageddon.

Second, there is a site called the Charity Navigator that ranks non-profit organizations from 0 to four stars, based on a variety of metrics. Charity Navigator gives the Climate Reality Project two stars.

The Charity Navigator folks also compare the CRP to what they consider to be similar projects (Alaska Wilderness League and three others). The CRP comes in … well … not to put too fine a point on it, of the five, they come in dead last in the overall rating.

The most interesting finding, however, was how much of the money goes to overheads, and how much actually goes to their work. I used to run a non-profit, and I have kept the books and dealt with all the grant madness and all of the accounting requirements. The usual division for a well-run non-profit is on the order of 15% or less going to overheads, and 85% going to the work of the non-profit.

According to the Charity Navigator, only 74% of the money raised by the Climate Reality Project goes to projects, with the rest going to overheads. No bueno. The CRP is the worst of the five comparable non-profits by that metric as well. All of the comparison non-profits spent more on projects and less on administration than did the CRP.

Now, that’s bad enough. But if you take a look at the accounts I linked to earlier, they break down their expenses as follows:

ACCOUNT, 2010 Expense

Grants USA, $3,725,209

Grants Overseas, $155,310

Salaries Officers, $1,387,906

Salaries Staff, $7,251,182

Benefits, $992,182

Payroll Taxes, $466,680

Legal, $41,738

Accounting, $30,257

Lobbying, $13,408

Fundraising, $255,022

Other Expenses, $2,960,738

Advertising, $1,135,090

Office Expenses, $229,111

Info Technology, $547,260

Occupancy, $1,434,612

Travel, $553,737

Conferences, $291,713

Interest, $3,531

Depreciation, $428,292

Insurance, $27,506

Bad Debt, $2,000,032

Events, $1,030,059

Email List Purchase, $378,699

Pubs/Subscriptions, $189,949

Other Exp, $151,178

Misc. Exp, $7,385

TOTAL, $25,687,786

Used for Projects, $14,142,300, 55%

Used for Administration, $11,545,486, 45%

I’ve marked the line items that I would say were project related in red, and left the administrative expenses in black. Perhaps there are some other project related expenses, although if so I can’t see them. According to the Climate Navigator, they spent just over nineteen million dollars on projects, and I’m short about five million. But even by the numbers from the Climate Navigator, the Climate Reality Project is spending too much money on their overheads and not enough on projects.

What does all of this establish? Not a lot, other than that:

• The officers are making quite nice money off of climate alarm, thank you very much, and

• Al Gore is not very good at running a non-profit, and

• The people giving their hard-earned money to Al et al. are getting a bad deal, they’re getting very little bang for the Benjamin.

Best to all,

w.

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November 24, 2012 11:44 pm

Just in case they change it.
http://i48.tinypic.com/16hkmfd.png

Matt
November 24, 2012 11:44 pm

What is the CO2 foot print of 7 officers earning 1.5 million jointly? I guess they have big houses, big pools and big cars and big travel plans for the annual hols.

November 25, 2012 1:10 am

To be fair, calling him “Chairman Gore” is nowhere near as funny as if they’d called him “President Gore”.

Peter Miller
November 25, 2012 3:47 am

I should imagine you would see the same thing for one of those nutty religious cults, where the ‘chosen few’ milk their devotees. The top guys don’t get salaries, they just get provided with whatever they want – and that means everything.
Much of the alarmist movement can be justifiably described as being a cult – if it looks like a cult, if it sounds like a cult, if it acts like a cult………………….then it is a cult.

Hot under the collar
November 25, 2012 3:57 am

Maybe it was a typing error and should have read “The DOUBLY Incontinent Truth”
Certainly would match the acronym “CRAP”.

Brian S
November 25, 2012 4:07 am

At last something about CAGW makes sense to me! An Incontinent Truth led to a pile of CR*P.
So who’s going to pay to clean up Al Gore’s mess?

henrythethird
November 25, 2012 4:16 am

Under what category would the “subscription” for Ustream fall under?
Just curious, because unless you’ve got the “unlimited” plan they could charge you anywhere from 20 to 50 cents per “excess” viewer hour (how many viewers watch your stream and for how long)
Just imagine – if 16 million viewers watched for the entire 24 hours, they’d rack up an impressive 384,000,000 viewer hours. At the lowest published price of 20 cents per VH, that could be worth around $76,800,000.
Then again, if all 16 million spent 3.5 minutes each (the average according to Alexa), then they only had about 933,333 viewer hours (worth around $186,666.60).
So whoever had the bright idea of running up the viewer count to 16 million may have actually COST them money (it all depends how long each “view” was).

Peter Miller
November 25, 2012 5:02 am

Willis
I did a little financial analysis of my own.
On current financial trends this organization should soon hit its own fiscal cliff.
1. During 2010, net assets declined from $16.0M to $6.7M.
2. In 2010, expenses exceeded revenues by $9.3M, a big improvement on the loss of the previous year of $26.6M.
3. Revenues in 2008 were $87.5M, in 2010 these had fallen to $14.7M.
4. Why could a charitable organization have bad debts of $2.0M? Someone has been lending money, where he/she should not have been lending money. In most organizations, this would be grounds for dismissal, but in climate jamboree organizations, it is obviously different.

Tom in Florida
November 25, 2012 5:16 am

What’s the similarity between Chairman Mao and Chairman Gore? One’s dead and the other one doesn’t know anything about climate either.

John B
November 25, 2012 5:48 am

Two things:
If you had ever pondered why Bill Clinton was not convicted after being impeached, neither the democrats or the Republicans were willing to turn the office over to algore’s hands.
Second, how long before the lack of warming will be credited to having ‘raised awareness’ on the part of the warmers? At the moment it does not appear that legislation will be there to give credit so they will have to fall back on some claim of success.Government programs never fail, afterall, they are always just ‘inadequately funded’.

cba
November 25, 2012 6:10 am

“Dennis Ray Wingo says:
November 24, 2012 at 11:18 am
Two additional things look funky. Why does this organization have over $2 million in bad debts in one year?
Also, for the size of the total payroll, over $8.5 million, their payroll tax number of $466k is absurdly low.

the bad debt thing may be some statuatory accounting loophole that lets businesses deduct expenses without itemizing. Then again, maybe they’re selling algore books and t-shirts to a buncha lowlifes writing hot checks.
If you assume that the bennies of $900k are the FICA type stuff and the $466k is the FIT, then you’ve got a 20% of payroll for the staff which seems not too unreasonable for a buncha cheapskates hiring people at minimum wage, part time salaries, and no health insurance. The officers are probably being paid without payroll deductions because they probably draw income from a number of places and pay quarterly withholding – assuming they aren’t scamming the IRS.
Paying an accounting company $30k a year for what is likely a rather small business should be enough to keep the financial paperwork legit. After all, it does seem that they have plenty of OPM (other people’s money) given to them to keep things afloat, including what looks like $3m of grants, some of which might be from the gov…
Ah, some of the bad debt may also be from unsold tickets that vanished into the pockets of employees shortly before the events.

Gail Combs
November 25, 2012 6:40 am

Go Home says:
November 24, 2012 at 2:03 pm
Payroll taxes in this case most likely mean social security and medicare payments by the company, and does not represent what comes out of the paycheck of employees. So 5.4% is in line with their accounting. Medicare is 1.45% of total salaries. Social security for the past two years is 4.2% of all salaries up to $110,000 for each. So I see this as no issue.
____________________________________________
According to guidstar it is for
Fiscal Year Starting: Jan 1, 2010
Fiscal Year Ending: Dec 31, 2010
First They do not pay FUTA. From the IRS:

…Most employers pay both a federal and a state unemployment tax. Only employers pay FUTA tax. Do not collect or deduct FUTA tax from your employees’ wages. The FUTA tax applies to the first $7,000 you pay to each employee during a calendar year
For tax-exempt organizations . . .
Religious, educational, scientific, charitable, and other organizations described in section 501(c)(3) and exempt from tax under section 501(a) are not subject to FUTA tax and do not have to file Form 940.

Salaries Officers, $1,387,906
Salaries Staff, $7,251,182
Salaries Total $ 8,639,088 X 1.45% =$125,267 that leaves $341,413 in SS taxes
If you figure none of the staff is getting more than $110,000 a year, then SS on the staff salaries is
$304,550 that leaves the officers paying $36,863
4.2% of $110,000 a year is $4,620 per person or about 8 officers dividing up that $1,387,906 a year. That is an average salary of $173,488 for each officer if there are only 8. Nice job if you can find it.
The board of directors is listed here
There are 10 including Gore and not including the CEO. Whether they get compensation I do not know, nor do I know who the company officers are.
This is the Traditional Nonprofit Organizational Structure There are seven officers including the CEO.

Gail Combs
November 25, 2012 7:00 am

Go Home says: November 24, 2012 at 2:43 pm
“The Glover Park Group was founded in June 2001 by Michael Feldman…
____________________________________
Nice find! It gets positively incestuous doesn’t it/ Amazing how the same names keep repeating.

Gail Combs
November 25, 2012 7:23 am

Billy says:
November 24, 2012 at 4:38 pm
In Canada payoll tax is the employer contribution… The US should be similar.
_____________________________
It is. But charities and churches do not pay unemployment tax.

Coach Springer
November 25, 2012 7:41 am

Seems like even the “project” portion is mostly about the proselytizing with a smaller portion ~ $4M to grants / warmist science. One great big PAC if you look at it objectively. Separately, where does Gore get his benefit here if not in salary? Does he or his other organizations get any of the grant or conference money? Travel? Do they buy carbon offsets from him and invest in his ventures? Speaking as a financial investigator, if you’re going to follow the Benjamins, it’s a long and dust-clouded trail. Maybe he’s just in it for the advertising benefit, but that would be a foolish assumption.

Sean
November 25, 2012 9:33 am

“I got to reading about Al Gore today, and started wondering about his Climate Reality Project (CRP)….The official name of the CRP is the Alliance for Climate Protection.”
Allow me to suggest a new acronym for this nefarious group: CRAP, as in the Climate Reality Alliance Project.

Steve Vandorne
Reply to  Sean
November 25, 2012 9:59 am

said, ” CRAP, as in the Climate Reality Alliance Project.” Now you are just picking on Thomas Crapper. Poor guy he invented one of the most important inventions ever and he names goes down the crapper.

ironargonaut
November 25, 2012 9:58 am

you should take a look at how many corporate boards Al is a member of. These are paid positions.

Sean
November 25, 2012 10:01 am

Dennis Ray Wingo asks: Why does (a charity) have over $2 million in bad debts in one year?
The answer might go something like this: it makes a “loan” to someone or some group, not intending to ever see that loan repaid, and then it writes that loan off as a bad debt. This is the same technique that criminal groups use to launder their drug money and put it back “clean” in the pockets of their leadership.
So yes, something smells here and maybe it calls for a tax audit.

mrmethane
November 25, 2012 2:25 pm

It’s also fascinating to plug in search terms like Fenton Communications and follow the links to adbusters and back to Soros, who seems to be well and truly at the center of all. Obama is another one with dozens of linkages – perhaps the most networked politician of this age. Thank you to the poster of the Muckety machine – absolutely a wonderful resource.

Sun Spot
November 25, 2012 3:43 pm

Gerard Nelson says:
November 24, 2012 at 11:23 am
“Just read an article stating that Hewlett Packard have written down their company value by $5 billion!!!”
I work with HP software and have watched this company slowly being grossly miss-managed into the ground by incredibly incompetent upper management.
To learn that they are on the cAGW band wagon explains allot.

Neo
November 25, 2012 7:58 pm

OMG. It takes $2 to administer $1 in grant money (if we just ignore all the charges for “fluf”).

November 25, 2012 11:53 pm

Note that I have no evidence that this is the case. I am simply saying that this is both a likely and a reasonable explanation for such a two million dollar bad debt writeoff.
You cannot book possible future revenue that does not occur as a debt. Willis I am telling you that this is not the case with a non profit. Debts these days that are written off can be charged back to the debtor as income per IRS rules and a 1099 issued. You simply cannot do that with a pledge that is not fulfilled. This part bears more investigating.

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