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Sierra Club

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Sierra Club
85 Second St., 2nd Fl.
San Francisco, CA 94105
CA Tel. 415-977-5500
Fax 415-977-5799

Type: Private - Not-for-Profit
On the web: http://www.sierraclub.org
Employees: 400

Take a hike with the Sierra Club. The Sierra Club promotes outdoor activities and environmental activism on both the local and national level through political lobbies, education, outings, and publications. The club's more than 1.3 million members are organized into state and regional chapters throughout the US and Canada. Sierra Club publishes books, calendars, SIERRA magazine, and The Planet, an activist newsletter. Its current issues are smart energy solutions, clean water, stopping commercial logging in national forests, ending sprawl, and protecting wetlands. The group was founded in 1892 by naturalist John Muir.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending December, 2006:
Sales: $91.6M

Officers:
Executive Director: Carl Pope
President: Lisa Renstrom
Director, Finance: Lou Barnes

 
 
Company History: The Sierra Club

Incorporated: 1892
NAIC: 813312 Environment, Conservation & Wildlife
SIC: 2731 Book Publishing

The Sierra Club occupies a unique place in American culture. One of the most influential U.S. environmental activist groups, it has been supported by such legendary members as photographer Ansel Adams and founder John Muir. Though some picture it a bully, the group employs less extreme measures than Greenpeace and lacks the financial prowess of The Nature Conservancy.

California's Sierra Nevada mountains became the site of a mountaineering community in the last half of the 19th century. Legendary naturalist John Muir was active in promoting the creation of the Yosemite, Sequoia, and General Grant National Parks to protect the High Sierra from grazing sheep and other means of destruction.

Professor J.H. Senger, of the University of California, conceived a repository of maps and books of the area. By 1890 Senger and his students and colleagues had been discussing the idea of a "Sierra Club," with a headquarters in the remote, unspoiled Yosemite Valley. Muir, attorney Warren Olney, and artist William Keith began discussions at Keith's studio. Several professors from the University of California and Stanford, and other interested parties, soon joined the group, which counted 182 members at its inception. Olney drafted the club's articles of incorporation, which were signed in his law office on June 4, 1892. Muir was chosen as the first president.

The Sierra Club immediately began printing maps and newsletters, maintaining trails, and defeating legislation aimed at reducing Yosemite National Park's boundaries. The group also succeeded in lobbying to turn the Yosemite State Park over to the federal government, which incorporated it into the national park. At the time, however, exploring the area's rivers and mountains was the club's primary focus.

A planned dam at Hetch Hetchy Valley to secure hydroelectric energy for the San Francisco community flared into a national controversy in 1910 that raged for a decade and left dividing scars. Hundreds of newspapers expressed (generally conservationist) opinions on the project and Congress held two sets of hearings on it.

Even one of the Club's founders, Warren Olney, who had been voted mayor of Oakland after receiving both Republican and Democratic nominations, felt the dam was necessary. He resigned from the club in the wake of the painful confrontation. The dam was built eventually.

John Muir died on Christmas Eve, 1914, crestfallen over the outcome of the Hetch Hetchy affair. Its memory produced a generation of more politically savvy leaders, however, and highlighted the need for better organized campaigns to save such wilderness areas. The Sierra Club's own reputation seemed enhanced by its role in the struggle, ensuring its influence in future public land management decisions. Part of Muir's legacy was the National Park Service, founded in 1916. Its first director, Stephen Mather, was a Sierra Club member. Thus began an era of cooperation with governmental agencies.

Joseph LeConte, son of one of the original founders, followed Muir as president in 1915. In the 1920s and 1930s the club continued the annual High Trips into the Sierra begun in 1901 and documented in Bulletins. They brought dozens of campers as new chapters sprouted up around California. Some were documented by legendary photographer Ansel Adams, who joined in 1919. He served as Sierra Club director from 1934 to 1971.

The Sierra Club helped turn the management of the Kings Canyon area away from the Forest Service, which allowed logging, and into the hands of the Park Service. The Kings Canyon National Park would escape much of the development of other national parks. When the Park Service plans recarved an existing road there, however, it highlighted a conflict between the club's goals of preserving nature and making it accessible.

In the 1940s chapters across the country came into being, not only in California but in the Northwest and New England. Membership stood at about 4,000. During World War II the club helped develop Army training materials for traversing mountainous terrain.

The Sierra Club board updated its motto in 1951--"To explore, enjoy, and protect the Sierra Nevada and other scenic resources of the United States"--omitting the "rendering accessible" prerogative of the original version. The Sierra Club had 7,000 members at the time. One of the club's main concerns was the intense demand on timber brought about by postwar housing construction.

Dave Brower, a publicist for the Yosemite Park hospitality operator, became the club's first executive director in 1953--the beginning of professional Sierra Club staff. Already a volunteer, and a board member since 1941, he was hired to campaign against the Upper Basin project that threatened to place seven dams in the Colorado River basin.

Under Brower, the club boated observers along the rivers. Brower also testified before the U.S. House that Bureau of Land Reclamation engineers had simply miscalculated their water evaporation figures. As with Kings Canyon, they filmed trips through the area and produced a photo/text album, which included a chapter by legendary publisher Alfred A. Knopf. News magazines across the country began documenting the controversy unfolding at Dinosaur National Monument, which was saved, though at the expense of Glen Canyon. President Eisenhower was able to trigger dynamite in the canyon wall from the White House in 1963.

In 1960 The Sierra Club published the ambitious, large-format photo-and-text book This Is the American Earth, which sold well in spite of its steep $15 price. Other photo books followed in this unique program. Another innovation that would become ubiquitous in bookstores was the club's nature calendar, developed with Ballantine Books.

The Wilderness Act became law in 1964, though it still allowed mining. The Sierra Club championed the cause of a Redwood National Park on the northern California coast to protect some of the country's last virgin forests. The club published controversial open letters in national newspapers and by 1968 the beginnings of the park were in place.

A 1967 campaign to prevent dams in the Grand Canyon echoed The Sierra Club's earlier protests. The group produced three books as articles appeared in major consumer magazines. After running a confrontational ad in the New York Times, The Sierra Club found the IRS investigating and finally withdrawing its tax-exempt status.

The IRS action inflamed the press and the public. Club membership doubled in the next three years to 78,000. The group spent the rest of the decade fighting what it deemed inappropriately placed ski lodges and nuclear reactors. Its early vacillations on the latter issue allowed for the development of the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant.

Brower began to receive criticism for turning too much of the club's attention to publications, which were now losing money. To promote them, he ran an ad in the New York Times that called for making the whole Earth a national park. The board did not appreciate the gesture, and within a few months he had been replaced by attorney Mike McCloskey as executive director. Brower later formed the Friends of the Earth.

The Earth pictures taken from space in 1969 seem to have precipitated a shift in public perception, causing the planet to be seen as vulnerable, fragile, and unique in the universe. The National Environment Policy Act, which became law in January 1970, required impact studies for future federal projects. The Clean Air Act also was passed, the Environmental Protection Agency was created, and April 22, 1970 was designated the first Earth Day. For its part, The Sierra Club published a mass market activist's guide that sold 400,000 copies and began distributing a tip sheet from Washington.

The Sierra Club fought Walt Disney's plan for a massive ski resort in the Mineral King area of the Sierra Nevada range. In the process, it crossed paths, not for the last time, with Ronald Reagan, then governor of California. After a legal battle that extended to the U.S. Supreme Court, the proposed development was defeated.

Threatened coastlines and forest areas gave The Sierra Club more cause to rally in the 1970s. Logging, mining, and construction interests coveted pristine land, and others wanted to dissect national parks with motorized vehicles and power lines.

The energy industry--with its oil slicks, radioactive waste, and so on, became a particular concern of the 1970s. The club also challenged a Boeing proposal to build a supersonic aircraft similar to the Concorde, complaining of sonic booms and damage to the ozone layer. World population control also became a popular topic, discussed at a U.N. environmental conference in Stockholm in 1972.

The decade ended with a bang: the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act doubled the national park system.

The Sierra Club motto was revised yet again in 1981 to reflect global concerns such as the newly revealed legacy of industrial pollution behind the Iron Curtain. The club also fought against development in the Amazon rain forest by lobbying the World Bank. Membership had reached 182,000 by this time.

Hoping to gain more sway with elected officials, the group began funding electoral campaigns in earnest (thanks to a 1974 campaign finance reform law), during a time that also saw the emergence of more radical groups such as Greenpeace. In 1980 the club donated $100,000 to various Democratic candidates for the U.S. and California legislatures who opposed Reagan's environmental policies. Ansel Adams died in 1984 while working on "Manifesto of the Earth," a response to these policies.

Reagan's interior secretary, James Watt, was the bane of many a conservationist. He attempted to reopen the nation's most beloved natural sanctuaries to mining. Ironically, Watts and other Reagan appointees helped spark a renewed interest in environmental activism that doubled Sierra Club membership. Outrageous public comments finally cost him his job.

The club also lobbied in support of the Environmental Protection Agency's Superfund, allocated by Congress to clean up toxic waste sites. In 1985 the club bought a new office building in downtown San Francisco, where it kept its staff of 250. Two years later Michael Fischer was elected the club's fourth executive director.

One of The Sierra Club's main challenges, according to Fischer, was to remain responsive while avoiding the pitfalls of bureaucracy. It also sought to attract more minorities. Its San Francisco chapter established a gay and lesbian group. In 1992 the club's 625,000 members celebrated its 100th anniversary. The Sierra Club estimated its election budget that year at $1 million. Though membership growth slowed in the early 1990s, the group became more aggressively political. It lobbied hard to elect Democrat Ron Wyden to fill one of Oregon's senate seats in 1996 after the retirement of Senator Bob Packwood.

The group had begun endorsing credit cards, long distance service, stuffed animals, and other merchandising. It also stepped up its direct mailing efforts. The Sierra Club won a couple of favorable tax rulings regarding the sale of mailing lists and its Affinity Card royalties.

In the mid-1990s the club also focused its efforts on giant hog and poultry farms and their attendant pollution. Land conservation remained another important concern. In 1997 The Sierra Club proposed that after 100 years of commercial timber harvesting in national forests, the government should no longer allow the practice. Loggers argued that restrictions already had cost thousands of jobs and forced numerous mills out of business.

The Sierra Club sued the Environmental Protection Agency after its loosened medical waste controls. It also found itself on the opposite side of the courtroom. Bluebird Systems sued the group for $10 million after finding its web sites connected to the Bluebird local area network, as Inc. magazine reported.

A 1997 survey picked The Sierra Club as the most effective environmental lobby on Capitol Hill. The group spent $7 million on the 1998 elections, including advertising and its first get-out-the-vote campaign. Long a fixture on the national landscape of politics and the environment, The Sierra Club could be expected to continue into the next millennium the pursuit of its original cause: protecting and preserving the earth's natural resources.

Principal Subsidiaries

Sierra Club Foundation; Sierra Club Political Committee; Sierra Club Property Management, Inc.; Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund.

Further Reading

"Anti-Loggers Hit Trails in United States, Canada," Wood Technology, July/August 1997, pp. 18-19.

Carr, Clifton, and Tom Turner, Wild by Law: The Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund and the Places It Has Saved, San Francisco: Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund/Sierra Club Books, c. 1990.

Cohen, Michael P., The History of the Sierra Club, 1892-1970, San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, c. 1988.

Ember, Lois R., "Environmentalists Regroup to Protect Their Agenda After Painful Defeats," Chemical and Engineering News, February 27, 1995, pp. 26-30.

Esterson, Emily, "Bluebird's Unhappiness," Inc., March 17, 1998, p. 20.

Forbes, Steve, "Not a Bathtub," Forbes, March 23, 1998, p. 28.

Gilliam Ann, Ed. Voices for the Earth: A Treasury of the Sierra Club Bulletin, San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1979.

Hamilton, Joan, "A Civil Society: Sierra Club Voted Most Influential," Sierra, January 1999, p. 11.

Hileman, Bette, "Environmental Leaders Give EPA Mixed Reviews on Its Performance," Chemical and Engineering News, October 30, 1995, pp. 30-37.

Hjelmar, Ulf, The Political Practice of Environmental Organizations, Aldershot, England; Brookfield, Vt.: Avebury, 1996.

Hopkins, Bruce, "Tax Court Opens Up New Fund-Raising Options," Fund Raising Management, September 1993, pp. 55, 58.

Jones, Holway, John Muir and the Sierra Club: The Battle for Yosemite, San Francisco: Sierra Club, 1965.

Kriz, Margaret, "The Big Green Election Machine," National Journal, October 24, 1998.

McClure, Ronnie C., and Kenneth H. Silverberg, "Tax Breather, Thanks to the Sierra Club," Association Management, December 1993, p. 26.

Nelson, Robert H., "Tom Hayden, Meet Adam Smith and Thomas Aquinas," Forbes, October 29, 1990, pp. 94-97.

Schlossberg, Howard, "Sierra Club Finds Direct Marketing Harder to Do, But Vows to Improve," Marketing News, March 29, 1993, p. 18.

Turner, Tom, Sierra Club: 100 Years of Protecting Nature, New York: Harry N. Abrams/Sierra Club, 1991.

Vanchieri, Cori, "Burning Issues," Hospitals and Health Networks, March 5, 1998, p. 38.

Wexler, Robert A., "Affinity Card Income Was Royalty, Not UBI," Journal of Taxation, November 1994, pp. 316-18.

— Frederick C. Ingram


 

U.S. organization for the conservation of natural resources, headquartered in San Francisco. It was founded in 1892 by a group of Californians, including John Muir, who wanted to sponsor wilderness outings in Pacific Coast mountain regions. As its first president, Muir initiated the club's involvement in political action on behalf of nature conservation. With branches in all 50 states, it works to educate the public on environmental issues and lobbies local, state, and federal agencies for environmental legislation.

For more information on Sierra Club, visit Britannica.com.

 

John Muir, the apostle of the American preservationist movement, cofounded the Sierra Club in 1892 and became its first president. The club's 182 charter members believed that by bringing people to the mountains and educating those who would not come, they could convince Americans to safeguard California's wildlands. Foremost, the new clubstrove to protect the recently established Yosemite National Park, which faced its greatest threat from a proposal to dam the nearby Hetch Hetchy Valley. The ensuing controversy exposed a rift between preservationists, who believed in defending wilderness from most uses except recreation, and progressive conservationists, who advocated the "wise use" of the nation's resources.

During the first half of the twentieth century, the Sierra Clubstood at the vanguard of the preservationist movement. The club lobbied hard for the creation and protection of such national parks as Mount Rainier, Glacier, and the Grand Canyon, and clubmember Steven Mather became the first director of the National Park Service. Yet the Sierra Clubremained relatively small and localized.

Led by the so-called "Young Turks," including David Brower and Ansel Adams, during the 1950s, the Sierra Club became more aggressive and national. The club's focus, however, remained on preservation as it fought to stop a dam at Dinosaur National Monument and pushed for passage of the Wilderness Act. From 1955 to 1965, clubmembership grew from 10,000 to 33,000.

During the 1960s and the 1970s, the Sierra Clubretained its leadership role only by broadening its lobbying activities to support new environmental laws to protect human health and welfare. To this end the club supplemented lobbying with litigation, which, for example, led to a ban on the widely used carcinogenic DDT in 1972. Club membership climbed to 114,000 by 1970 and to 200,000 by 1980.

Although concern over the Ronald Reagan administration's anti environmentalism drove membership to 325,000 by 1982, the Sierra Club struggled during the 1980s just to defend what had been accomplished. During the 1990s, the club resumed the offensive, fighting to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, to strengthen the Clean Air Act, and to create the California Desert Protection Act. At the same time, the club again expanded its agenda by speaking out against global warming, the depletion of the ozone layer, and global trade without environmental controls and by linking environmentalism with human rights abuses worldwide. By 2000, club membership had reached 600,000. What had begun as a small group of outdoor enthusiasts dedicated to protecting Yosemite Valley became by the end of the twentieth century one of the largest and most influential environmental organizations in the world.

Bibliography

Cohen, Michael P. The History of the Sierra Club, 1892–1970. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988.

Fox, Stephen R. The American Conservation Movement: John Muir and His Legacy. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Sierra Club,
national organization in the United States dedicated to the preservation and expansion of the world's parks, wildlife, and wilderness areas. Founded (1892) in California by a group led by the Scottish-American conservationist John Muir, the Sierra Club is made up of more than 630,000 people devoted to the exploration, enjoyment, and protection of the natural environment. The club was instrumental in helping to create the National Park Service and the National Forest Service, as well as in the formation of individual recreation areas, such as Olympic and Redwood national parks. The group has also led efforts to obtain new parklands in Alaska. Through a program of court litigation and congressional action, the Sierra Club has opposed strip mining, the use of DDT, offshore oil drilling, hazardous wastes, and most other forms of chemical or aesthetic pollution. The Sierra Club has also broadened its program to include activities dealing with the urban environment, protection of tropical forests, and overpopulation. Through its almost 300 local groups, the Sierra Club sponsors a series of nature outings, and its national office, located in San Francisco, publishes a monthly bulletin as well as numerous books about ecology and the environment.

Bibliography

See Sierra Club, Guide (1989).


 
Wikipedia: Sierra Club
Logo of Sierra Club
Motto Explore, enjoy and protect the planet.
Established 1892
Exec. Dir. Carl Pope
President Robbie Cox
Headquarters San Francisco, CA, USA
Membership 1,300,000
Founder John Muir
Homepage www.sierraclub.org

The Sierra Club is an American environmental organization founded on May 28, 1892 in San Francisco, California by the well-known preservationist John Muir, who became its first president. The Sierra Club has hundreds of thousands of members in chapters located throughout the United States, and is affiliated with Sierra Club of/du Canada.

Mission statement

  1. Explore, enjoy, and protect the wild places of the earth.
  2. Practice and promote the responsible use of the earth's ecosystems and resources.
  3. Educate and enlist humanity to protect and restore the quality of the natural and human environment.
  4. Use all lawful means to carry out these objectives[1].

Organization

The Sierra Club is governed by a fifteen-member volunteer Board of Directors. Each year, five directors are elected to three-year terms, with all Club members eligible to vote. A president is elected annually by the Board from among its members and receives a small stipend. The Executive Director runs the day-to-day operations of the group, and is a paid staff member. The current Executive Director is Carl Pope.

All Club members also belong to chapters (usually state-wide), and to local groups. National and local special interest sections, committees, and task forces address particular issues. Policies are set at the appropriate level, but on any issue the Club has only one policy.

In addition to the members who are active as volunteers, the Club has approximately 500 paid staff members. Most of them work at the national headquarters in San Francisco, California, but there are others in the lobbying office in Washington, D.C. and in numerous state and regional offices.

All members receive Sierra magazine, a bi-monthly glossy magazine describing the Club's activities and spotlighting various environmental issues. All chapters publish a newsletter and/or schedule of activities, and many groups also publish a newsletter. The Sierra Club also has a weekly radio show called Sierra Club Radio.

History

In September 2005, the Sierra Club held its first Sierra Summit in San Francisco. Approximately 1,000 volunteers from around the country, selected by their chapters and groups, were delegates; some nondelegate members also attended. There were seminars and exhibit presentations about current environmental issues and about techniques for more effective activism. Prominent guest speakers included Al Gore; Bill Maher; Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.; and Arianna Huffington.

Notable past or current directors

Outings

In 1901 William Colby organized the first Sierra Club outing to Yosemite Valley. The annual High Trips were led by accomplished mountaineers (some of them Sierra Club directors), such as Francis P. Farquhar, Joseph Nisbet LeConte, Norman Clyde, Walter A. Starr, Jr., Jules Eichorn, Glen Dawson, Ansel Adams, and David R. Brower. Many first ascents in the Sierra Nevada were made on Sierra Club outings. Sierra Club members were also early enthusiasts of rock climbing and pioneers of the craft. In 1911 the first chapter was formed, Angeles, and it immediately started conducting local outings in the mountains surrounding Los Angeles and throughout the West. In World War II many Sierra Club leaders joined the 10th Mountain Division, bringing their expertise to the war effort.

The High Trips, sometimes huge expeditions with more than a hundred participants and crew, have given way to smaller and more numerous outings held across the United States and abroad. The National Outings program conducts hundreds of outings, most of which are between 4 to 10 days in length. Local chapters, groups, and sections lead thousands of generally shorter trips in their regions and beyond (mostly hiking, but also including cycling, cross-country skiing, etc.). Inner City Outings groups help make wild places accessible to children who are only familiar with the urban environment.

Conservation policies

The Sierra Club has official policies on a number of conservation issues. They group these into seventeen categories: agriculture, biotechnology, energy, environmental justice, forest and wilderness management, global issues, government and political issues, land management, military issues, nuclear issues, oceans, pollution and waste management, precautionary principle, transportation, urban and land use policies, water resources, and wildlife conservation.

Land management

Some Sierra Club members have urged the Club to be more forceful in advocating for the protection of National Forests and other federally owned public lands. For example, in 2002 the Club was criticized for joining with the Wilderness Society in agreeing to a compromise that allowed logging in the Black Hills in South Dakota[4].

Nuclear issues

The Sierra Club opposes building new nuclear reactors, both fission and fusion, until specific inherent safety risks are mitigated by conservative political policies, and regulatory agencies are in place to enforce those policies. Fusion is currently opposed due to its probable release of the hydrogen isotope tritium[5].

Political activism

Protecting rivers

One long-standing goal of the Sierra Club has been opposition to dams it considers inappropriate. In the early 20th century, the organization fought against the damming and flooding of the Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park. Despite this lobbying, Congress authorized the construction of O'Shaughnessy Dam on the Tuolumne River. The Sierra Club continues to lobby for removal of the dam, urging that San Francisco's water needs be accommodated instead by the re-engineering of the Don Pedro Reservoir downstream.

The Sierra Club advocates the decommissioning of Glen Canyon Dam and the draining of Lake Powell. The Club also supports removal, breaching or decommissioning of many other dams, including four large but high cost dams on the lower Snake River in eastern Washington state.

Blue-Green Alliance

In June, 2006, the Sierra Club announced the formation of a Blue-Green Alliance with the United Steelworkers, the largest industrial union in North America. The goal of this new partnership is to pursue a joint public policy agenda reconciling workers' need for good jobs with all people's need for a cleaner environment and safer world.[1]

Immigration controversy

During the 1990s, some Sierra Club members wanted to take the Club into the contentious field of immigration to the United States. The Club's position was that overpopulation was a significant factor in the degradation of the environment. Accordingly, the Club supported stabilizing and reducing U.S. and world population. Some members argued that, as a practical matter, U.S. population could not be stabilized, let alone reduced, at the then-current levels of immigration. They urged the Club to support immigration reduction. Other Sierrans, however, thought that the immigration issue was too far from the Club's core mission, and were also concerned that involvement would impair the organization's political ability to pursue its other objectives. The Board of Directors accepted this latter view, and voted, in 1996, that the Sierra Club would be neutral on issues of immigration.

The advocates of immigration reduction sought to reverse this decision by using the referendum provision of the Bylaws of the Sierra Club. They organized themselves as "SUSPS", a name originally derived from "Sierrans for U.S. Population Stabilization" (although that name is no longer used since the Sierra Club objected to infringing the Club's trademark in the term "Sierrans"). SUSPS and its allies gathered the necessary signatures to place the issue on the ballot in the Club's election in the spring of 1998. The Board's decision that the Club would take no position on immigration was upheld by the membership by a three-to-two margin, although SUSPS complained that the ballot had been structured in an unfair and confusing manner.

The controversy resurfaced when a group of three immigration reduction proponents ran in the 2004 steering committee elections, hoping to move the Club's position away from a neutral stance on immigration [2]. The battle grew heated, with accusations of unethical and possibly illegal behavior floated by both sides[3][4]. A lawsuit was filed by the reduction proponents, but subsequently dropped. Groups outside of the Club became involved, such as the Southern Poverty Law Center and MoveOn [5]. Finally, the reduction proponents won only 3% of the vote, and the controversy subsided.

California Quarter Design

Members of the Sierra Club within the state of California successfully lobbied to have the California State Quarter depict their founder John Muir. [6]

Related organizations

Affiliates and subsidiaries

The Sierra Club Foundation was founded in 1960 by David R. Brower. It is a 501(c)3 charitable foundation that provides support for tax- deductible environmental action.

The Sierra Club of/du Canada has been active since 1963. It is now an independent corporation with its own national structure and local entities throughout Canada working on pollution, biodiversity, energy, and sustainability issues.

In 1971, volunteer lawyers who had worked with the Sierra Club established the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund. This was a separate organization that used the "Sierra Club" name under license from the Club; it changed its name to Earthjustice in 1997.

The Sierra Student Coalition (SSC) is the student-run arm of the Sierra Club. Founded by Adam Werbach in 1991, with 14,000 members, it purports to be the largest student-led environmental group in the United States.

The Sierra Club Voter Education Fund is a 527 group that became active in the 2004 Presidential election by airing television advertisements about the major party candidates' positions on environmental issues. Through the Environmental Voter Education Campaign (EVEC), the Club sought to mobilize volunteers for phone banking, door-to-door canvassing and postcard writing to emphasize these issues in the campaign.

Internal caucuses

These are unofficial groups of Sierra Club members attempting to influence Sierra Club policy by electing candidates to the board of directors. Some of these groups are listed below in alphabetical order:

  • JohnMuirLives - members who want the club to adopt a stronger stance on such issues as forest conservation and the club's political endorsement process. A spin-off from the John Muir Sierrans.
  • John Muir Sierrans (no website) - formed in the 1990s by David Brower and other club members to promote changes to club positions, in favor of a zero-cut forest policy on public lands and decommissioning Glen Canyon Dam. JMS was successful in changing club positions on both counts.
  • Sierra Democracy - members opposed to the club's "old guard", and supporting the rights (in Club elections) of groups like SUSPS and JML. Website was specific to the 2004 board election and has not been updated since.
  • SUSPS - members who want the club to support U.S. population stabilization by overturning the 1996 decision of the club to take "no position" on immigration.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Inside the Sierra Club. Retrieved on 2007-08-04.
  2. ^ About the Photographer - Jim Dougherty Photography. Retrieved on 2007-08-04.
  3. ^ HPS Summit Signatures - Mount Harwood. Retrieved on 2007-08-04.
  4. ^ Jeffrey St. Clair: Dark Deeds in the Black Hills (on muckraking magazine Counterpunch's website). Retrieved on 2007-08-04.
  5. ^ Nuclear Power - Conservation Policies - Sierra Club. Retrieved on 2007-08-04.

References

  • David Brower, For Earth's Sake: The Life and Times of David Brower (Salt Lake City: Peregrine Smith Books, 1990) ISBN 0-87905-013-6
  • Michael P. Cohen, The History of the Sierra Club, 1892-1970 (San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988) ISBN 0-87156-732-6
  • Michael McCloskey, In the Thick of It: My Life in the Sierra Club (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2005) ISBN 1-55963-979-2
  • Tom Turner, Sierra Club: 100 Years of Protecting Nature (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1991) ISBN 0-8109-3820-0

External links


 
 

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Hoover's Profile. ©2008 Hoover's, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Company History. International Directory of Company Histories. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sierra Club" Read more

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