Newly released tax returns offer a look
at the spending priorities, staff salaries and steadily growing
coffers of the Hawaii Community Foundation, the Islands' largest
philanthropic initiative.
The foundation closed 2015 with net
assets of nearly $460 million — successfully soliciting some $45.6
million in grants and donations that year, according to its 2015 federal form 990.
This represents a dramatically upward
trend of undisclosed mainland philanthropists parking money at HCF,
where they are allowed to discretely engage in donor-advised giving.
In 2011, HCF reported gifts, grants and contributions of nearly $16.7
million. That figure increased to $23.9 million in 2012, $27.7
million in 2013 , $30.5 million in 2014 to $45.6 million in 2015.
However, HCF cut the total amount of
grants it awarded by $573,897 between 2014 and 2015.
Overall, HCF spent $13.8 million to
award grants of $29.4 million in 2015.
In 2015, HCF spent some $6.7 million on
salaries, up $266,447 from the previous year. Kelvin Taketa, HCF
president and CEO, was paid $359,792 plus $149,129 in additional
compensation from HCF and related organizations, for a total of
$508,921. HCF's top 11 employees, including Taketa, received
compensation totaling $2.3 million in 2015.
HCF spent $3.2 million on fundraising,
$725,225 on conferences, conventions and meetings, $120,256 on
advertising and promotions and $106,563 on travel.
The foundation's giving pattern also
indicates a receptivity to funding organizations that talk about
alternative approaches to farming, as opposed to actually advancing viable agriculture.
For example, it gave a whopping $476,670 to the Kohala
Center — a Big Island group that reported income of $5.2 million
in 2014, with little to show for it. The Center's School Garden
Network is directed by anti-GMO activist Nancy Redfeather.
Malama Kauai, another do-nothing faux
ag group, was awarded $100,000 by HCF — more than a third of the
$274,846 the organization reported as income in 2015. The group spent
$121,598 to deliver fruit and veggies to after-school programs and
Kauai food banks, and $35,077 on its community garden and “food
forest.” But what, pray tell, was the value of the food it actually
produced?
Similarly, HCF gave $80,000 to the
Center for Food Safety — ostensibly for “environmental”
programs — while Gary Hooser's Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action was given a $52,500 grant for “public policy and advocacy.”
Yet just today, Hooser published a Civil Beat column bemoaning HAPA's
complete failure to advance any of its objectives in the state
Legislature — while blaming lawmakers, of course.
HCF also gave $12,500 to the Kauai
Community Cat Project (KCCP), which engaged in a vicious cyber-bullying campaign against former Kauai Humane Society Director Penny Cistaro
and is now suing Kauai County to stymie its efforts to develop an
ordinance aimed at controlling the island's feral cats. Furthermore, the KCCP spent $80,000 to manage just 510 cats.
And inexplicably, HCF gave $10,000 to
SHAKA, which mounted an anti-GMO moratorium in Maui County that was
later thrown out by the courts. Though SHAKA's 2015 tax return has
not yet surfaced on Guidestar, its 2014 return showed income of
$329,056. It ended that year with just $46,053, having spent $87,931
on “management,” another $84,243 on advertising and promotion and
and $30,321 on legal fees.
Uh, so what, exactly, was the public
charitable purpose that SHAKA provided with its money? And none of
its funding sources were disclosed, either.
Why is HCF funding groups that are
decidely opaque, and actively working to undermine agriculture and
sow discord in Hawaii? Especially when its mission is “investing in
community well-being” and “strengthening Hawaii's communities.”
Now compare the grants given to those self-serving groups with their very narrow agendas to the amounts
awarded to organizations that serve a broad sector of the public:
$116,295 to Aloha United Way; $62,000 to Big Brothers/Big Sisters;
$78,600 to American Cancer Society; $85,403 to American Red Cross
Hawaii Chapter; $50,000 to Polynesian Voyaging Society; $55,888
National Tropical Botanical Garden; $10,000 Hawaii Meth Project.
Something seems out of kilter here.
I do give HCF kudos for listing all of the grants it made. However, in the name of public interest and transparency, it would be even more revealing to see where it's getting the money that is being used to effect change in Hawaii, and what sort of strings the donors have attached.
I've given to HCF and I had no idea they were using my money to fund these activists and their unwarranted and divisive schemes.
ReplyDeleteWhere is the outrage emoji button.
Hey Joan, thank you for all you do. Do you have an idea or opinion on why HCF awarded these groups in question? The individuals who work for HCF on Kauai seem to be very honest and intelligent people - not that you said otherwise. My initial thoughts/questions that I hope you can comment on - naive or ignorant as they may be - is could HCF not know everything you know about these groups, like the majority of the public; or can HCF not take sides; or no one else asked for the money; or these groups' intentions, as written to HCF, seemed worthy; or it's an effort to be unbiased? I could go on, but what do you think?
ReplyDelete@9:58-- You're welcome! I think it's a combination of HCF not knowing what these groups are really about (and how little they actually accomplish in the public interest), and pressure from some of HCF's new donor sources to support the Utopian ag movement.
ReplyDeleteThat's what I meant when I made this statement: "This represents a dramatically upward trend of undisclosed mainland philanthropists parking money at HCF, where they are allowed to discretely engage in donor-advised giving."
"Furthermore, the KCCP spent $80,000 to manage just 510 cats."
ReplyDelete$80,000/510 = $156.86 per cat for a year
'just'?
Thats actually really good. It makes me wonder if you've ever had a cat, Joan.
For comparison the government quarantine for arriving pets charges around $450 a month to house a cat:
http://hdoa.hawaii.gov/ai/files/2013/01/aqsbrochure.pdf
I usually enjoy your blog but I should probably start checking your numbers and facts more often.
@11:04 Check away. Because I can't tell you how much I enjoy readers who quibble with one subjective word in a post that took me several hours to research and write.
ReplyDeleteIn any case, I didn't think it was such a great deal when you consider there is no shelter provided, KHS pays covers the spay-neuter and veterinary, and there are an estimated 20,000 feral cats on the island.
Another non/not for profit scheme like Akamai.
ReplyDeleteHalf a million in yearly compensation to run a non profit foundation. What a sham!!!😦😯😑
ReplyDeleteI guess I'm the dumb one working for a living.
You people would be surprised how many of these non profit schemes are well known orgs around the world. All you have to do is Google non profit CEO/President salaries.
ReplyDeleteIs this why HCF's Kevin Takata got canned?
ReplyDeleteThanks Joan. Appreciate the research and all you do.
ReplyDeleteGreat investigative reporting. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWhich of these are funded through HCF as part of their 'General Funds' of donations vs. specific non-profit grants from a donor? The real question is, are groups or people using HCF specifically to anonymize the grant/contract creation process to 'clean their hands'.
ReplyDeleteOur society deserves a discussion of these money funneling channels, much like the debate about huge undisclosed donor types to PACs or 'educational' advocacy groups related to gun control, abortion, climate change, etc.
Hypothetical - Is there a difference between Monsanto vs. Koch Brothers vs. Omidyar vs. Gates using HCF to create environmental education programs anonymously with specific contracts in place detailing the type of education to take place? Is the board at HCF willing or able to vet the content of an education program funded through them, and ensure that no lobbying is taking place as part of 'education'.