Annual Report - Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
Transcription
Annual Report - Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
ROCKY MOUNTAIN ELK FOUNDATION Annual Report 2015 RMEF Board of Directors Chairman Chuck Roady Bonners Ferry, ID Vice Chairman Lee Gamble Philip Barrett Mike Baugh Russ Bumgardner Scott Chester Curtis Christiansen Gary “Swede” French T.W. Garrett Andrew Hoxsey Larry Irwin Eric Johnson Fred Lekse Bill Madison Don Moss Randy Newberg Vicki Peltonen G.J. “Jerry” Pionessa Linda Powell Dennis Radocha Diana Rupp Michael Steuert Terry Sweet Joe Treadway Bob Wellman Dandridge, TN Newnan, GA Molt, MT Denham Springs, LA Laurel, MT Giddings, TX Eagle Creek, OR Cleveland, TX Oakville, CA Stevensville, MT Jackson, WY Charlotte, NC Alturas, CA Dayville, OR Bozeman, MT Bayfield, WI Moultrie, GA Summerfield, NC Boise, ID Torrance, CA Roanoke, TX Grand Junction, CO Asheville, NC Chewelah, WA Founders & Lifetime Honorary Members Charlie Decker Bob Munson Libby, MT Lynnwood, WA Officers M David Allen Rodney Triepke Lori Parker President & CEO Secretary & COO Treasurer & CFO The mission of the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation is to ensure the future of elk, other wildlife, their habitat and our hunting heritage. WWW.RMEF.ORG PRESIDENT’S & BOARD MESSAGE A M David Allen President & CEO Chuck Roady Chairman of the Board s we take the measure of 2015, the high points for many of us were spending time in the backcountry, mountains or the woods chasing elk, deer and other game. Those outings strengthen our relationships with family and friends as well as our ties to scenic landscapes and the wildlife we all cherish. They also help re-energize our dedication to what this organization is all about. It’s clear now that 2015 was a year to remember for RMEF— and one worth celebrating. We permanently protected vital habitat in 8 states while opening or securing public access to an all-time high of 75,922 acres of prime elk country last year. Thanks to our passionate volunteers and members and our many committed partners, we helped carry out 227 habitat enhancement projects to improve 142,188 acres of great wild places for elk and an abundance of other wildlife. The vast majority of those acres lay on public lands. We also reached out to more youth to pass on our hunting heritage. Yet the loss, fragmentation and degradation of habitat remain significant threats to elk and other wildlife in the United States. The bedrock of wildlife management and funding, known as the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation, is being threatened by a variety of factors including a decrease in the number of people who hunt. Loss of access to hunting lands is consistently listed as the top reason for hunter attrition. The RMEF is also recognizing the crucial need to get involved in issues related to elk, hunting and conservation, and to urge our membership to do the same. In 2015 we stepped up and solidified working relationships with members of Congress, federal and state agencies, and state legislatures in order to better monitor wildlife‑related issues. We advocated for the Bipartisan Sportsman Act, Resilient Federal Forests Act and full authorization of the Land and Water Conservation Fund. Financially, we finished the year in the black and with endowments totaling more than $46 million, leaving us primed to do more great work moving forward. And perhaps our most exciting statistic: RMEF ended 2015 with 219,750 members, a 7.1% increase over 2014. This marks the second largest single-year increase in members in RMEF history. In December we held the Hunter & Outdoor Christmas Expo in conjunction with our national convention in Las Vegas, Nevada. Expanding to 10 days in 2015, the show hosted 230 exhibiting companies and attracted nearly 90,000 attendees. We also saw promising growth in our social media platforms. The RMEF has more than 400,000 followers on Facebook, over 28,500 on Twitter and nearly 27,400 on Instagram. Additionally, staff finalized work on our Hunting is Conservation social media campaign which launched in January 2016. By almost any measure, we are in a better place than we’ve ever been to do the most for elk. In the following pages, we’ll show you how we go about that. We hope it will inspire you to support our cause and to help us do more for elk country. 3 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE STAT E M E N T OF A C T I V I T I ES S TAT EMEN T O F FI NANCI AL PO SI TI O N REVENUES AS SETS, LIABILITIES & NET AS SET SUMMARY (thousands) Net special events $10,842 Net merchandise, royalty & advertising sales Membership dues 3,211 10,739 (thousands) Current assets Investments 46,033 Property & equipment, net of depreciation 11,714 Conservation land holdings 2,374 21,589 Other assets 1,657 Land sales 3,080 Total assets $81,096 Contract & grant revenue 2,381 Investment income (loss) (618) Current liabilities 6,844 Other income (loss) (107) Planned gift liabilities, net of current portion 1,251 Long-term debt, net of current portion 1,824 Donations (excluding conservation easements) Conservation easements Funds available for program & support services 9,033 $60,150 EXPENSES Program services 53,057 Total liabilities $9,919 Unrestricted net assets 28,504 Fundraising 3,551 Temporarily restricted net assets 10,876 Administration 1,796 Permanently restricted net assets 31,797 Total expenses Increase in net assets $58,404 $1,746 Total net assets $71,177 Total liabilities & net assets $81,096 The information above is derived from the 2015 financial statements audited by Clark Nuber P.S. Complete audited statements can be seen at www.rmef.org, or request a copy at (800)225-5355. 4 $19,318 FUNDRAISING 6% 91% PROGRAM SERVICES ADMINISTRATION 3% where your investment goes money invested by program 22% MEMBERSHIP HABITAT & WILDLIFE STEWARDSHIP 11% HUNTING HERITAGE 8% 58% PERMANENT LAND PROTECTION ELK RESTORATION 1% 5 YEAR IN REVIEW The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation helped ensure the future of elk, other wildlife, their habitat and our hunting heritage in 2015 thanks to achievements carried out through these programs: Permanent Land Protection & Access RMEF seeks to protect and keep elk country wild and open to the public. We achieve that through land acquisitions, conservation easements, real estate donations and access agreements. 2015 Total: 17 projects protected 12,249 acres of critical wildlife habitat in eight states and opened or secured public access to 75,922 acres. 6 Habitat Stewardship RMEF helps ensure that elk and elk country remain abundant and healthy by working with federal, state, tribal, university and private partners to improve forage, water, space and cover for wildlife, and to fund research and wildlife management. 2015 Total: 227 projects enhanced 142,188 acres and advanced the science of elk management across 26 states. Hunting Heritage RMEF strives to convey a better understanding of the vital link between hunting and conservation while also reaching out to the next generation to help secure the future of our hunting heritage. 2015 Total: 283 projects reached 93,258 children across the country. Another 39,532 people visited RMEF’s educational displays at the Elk Country Visitor Center in Missoula, Montana. Elk Restoration RMEF helps reintroduce elk to their historic ranges by providing financial assistance, offering volunteer manpower and funding feasibility studies. To date, RMEF has played a vital role in bringing elk back to Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin and Ontario. 2015 Accomplishments: RMEF supplied funding and volunteer manpower to assist continuing restoration efforts in Wisconsin and offered West Virginia support for its plan to restore elk. TORSTENSON FAMILY ENDOWMENT RMEF’s $34 million Torstenson Family Endowment is one of the largest endowments ever given to a hunter‑based, wildlife conservation organization. Each year RMEF uses interest from the endowment (the principal remains intact) to further core mission programs of permanent land protection, habitat stewardship, elk restoration and hunting heritage. This allows RMEF to increase project funding by attracting matching grants from both the private and public sectors, thus aiding our ability to move swiftly when key elk conservation opportunities arise. In 2015, more than $1.6 million from the endowment helped fund 70 projects in 24 states, including: •$811,754 to permanently protect 2,619 acres and open or secure public access to 33,344 acres of vital elk habitat in six states •$447,430 for habitat stewardship and management projects in 15 states •$404,367 to help fund hunting heritage projects across the U.S. •$15,844 to support elk restoration efforts in Wisconsin A key focus of the Torstenson Family Endowment is reaching out to young people. This honors the legacy of Bob Torstenson, who was deeply committed to instilling a love of wild places and hunting in future generations. In 2015, the endowment awarded 12 elk education trunks to schools, state parks and other educational venues in nine states and one Canadian province. The trunks contain lesson plans, activities, books, antlers, hides, skulls and other hands-on teaching tools. The endowment also funded seven college scholarships for outstanding students majoring in wildlife biology, supported the expansion of the Conservation Leaders for Tomorrow program that educates wildlife professionals about the vital link between hunting and conservation, allowed RMEF to grant more than $105,000 to support hunter education programs in nine states, and funded other youth-oriented projects and activities. ACCESS ELK COUNTRY The Challenge: Access Lost In 1915 roughly 100 million people lived in the United States. Today, there are more than 321 million and climbing. This growth has had a two-fold impact on wildlife habitat and huntable landscapes. Not only has development eliminated or diminished a huge amount of former elk country, but there are now exponentially more people seeking the remaining open spaces. Lack of access to quality hunting opportunities is the single biggest reason people stop hunting. For those just hoping to start hunting, access is the largest hurdle. SCOTT BOSSE Thanks to the vision and relentless drive of Theodore Roosevelt and all the people who have followed in his footsteps who believed that hunting is conservation, we have an amazing wealth of federal public land. Those 640 million acres are owned by and open to every citizen in the United States. It’s an incredible legacy that makes America unique in the world and supports the huge majority of elk hunters each year. Unfortunately, when it comes to hunting and recreation, it’s no longer enough. Why It Matters Hunters are by far the largest source of funding for wildlife stewardship and access. So losing access creates a vicious spiral. Loss of access = fewer hunters = less habitat, less stewardship, lower-quality habitat and … even less access. If our hunting and wildlife conservation traditions are to survive, we must work to provide this and future generations access to high-quality hunting experiences. What We’ve Done: Access = Success RMEF was founded by public-land hunters and we have been committed to access from the beginning. So far, RMEF has secured or improved public hunting access on 852,628 acres of prime elk country in 21 states. The lands RMEF acquires and permanently protects are conveyed to a state or federal agency and opened to public access. More than half of RMEF’s nearly 500 permanent land protection projects—acquisitions, exchanges and conservation easements on private lands—are now open to the public. Key Tools: Access Elk Country Initiative: Getting Aggressive on Access •Purchases or exchanges in areas of checker-boarded public and private lands create big, unbroken expanses of public elk country RMEF launched the Access Elk Country Initiative at the close of 2015 with this ambitious goal: •Strategic acquisition of small parcels unlocks large blocks of public land 5 x 50,000—We aim to open or secure access to 50,000 acres of public lands every year for the next five years for a total of 250,000 acres of great elk country open to all. •Re-routing roads or securing access easements provides legal passage to sweeps of public land beyond Can it be done? It’s aggressive, but there is no other way to be when it comes to the fight to protect public access. And 2015 showed that this goal is attainable: RMEF smashed our old high mark, opening access to almost 76,000 acres of excellent elk country in seven states. •RMEF is a proud charter sponsor of Outdoor Life’s Open Country awards, which celebrate and stimulate fresh ideas and good work by highlighting grassroots efforts that create more opportunities for the public to hunt • Seeking innovative ways to access private land. Supporting proactive efforts like Access Yes! programs in Idaho and Wyoming opens more high-quality private land to public access, as well as creates access to landlocked public land. It would be easy enough to just run up numbers, but access only matters if the trail leads to flourishing habitat. Our measure of success is whether you have a real opportunity to encounter elk—and to walk out satisfied at the end of the day even if you’re carrying nothing more than memories. 9 EASTERN ELK INITIATIVE Every bugle echoing through the hills and valleys of the Eastern U.S. signals a new chapter in one of North American wildlife’s greatest recovery tales. It’s the story of elk that’s still being written, and RMEF is working hard to shape a happy ending. Reintroducing elk to their historic ranges has been an RMEF goal since 1990. When Europeans came to North America, as many as 10 million elk roamed the U.S. But overhunting and habitat destruction took a brutal toll. By 1900, there wasn’t a wild herd east of the Mississippi. Now RMEF is helping rewrite history, most recently in the rolling hills of Wisconsin, where the Elk Foundation has contributed more than $300,000 to restoration projects in 2015 alone. Since 1990, RMEF has worked with Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources to bring elk back, with the goal of having almost 1,800 in the state. The northern Clam Lake herd now numbers about 160. It was started in 1995 from an RMEF-funded transplant of 25 Michigan animals. Biologists identified a rich swath of forests and grasslands in central Wisconsin as ideal habitat for a second herd, and in 2015, 26 Kentucky elk became the first of the Black River State Forest herd. The five-year plan is to bring 150 Kentucky elk to Wisconsin. HABITAT STEWARDSHIP: LAND PROTECTION & ACCESS: 27,000 ACRES 11,000 ACRES ELK MOVED: FUNDRAISING NEED: 250 $5.2 MILLION RON SAFFER eastern elk: 5-year goals STEP 1: Rebuilding Numbers •Vision: To see 17,000 elk roaming the countryside throughout the Eastern U.S. • Already accomplished: • Helped restore wild elk to six states (WI, KY, TN, NC, MO, VA) and Ontario, Canada • Expanded the population and range of elk in other states where herds already existed (AR, MI, MN, PA) • Invested in feasibility studies (IL, NY, MD), which are used by state agencies to determine restoration potential in their area • An example of resourcefulness in 2015: RMEF volunteers in the Southwest Virginia Coalfields and West Virginia Hatfield McCoy chapters disassembled over 13,000 feet of holding pen fence in Virginia and transported it more than 100 miles to West Virginia. This saved West Virginia $50,000 to use for other aspects of the restoration project. STEP 2: Enriching Habitat •Vision: Establish stronger early successional habitats, where elk and other wildlife flourish W OR K I N G FOR WA PI T I •Already accomplished: • More than 150 habitat projects already completed on Eastern lands STATE 2015 ACRES ENHANCED STATEWIDE 2015 POPULATION GOAL POPULATION STEP 3: Protecting Land AR 1,557 700 N/A •Vision: Protect key habitat areas which could include reclaimed private mine lands and new public lands, and mitigate crop depredation and agricultural conflict KY 12 10,000 10,000 MI 203 1,042 900-1,000 •Already accomplished: MO 7,036 104-118 400 • More than 87,000 acres forever protected in the East MN 434 180 150 • RMEF has secured conservation easements and purchased strategic parcels of land to be opened to the public NC 562 no estimate N/A PA 1,986 821 600-800 STEP 4: Honoring the Hunt TN 221 300-500 500 VA 435 100 400 WI 120 180 1,800 WV 650 no estimate N/A ON - 612-1,005 1,000 • Methods of habitat enhancement include prescribed fire, plantings and mechanical treatment, which create landscapes that support numerous native plant and animal species •Vision: Improve hunting experiences and protect our hunting heritage •Already accomplished: • Six Eastern states (AR, KY, MI, MN, PA, TN) now hold elk hunts, with roughly 1,300 people drawing tags for this unique experience each fall • Every Eastern state to receive RMEF funding to help establish hunting once local elk populations can support it Note: Arkansas, Michigan, Minnesota and Pennsylvania restored elk prior to the founding of the RMEF. 11 HABITAT AND WILDLIFE STEWARDSHIP RMEF works to enhance and restore habitat and improve the science of elk management in every state with wild, free‑ranging elk. We partner with federal and state agencies, private landowners, industry, universities and other nonprofits to accomplish this, helping to multiply the money we put on the ground and ensure a bright future for elk and other wildlife. RMEF’s habitat and wildlife stewardship accomplishments in 2015: Enhanced 142,188 acres through 227 habitat and wildlife stewardship projects on public and private lands in 27 states, including: 12 prescribed burns noxious weeds reducing encroachment Using prescribed fire to rejuvenate more than 53,000 acres in 14 states. These burns give rise to grasses, forbs and browse species and bring grasslands and forests back into succulent early‑growth stages. Case in point: RMEF helped fund this 320‑acre burn in Wyoming, reducing encroaching limber pine and juniper from a critical elk calving area on Bureau of Land Management acres in Crooks Creek. Combatting the spread of noxious weeds that outcompete native vegetation. RMEF‑sponsored projects fought these invaders across more than 18,300 acres of prime elk habitat in 11 states, using herbicides, hand-pulling and biocontrol. For example: RMEF helped fund spraying of yellow toadflax, spotted knapweed, houndstongue and musk thistle infestations at Montana’s Bear Creek Wildlife Management Area and on surrounding national forest lands—critical winter range for elk, mule deer, pronghorn and white-tailed deer along the west flank of the Madison Range. Reducing pinyon and juniper encroachment on more than 21,700 acres in six western states to restore sagebrush steppe and native grassland habitat, free up groundwater resources and help prevent large-scale wildfires. This work reinvigorated places like the Sandledges area near Richfield, Utah, where RMEF funds helped pay for a work crew to lop off and scatter pinyons and junipers that had overrun 1,951 acres of public grassland and sagebrush used by elk, mule deer and greater sage grouse. water sources Constructing and repairing wildlife water sources such as guzzlers, spring developments and ponds at more than 40 locations to provide elk and other wildlife with reliable water in suitable habitat and during severe drought. Places like Fort Hunter Liggett in California, where a $15,000 grant from RMEF helped fund installation of two guzzlers to provide wildlife with water during dry summers and falls that have been straining the area’s tule elk population. The guzzlers should also lessen roadkill by keeping elk and other wildlife from needing to cross highways for water on nearby agricultural lands. elk research predator management Conducting elk research led by universities and state wildlife management agencies to provide biologists with sound, scientific data for effective elk and elk habitat management, RMEF participated in more than 30 such studies in 2015. One of them was in Great Smoky Mountains National Park where RMEF helped biologists there monitor this herd since it began as an experiment in 2001. Most recently, Elk Foundation funds paid for radio-collars, radio-telemetry equipment and other supplies needed for population monitoring. Park staff captured nine adult elk and nine calves in spring 2015, fitting all with radio-collars and discreet identification tags. This makes 41 adult elk that are now being monitored with radio-collars in the GSMNP herd. Strongly advocating for the state management of wolves and other predators, RMEF fully endorses the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation and supports science-based management of all wildlife. RMEF provides grant funding specifically for wolf management, including $100,000 for efforts in Idaho and Montana in 2015. The grants provided for more collaring, remote camera work, and both aerial and ground tracking to better document wolf pack locations, size and home ranges, and overall population numbers, as well as resolving wolf conflicts associated with livestock depredation. In addition, RMEF is actively engaged in predator management by providing official public comment, encouraging state-based predator management, including the delisting of wolves, and working with members of Congress, other federal and state agencies, state and local lawmakers, RMEF members, and sportsmen and women to do the same. HUNTING HERITAGE When we changed our mission statement in 2012 to include “our hunting heritage,” it was a decision to look to the future. We live in an era marked by competition—competition for our children’s attention and time. How do we help them become hunters and stay hunters, to care about conservation? Project success To date, the RMEF has funded more than 3,700 projects and assisted in teaching more than 7.4 million people about hunting ethics, hunter safety and the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation. Our five-year goal is to reach 1 million people through state grants, hunting heritage programs and other state and chapter events. HU N T IN G H E R I TAG E O U T R E A C H PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS Total State Grants, SAFE Challenge Program, etc. 93,079 Total Direct Outreach Reported - National Programs / Sponsorships 179 Total Direct Outreach Reported - RMEF Elk Country Vistor Center 39,532 Total People reached in 2015 Hunting Heritage and Conservation Direct Outreach 132,790 14 NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2015 RMEF supports hunting heritage programs for youth such as the National Archery in the Schools Program. The Team Elk television show continues to run on the Outdoor Channel, which reaches 40 million viewers in 50 different countries. BUGLE We’re reaching out to members via Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube and Elk Tracks, the RMEF’s blog. Bugle magazine continues to be the major membership benefit, touting a readership of 400,000. In 2015, we delivered 12 elk trunks to grade‑school students from Idaho to Missouri to Massachusetts. The trunks are packed with educational materials from elk skulls to scat (replicas of course). Over the years, each trunk reaches upward of 2,500 kids. In late 2013, the RMEF created its youth membership program. We aim to increase youth membership by 2,000 members every year. The RMEF partnered with hunter education programs across the country to distribute orange vests and/or youth knives to more than 100,000 future hunters. We created and produced the Life of Elk video, which is featured in the RMEF’s Elk Country Visitor Center in Missoula and distributed in elk education trunks. Samantha Block, one of seven 2015 Wildlife Leadership Award recipients. Since 1991, RMEF’s Wildlife Leadership Awards have recognized some our nation’s brightest students in wildlife. This scholarship fund grew in 2006 thanks to a memorial given by the family of Gerald L. Turpin, an avid elk hunter killed in a logging accident. In 2013, RMEF’s Torstenson Family Endowment boosted it further, continuing the late Bob Torstenson’s legacy of conservation education. All recipients get a $3,000 scholarship and a one-year RMEF membership. Past winners have gone on to become leaders in their professions, and RMEF is proud to have helped them along their path. In 2015, the RMEF awarded seven scholarships. 15 MEMBERSHIP & VOLUNTEERS The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation’s success as one of the nation’s premier wildlife conservation organizations is rooted in the commitment of our volunteers and the support of our members. members They are the lifeblood that keeps RMEF growing—and we’re happy to announce that’s exactly what we’re doing. Last year marked the seventh consecutive year of record membership for RMEF. Members numbered 219,750 strong as of December 31, 2015. That’s a 7 percent growth in membership last year alone, and the largest single year of growth since 2010. Looking ahead As membership grows, RMEF is focused on growing our volunteer base. Our 11,000‑plus volunteers make up less than 1 percent of the active elk hunters in North America. Imagine what we could accomplish with 20,000, or even just 15,000? Our goal is to recruit 800 new volunteers in 2016. To do so, we recognize we need to invest more in this sector, so RMEF has introduced a Core Volunteer Campaign with incentives for those who pledge their help to RMEF in 2016: •Those who recruit or become a new volunteer are automatically entered into a drawing for 29 gift packages from RMEF sponsors. Prizes include items from Danner, Buck Knife, Yeti, Vortex, a Traeger grill and a Rhino Metals safe “We are grateful for so many men and women who support and value conservation and our mission. We don’t take this influx of new members lightly. We will continue to do all in our power to conserve and enhance elk habitat, create new and improved access opportunities for hunters and remain active in issues impacting the future of wildlife and our hunting heritage.” In 2015, RMEF volunteers: •Numbered more than 11,000 coast to coast •Actively served on committees in more than 500 RMEF chapters •Gave more than 7,200 hours of volunteer time for on-the-ground projects across the country •Stepped up for on-the-ground projects in 28 states, utilizing more than 760 volunteers in over 90 chapters •Spearheaded more than 80 projects that benefitted habitat and wildlife in the field and educated youths and adults through hunter education programs and SAFE events —David Allen, RMEF president and CEO Volunteers Having our membership at an all-time high is outstanding, but it is the dedication of our volunteers that allows RMEF’s mission to reach a higher level. In fact, even though only 1 out of every 20 members are volunteers, the money they raise annually eclipses membership proceeds in supporting the Elk Foundation’s mission. At RMEF, the size, health, strength and leadership of each chapter’s committee are vital to our success. Volunteers also commit time, sweat and talent helping with on-the-ground stewardship projects and raising funds that are put back into their own backyards to bolster RMEF’s mission. 17 FRIENDS OF THE FOUNDATION The primary ways individuals, companies and organizations supported the RMEF in 2015: Memberships Nearly 220,000 supporting, sustaining, sponsor, outfitter and life members from around the world backed the RMEF and its mission to ensure the future of elk, other wildlife, their habitat and our hunting heritage. Annual Giving Program Seeking to further the mission, generous RMEF members and volunteers donated more than $2,317,000 through annual giving. Workplace Giving The Combined Federal Campaign is one of the most beneficial workplace giving programs for the RMEF. It allows federal employees and military personnel to support their favorite charities through payroll deductions. This program, combined with other workplace giving programs, generated more than $130,000 for RMEF in 2015. Matching Gifts Habitat Partners Many employers will match an employee’s cash donations, volunteer hours, auction item purchase (above fair market value) and portions of sponsor or life memberships through corporate matching gift programs. In 2015, nearly 50 companies matched employee’s gifts to the RMEF, contributing more than $85,000 to further the mission. The Habitat Partner program recognizes major donors for their philanthropic donations. Their cumulative giving begins at $2,500. Individual and corporate Habitat Partners donated nearly $2.5 million to conserve elk country in 2015. Memorials & Honoraria RMEF creates memorials and honoraria at the request of families and friends who wish to remember or honor their loved ones through a gift for wildlife habitat conservation. In 2015, donors contributed more than $36,000 through this program. Corporations stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the RMEF through sponsorships, Bugle magazine advertising and affinity partnership programs. These businesses also donated products and services, contributed royalties through licensing agreements and sponsored RMEF events totaling $3.3 million in 2015. Trails Society Foundation Support The Trails Society recognizes those who use their estate plans to make elk country a better place for the generations to come. Nearly 350 Trails Society members have advanced the RMEF’s mission through planned gifts either during their lifetime or through a testamentary gift. Private, corporate, state and federal foundations supported habitat enhancement projects, permanent protection of critical elk range and programs that taught thousands of children and adults about conservation and North America’s hunting heritage to the tune of more than $2.3 million in 2015. Corporate Partnerships Back in the mid 1980s a friend of mine told me about a new wildlife organization he discovered called the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation. He showed me a Bugle magazine. I joined at the first big game banquet held at the Showboat Hotel in Las Vegas in 1986 or 1987 where I met Bob Munson, Charlie Decker and a lot of wonderful people. Right away I knew this was THE organization for me. These people had hung their hat on ELK—not just for ELK, but for ALL wildlife. I liked that. Since then, I have supported the RMEF by maintaining my membership as a Sponsor, Life Member, Trails Society Member, and Habitat Council Member, and by participating on the local committee since 1991 and attending every Elk Camp since 1988. What I see with RMEF, its members and staff are a lot of like-minded people with one purpose: to maintain and protect HABITAT for ELK and all WILDLIFE because without habitat we have nothing. 18 —Robert Bobbett, Jr., Life Member, Sponsor Member, Volunteer, Trails Society and Habitat Council Member HABITAT COUNCIL RMEF Habitat Council members–those who have donated cumulative philanthropic gifts of $10,000 or more–gathered in Park City, Utah, in June 2015 for the annual Summer Habitat Council Meeting and Retreat, and again in December at our Elk Camp national convention in Las Vegas. The events gave Habitat Council members the opportunity to talk with and provide input to the president and CEO, chairman of the board and executive staff. Highlights of the three-day Utah retreat included a project tour of the Seventh Heaven Ranch, and trips to the historic High West Distillery and Saloon, Browning factory outlet store, and Park City’s Olympic Park, site of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games. There is something remarkable and unique about the RMEF. For one thing, it really is not just an organization whose “membership benefits” amount to little more than having your name on a mailing list and receiving a magazine or plaque on the wall. When you join the RMEF you don’t just belong to it—it belongs to you. You become a member of a family that shares the same passion for all that nature has to offer. By protecting land and improving habitat for big game, you are protecting a resource that, once gone, can never be replaced. Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So don’t hesitate to help support RMEF with the challenges of dwindling resources and habitat for Mother Nature. —Debra Surface, Habitat Council, Trails Society, Banquet Sponsor, Life Member 19 IT HAS IT ALL—From the plunge of Tenderfoot Falls to massive aspen stands, dark spruce pockets and sub-alpine meadows, this stretch of central Montana is a paradise for elk and other wildlife. People, too. It took nine years of dogged work to acquire 16 pieces of private land checkerboarded up Tenderfoot Creek, vital tributary of Montana’s legendary Smith River. But it now forms one solid 20,000-acre block of great elk country. And every foot of it is open for the public to hunt, fish and simply enjoy. If ever there was a win for wild elk, wild trout and the common man worth bugling about, this was it. COVER PHOTO: DONALDMJONES.COM tenderfoot creek, montana