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HUNDREDS OF COMPANIES JOIN FORCES, MAKE TIME FOR WORKERS TO VOTE IN 2020 ELECTION

A coalition of U.S. companies representing more than 2 million workers has come together for a nonpartisan movement called Time to Vote. The goal is to increase voter participation in the Nov. 3, 2020 general election.

There is no shortage of hurdles to voting, but no one should have to choose between earning a paycheck and casting a ballot. Time to Vote companies have an important role in supporting their employees’ ability to make sure they are registered to vote and have time to study their ballots and perform their civic duty.

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This Presidents' Day, the fight for public lands continues

This op-ed by Rose Marcario, president and CEO of Patagonia and Land Tawney, president and CEO of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers was originally published in The Missoulian.

One hundred years ago, a gold prospector named Ralph Cameronattempted to claim the Grand Canyon. It seems ridiculous now, but it’s true — he wanted to get rich mining the land, and if President Theodore Roosevelt hadn’t signed into law a powerful conservation bill, we might have lost one of our nation’s greatest treasures.

PLAINTIFF ORGANIZATIONS IN BEARS EARS AND GRAND STAIRCASE-ESCALANTE NATIONAL MONUMENT CASES DECRY ADMINISTRATION’S FINAL MANAGEMENT PLANS

Today, sovereign tribal nations, local and national groups, all plaintiffs in the federal court cases challenging the legality of the Trump Administration’s reduction of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments, released a joint statement. This statement comes in response to the Bureau of Land Management’s Records of Decision finalizing resource management plans for the Monuments.

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Response to the rollback of the Clean Water Act

“President Trump just removed protections for tributaries and wetlands in your community. This comes after polluting your air, putting your public lands under threat and ignoring the climate crisis.  Make sure you are registered to vote today, make a voting plan, and show up in November to stop the pillaging of our planet.” - Rose Marcario, President and CEO of Patagonia

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Patagonia CEO, Rose Marcario, Calls for Business to Collaborate on Sustainability

The climate crisis may be the hardest test humanity has ever faced — the next 10 years will determine whether we pass or fail. As the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recently confirmed, it will be impossible to stop global temperatures from rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius if we don't drastically reduce emissions by 2030. The consequences will be inconceivable and irreversible.

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Patagonia and BHA CEOs: Congress Needs to Fire William Perry Pendley From the BLM

This op-ed ran in Men’s Journal on December 23, 2019. It was written by Rose Marcario, the president and CEO of Patagonia, and Land Tawney, president and CEO of the nonprofit conservation group Backcountry Hunters & Anglers.

William Perry Pendley needs to leave D.C. for Christmas and not return to his job afterward.

The U.S.’s 640 million acres of public lands and waters belong to all of us. Whether you love to hunt, fish, hike, or canoe—or just like to have a quiet place to stargaze—our public lands and waters are there to enjoy. Though most of us can agree that these wild places need protection, their future depends on constant citizen engagement and, of course, strong leadership.

Patagonia Community Raises $10 Million for the Planet in 17 Days, Company Will Match

Patagonia Community Raises $10 Million for the Planet in 17 Days, Company Will Match

 

 

Patagonia Community Raises $10 Million for the Planet in 17 Days, Company Will Match 

Local communities across the US and Europe contribute to grassroots groups on the front lines of the environmental crisis 

VENTURA, Calif. — Patagonia announced today that its community raised $10 million in donations to 1,043 grassroots environmental organizations in 17 days. On Black Friday, Patagonia committed to match individual donations made between November 29 and December 31, 2019, to a $10 million limit. “We’re energized by our community’s response,” said Lisa Pike Sheehy, who leads Patagonia’s environmental activism team. “Together we made history—in 17 days, our community raised $10 million for environmental nonprofits. This is extraordinary generosity to some of the most deserving and underappreciated efforts to save the planet.”

Donations were made through Patagonia Action Works, a platform that connects individuals with local grassroots organizations to take action on the most pressing issues facing the world today.  In the US, environmental nonprofits receive only three percent of philanthropic giving, yet climate change is our biggest existential threat. 

"Thanks to Patagonia's donation matching, we can launch environmental campaigns in up to five more countries next year, resulting in new laws that protect rivers, oceans and forests," said Earth Law Center's executive director and directing attorney, Grant Wilson. "We will also be able to train thousands more lawyers and judges on ecological-based legal movements that can save the planet. Patagonia's impact is momentous."

Executive director of the Conservation Lands Foundation, Brian Sybert, said, “Patagonia's donation match is a phenomenal end-of-year boost for Conservation Lands Foundation. It has brought us new donors and doubled major gifts. All of which will help make sure our Friends Grassroots Network—70 community-based groups throughout the West and in Alaska—has the capacity and resources to hold the line against the Trump administration's aggressive campaign to weaken protections and reduce public input on dozens of iconic public lands that they want to hand over to oil and gas development." 

Betsy Weber, assistant director at the Environmental Defense Center, said, “With this incredible support from Patagonia, the Environmental Defense Center will remain strong in our fight to prevent a tripling of onshore oil production in Santa Barbara County, to stop the Trump administration from expanding oil drilling and fracking off our coast, and to move forward with offshore renewable energy. These matching funds are providing EDC a huge boost to ensure we have the resources to continue to fight and win in the year ahead.” 

“The Patagonia match was a game changer for Native Fish Society. This was our largest year-end fundraiser—even before the match! Ending strong means we can start even stronger in our work in 2020 to revive abundant wild fish across the Pacific Northwest. Your support matters and wild fish matter, “said Mark Sherwood, executive director of Native Fish Society. 

Eloise Russo, the executive director of City Kids Wilderness Project, said, “The Patagonia Action Works match opportunity has been truly extraordinary for City Kids and has inspired our community to support our work in unprecedented ways. As a small organization, this additional support is truly transformational and will allow us to focus on what we do best: providing high-impact outdoor adventure and leadership development programming for DC youth.”    

Tens of thousands of individual donors contributed to the $20 million donation, which will go to over one thousand organizations in the US and Europe. The majority of these groups have limited staff and modest annual budgets. 

In addition to its $10 million donation match, Patagonia will donate, as it has for more than 30 years, one percent of its 2019 sales to nearly 1,200 grantees. To date, the company has donated more than $110 million to nonprofits working on environmental problems facing communities and the planet.

Patagonia President and CEO Rose Marcario’s relevant post on LinkedIn: HERE

About Patagonia We’re in business to save our home planet.
Founded by Yvon Chouinard in 1973, Patagonia is an outdoor apparel company based in Ventura, California. A Certified B-Corporation, the company is recognized internationally for its commitment to product quality and environmental activism—and its contributions of more than $110 million in grants and in-kind donations to date.

Contacts

PatagoniaPress@patagonia.com

 

 

This holiday season, give the gift of giving: Donate to environmental protectors

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This holiday season, give the gift of giving: Donate to environmental protectors

From Black Friday through the end of the year, Patagonia is matching all donations made through Patagonia Action Works

Nov. 26, 2019

VENTURA, Calif. — Patagonia is making it easy for you to give to your favorite environmental group in the name of a loved one (including your holdout uncle who refuses to believe in climate science). And, even better, Patagonia will match your donation.  

Environmental nonprofits make up only three percent of philanthropic giving, yet climate change is our biggest existential threat. Communities are being disrupted and even displaced while solutions to the crisis are known and available. So this holiday season, please donate to environmental protectors in the name of your disbelieving uncle—or anyone else of your choice.

Patagonia is matching all donations made through Patagonia Action Works starting Nov. 29 (Black Friday) through Dec. 31, 2019. Donors can choose to send a digital eCard, print a card from home, or pick up a physical card in any Patagonia store in the United States or Europe. No purchase of Patagonia product is required for donations to be eligible for matching. 

“Black Friday is often a day when we go out and buy things we don’t really need and give them to people who don’t really want them,” Patagonia CEO Rose Marcario wrote on LinkedIn this week. “This year, consider giving to our home planet in the name of someone you love. Give to the tireless, community-based groups who work to save clean water and air in your neighborhoods, our public land treasures, our wild animals and birds, and our wide oceans.”

Details

Patagonia will match all donations made on Patagonia Action Works between Nov. 29 – Dec. 31, up to $10,000 USD per donation until we’ve reached a maximum match of $10,000,000 USD. Donations are tax deductible.  

About Patagonia
We’re in business to save our home planet.
Founded by Yvon Chouinard in 1973, Patagonia is an outdoor apparel company based in Ventura, California. A certified B-Corporation, the company is recognized internationally for its commitment to product quality and environmental activism—and its contributions of more than $100 million in grants and in-kind donations to date.

Contacts

Corley Kenna: Corley.Kenna@patagonia.com

Corey Simpson: Corey.Simpson@patagonia.com

J.J. Huggins: John.Huggins@patagonia.com

 

 

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Save the Endangered Species Act!

The Endangered Species Act, passed almost unanimously by Congress and signed into law by a Republican president in 1973, is the most successful and popular environmental law in American history. It has protected the bald eagle, grizzly bear, humpback whale and gray wolf, as well as more than 1,650 other threatened and endangered species. The law has strong, bipartisan support among the American people. 

Patagonia Hires Marty Pomphrey as General Manager of Patagonia Japan

Patagonia, the Ventura, California-based outdoor apparel manufacturer has hired Marty Pomphrey as general manager of Patagonia Japan. As general manager, Pomphrey will oversee Patagonia’s growing business in Japan, which started in 1988 and today includes more than 500 employees and 22 stores. Pomphrey will build on the success and strong tradition established by longtime general manager Takasuki Tsujii, who has stepped away from the role after ten years of leading Patagonia’s team in Japan.

Patagonia wins UN Champions of the Earth award

US outdoor clothing brand Patagonia has been named a UN  Champion of the Earth, receiving the UN’s top environmental honor for a dynamic mix of policies that has put sustainability at the heart of its successful business model. 

Facing Extinction

Today, in stores and offices around the world, Patagonia is joining in solidarity with the youth activists peacefully striking for climate action and demanding that governments address the climate crisis. The outdoor apparel company is closing its stores and offices globally so employees can join the strikes and is asking concerned citizens in the US to text CLIMATE to 71333 to tell Congress there is no room in government for climate deniers.

Businesses Join Climate Strike

(New York, NY)  Ahead of the September 20th Climate Strikes and the week of action from September 24th to 28th, major businesses including Ben & Jerry’sLush CosmeticsSeventh Generation and Patagonia will join the Global Climate Strikes led by youth climate activists across the world. 

In the U.S., youth and adults are working together in an intergenerational and multiracial effort to demand bold climate action, including the immediate phase out of all fossil fuels. Large turnouts are expected in New York, Washington D.C., San Diego, Denver, Duluth, Los Angeles, Boston, Miami, Seattle, and more. 

Patagonia Response to the BLM's Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument Management Plan

"The Executive Order eliminating protections for Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument was illegal and no management plan for these lands should proceed until the resolution of the lawsuits. If this administration’s reckless agenda is not stopped, it will lead to the destruction of a national treasure protected for over two decades that enjoys support from hunters and hikers as well as local businesses and communities. And even more troubling, it sets a dangerous precedent for the future of all public lands and waters. These wild and wonderful landscapes should not be auctioned off to the highest bidder, and we have every confidence the courts will rule in favor of the plaintiffs and the original boundaries of the National Monument will be restored." – Rose Marcario, President and CEO, Patagonia⁠

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Patagonia Response to the BLM's Bears Ears Monument Management Plan

“The Executive Order abolishing Bears Ears was illegal and no management plan for these lands should proceed until resolution of the lawsuits. The President’s effort to reduce Bears Ears’ boundaries was done at the behest of mining and oil and gas industries. And this plan is another demonstration of this administration’s preference for extractive industry profit at the expense of the American people. Bears Ears contains iconic landscapes, sacred places, and priceless artifacts and this plan puts all of them under threat. Not to mention this is a colossal waste of time because BLM will have to create a plan for the full Bears Ears as originally designated after we win the lawsuit.” - Rose Marcario, CEO and President, Patagonia

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Patagonia response to rollbacks of EPA’s Clean Power Plan

“Our climate crisis is here and now, and we need global, urgent and transformative actions to address what is increasingly destructive and deadly.  Today, the Trump Administration continues its assault on the health of our communities by repealing the EPA’s Clean Power Plan. This unlawful action must not stand, and Patagonia will continue to fight alongside those who defend our planet, and who demand just and equitable solutions to the climate crisis.  We will confront climate deniers – they have no place in our government – and we will continue to advocate for immediate and dramatic increases in clean renewable energy, the conservation of our public lands and waters, and the unlocking of the organic agricultural sector’s potential to help solve our climate crisis. The reckless efforts to rollback climate protections through regulatory giveaways to fossil fuel companies must end – our community, business and planet depend on it.” – Rose Marcario, President and CEO, Patagonia

CNN Perspectives Op-Ed: Reckless farming is destroying the planet. This could save it.

The United Nations released a dire warning recently: Climate change is here and it's a clear and present danger to our entire planet. Of course, we didn't need another report to tell us that — we see it in extreme and unusual weather, disappearing wildlife and falling farm yields. But there is one major cause of this global catastrophe that doesn't get the attention it deserves: industrial-scale chemical agriculture.