Girl Scouts may be best known for their cookies, but two Ann Arbor, Mich., middle school students sold magazines this year instead of the organization’s trademark product because they found out an endangered species is threatened by an ingredient in Girl Scout cookies, The Grand Rapids Press reports.
Madison Vorva and Rhiannon Tomtishen, both 12, were doing research to earn a Girl Scout Bronze Award when they discovered the habitat of orangutans in Indonesia is being threatened by the production of palm oil, the newspaper writes.
Palm oil is produced from a fern-like plant called the oil palm tree. This plant can be grown only after the rain forest has been cleared -- most often through administering the slash-and-burn technique, a process that contributes greatly to deforestation. Thousands of orangutans -- now an endangered species -- have been killed in this process and as the demand for palm oil grows, their numbers will continue to dwindle.
"We've seen pictures of orangutans set afire and beaten. You really just want to reach out and do all that you can to help save them," Madison said.
“Just doing the Bronze Award wouldn’t be enough,” Madison said.
"We have stopped selling (the cookies)," Rhiannon said.
In their research, the girls said they found the demand for palm oil has risen in the past few years because it is free of trans-fat. However, it is relatively high in saturated fat.
They said they now avoid any snacks and candies that palm oil is found in.
Recently, Rhiannon and Madison met with Jane Goodall, known for her efforts to protect primates, at a youth conference in Chicago. Goodall signed the girls’ petition against the production of palm oil.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,351583,00.htmlThe Boys Scouts have been even worse.
By LEWIS KAMB
SEATTLE P-I INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER
For nearly a century, the Boy Scouts have worn a self-adorned badge as campsite conservationists and good stewards of the land.
"The Boy Scouts were green before it was cool to be green," said the organization's national spokesman, Deron Smith.
But for decades, local Boy Scouts of America administrations across the country have clearcut or otherwise conducted high-impact logging on tens of thousands of acres of forestland, often for the love of a different kind of green: cash.
A Hearst Newspapers investigation has found dozens of cases over the past 20 years of local Boy Scout councils logging or selling prime woodlands to big timber interests, developers or others, turning quick money and often doing so instead of seeking ways to preserve such lands.
"In public, they say they want to teach kids about saving the environment," said Jane Childers, a longtime Scouting volunteer in Washington who has fought against Scouts' logging. "But in reality, it's all about the money."
Scouting councils nationwide have carried out clearcuts, salvage harvests and other commercial logging in and around sensitive forests, streams and ecosystems that provide habitat for a host of protected species, including salmon, timber wolves, bald eagles and spotted owls.
Boy Scout councils have logged and sold for development properties bequeathed to them by donors who gave the lands with intentions they be used for camping and other outdoor recreation.
In some cases, councils have sought to use revenues from logging or land sales to make up for funding lost because of the organization's controversial bans on gays and atheists from membership and employment rolls.
"The Boy Scouts had to suffer the consequences for sticking by their moral values," said Eugene Grant, president of the Portland-based Cascade Pacific Council's board of directors.
"There's no question they lost membership and funding because of it. I think every council has looked at ways to generate funds ... and logging is one of them."
The investigation -- a nationwide review by five Hearst newspapers of more than 400 timber harvests, court papers, property records, tax filings and other documents since 1990 -- also found:
Scouting councils have logged across at least 34,000 acres -- a figure that vastly undercounts the actual number of harvests conducted and acreage cut, as forestry records nationwide are incomplete or nonexistent.
More than 100 Scouting councils have conducted timber harvests -- one-third of all Boy Scout councils nationwide.
At least 26 councils have logged in areas with or near protected wildlife habitat at least 53 times, a number also underrepresented.
Councils have conducted at least 60 clearcuts and 35 salvage harvests -- logging that some scholars and ecologists say can hurt the environment and primarily aims to make money.
Several councils submitted logging plans with inaccurate and incomplete information, and in some cases, disregarded rules or conditions established to protect wildlife, streams or other resources.
In some cases nationwide, Scout logging and land deals have involved cozy relationships in which Scouting councils have conducted business with current or former Scouting volunteers, their private companies, employers or in one case, a state regulator.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/specials/scoutslogging/397864_loggingmain29.html?source=mypi