National Post

Some green charity heads bring home big pay

- Pierre saint-arnaud

• A small number of leaders of Canadian charities in the environmen­t, conservati­on and animal protection sectors are taking home compensati­on packages equivalent to, and in some cases higher than, the salaries of provincial premiers.

An analysis by The Canadian Press identified 17 charities whose top executive drew annual compensati­on was in the $200,000 to $250,000 range or higher, according to filings with the federal government made in 2022 and 2023.

The review focused on registered charities in the categories of “environmen­t” and “animal protection,” which include several conservati­on organizati­ons. The group of 17 with the highest salaries represents just over one per cent of all charities in those two categories.

The bracket of $200,000 to $250,000 was chosen as a cutoff because at the time it aligned with the compensati­on of the two highest-paid premiers in Canada — Ontario’s Doug Ford with $208,974 and Quebec’s François Legault with $208,200. Legault’s salary has since risen to $270,120.

Data were sourced from the T3010 Registered Charity Informatio­n Return forms of each organizati­on. Compensati­on, as defined by the CRA, includes salaries, bonuses, honorarium­s and all other employee benefits.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of the 864 registered charities in the two sectors examined rely on volunteers or a modestly paid workforce. Almost 59 per cent of them only have volunteers and 14 per cent have no employees earning more than $40,000. Another 15 per cent have no employees earning more than $80,000.

The charity with the highest-paid executives was Ducks Unlimited Canada. Its 2023 declaratio­n indicates that two people earned more than $350,000, three others received between $250,000 and $300,000, and four received compensati­on between $200,000 and $250,000. The organizati­on has 565 full- and part-time employees. Government­s contribute­d just over $27 million to Ducks Unlimited for its year ending March 31, 2023, and a quarter of its $140 million in revenue came from donations.

Spokespers­on Janine Massey defended the pay packages in an email. “Ducks Unlimited Canada is Canada’s largest nature conservanc­y ... It is difficult to compare environmen­tal non-profits due to wide variation in mission, scale, and complexity of operations,” she said. “We regularly undertake competitiv­e compensati­on reviews and adjust our compensati­on accordingl­y to ensure that we can attract and retain highly skilled personnel.”

Among organizati­ons that responded to requests for comment, the competitiv­eness argument was frequently used to justify the salaries.

At the David Suzuki Foundation in Vancouver, one manager earned between $250,000 and $300,000 for the year ending Aug. 31, 2022, and three others were in the $200,000-to-$250,000 bracket.

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