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Australian news, and some related international items

Queensland Senator Matthew Canavan wants no tax deductability for environment groups

dollar 2Government MP steps up campaign against eco-charity tax concessions, ABC News, 10 Apr 15 By Conor Duffy More than 100 environment groups face being struck off a register that gives them tax deductibility status enjoyed by charities and research organisations.

A parliamentary inquiry into the Register of Environmental Organisations has begun taking submissions, with some Government MPs agitating for a cull of the 600-strong register.

Queensland LNP senator Matthew Canavan said a preliminary audit showed eco-charities were getting tax deductibility status to engage in political rather than environmental activity……….

Cam Walker from Friends of the Earth believes that protesting and lobbying is important environmental work.

“I think the Australian people are very sharp, they realise that protecting the environment isn’t just a case of planting some trees,” Mr Walker said.

“They realise that in the current context it’s political activity that brings about change.”

Government accused of being driven by ideology

Friends of the Earth has already come under Government scrutiny.

In the run-up to the last election it received a $130,000 donation which was spent on market research and used in conjunction with GetUp! for political campaigning.

It is currently being audited by the Australian Tax Office, but has been cleared in a separate Environment Department investigation………

Inquiry ‘more about politics than facts’

Environment NGOs said funding had already been cut for environmental campaigns and lawyers, and the latest move was part of a campaign against the sector.

“The current House of Representatives inquiry is an attempt to silence the environment movement. We have no doubt that this is more about politics than about facts,” Mr Walker said……..

Other groups like the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA), which campaigns on behalf of big business to remove environmental protections, also have tax deductibility status.

NGO academic and vice-president of Environment Victoria, Joan Staples, said that was hypocritical.

“The department that scrutinises them, which is not the Environment Department but the Industry Department, should be scrutinising them much more closely and look at whether they really are producing what that tax deductibility status requires of them,” she said……….http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-04-10/environment-groups-could-lose-tax-concession-status/6384554

April 11, 2015 - Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, civil liberties

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