" If funding agencies wouldn't be so incredibly naive when handing out the cash...we could have reformed this trade for good by now.
Who is more to blame? The scoundrels who blew the wad or the fools who gave it out to the wrong crowd?
I think its a cowardly argument is to lay blame on the faceless, nameless intangible "aquarium trade"...and hide from this history of embezzling the issues for profit by money grubbing carpetbaggers from some sectors of the professional eco-research community. ...for the last 20 years.
Steve"
But Steve, you speak about our industry as if it's in a perpetual infancy, able to be scapegoated, exploited by NPO's and then, in the end, unable to withstand the scrutiny of an outsider (i.e USCRTF). You also blame other organisations for feeding on our issues for direct profit to themselves. If reform was needed and the money was available, why hasn't the industry attempted to reform itself or be more directly involved in reform and what makes you think that the grant money, if it had been given to industry insiders would have been used more effectively, or would be going forward? We are in an industry made up of private businesses, each one operating with profitability in mind.
I know that you also feel, as I do, that the organizations in our industry (AMDA, PIJAC etc...) are not the proper vehicles for reform both from an efficiency and also a vested interest perspective.
You asked earlier who's to blame but I don't think it's about blame. I think all parties (private businesses, NPO's, industry org.'s) simply did what it was in their nature and mandate to do.
The private businesses focused on their bottom lines without too much concern (read: money spent) on reforming their industry. Besides, they really wouldn't be eligible for the type of funding that the likes of a MAC gets.
Industry organizations focused more on regulation and issues within the industry and the public perception of those issues. Certainly an industry advocacy org. isn't likely to funded for this type of reform work.
By my way of thinking, and by legal definition of a charitable contribution, that funding was only available to NPO's and will only be available to NPO's going forward.
If you maintain that they were the wrong NPO's then it should have been possible to create the right kind and capture the funding. If we needed to be more involved with those NPO's who received the funding then that too was possible to achieve.
I certainly think there's good reason to reform our industry at many/all levels but as long as you're talking about an industry of private businesses all competing with each other, that will be difficult to do from within the industry itself.
I know we've discussed eco-labeling before and IF (a very big if) that could be done in a productive, verifiable and sustainable manner, it might provide the incentive and funding for genuine reform. But is the MO buying public really willing to pay a premium for value added product?
-Jim