Culture Is Social Justice for the Birds? Audubon Attempts an Answer. - A battle over the group namesake’s ties to slavery grew into a conflict over diversity, highlighting complications that have arisen in the aftermath of George Floyd’s death.

Is Social Justice for the Birds? Audubon Attempts an Answer.
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Clyde McGrady
2023-08-06 12:53:31GMT

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Sam DeJarnett, a birder who worked at Portland Audubon, struggled to find inclusion in a group of predominantly older, white birders.Credit...Will Matsuda for The New York Times

On the same day George Floyd was murdered by a police officer on a Minneapolis street — Memorial Day, 2020 — Christian Cooper was searching for songbirds in Central Park. Mr. Cooper, who is Black, would be vaulted to fame after a run-in with a white woman who called the police and falsely claimed he was threatening her when he asked her to leash her dog.

To David Yarnold, the chief executive of the National Audubon Society at the time, both events demanded a response. The powerful conservation group and pre-eminent bird enthusiasts’ organization needed to weigh in, and even examine itself.

“Black lives matter,” Mr. Yarnold, who is white, wrote in a letter to the society’s staff after the first weekend of the George Floyd protests. “Our nation is in turmoil because our governments, our institutions (including Audubon), and private individuals haven’t done nearly enough to act on that fundamental truth.”

Mr. Yarnold promised to start a “long conversation” about how the Audubon Society could “become antiracist in everything we do.”

Three years later, that long conversation has led the society into an all-out feud over its own handling of race within the organization. Complaints about workplace conditions and the treatment of minority employees and hobbyists are bound up in the question of whether the conservation group should drop its namesake, John James Audubon, who owned slaves.

Mr. Yarnold has left, and several board members have quit. Local chapters of the national organization have distanced themselves, employees are in an uproar, donors are skittish and members — the lifeblood of the organization — are wondering what has happened to an insular community of nature lovers who were more accustomed to debating birding etiquette than to grappling with deeply entrenched racism.

What is going on inside the Audubon Society is a microcosm of the debates that have roiled organizations across the country since 2020. Companies, governments and campuses, driven by the energy of groups like Black Lives Matter, committed themselves to ambitious plans to change policing and corporate culture. Many found themselves caught between a desire to appeal to a younger, more diverse generation and the objections of others who said the changes they were considering went too far.

Audubon’s case is an example of the complications that can arise in a post-2020 world when an organization tries, or fails, to meet those expectations, especially when the expectations fall outside the organization’s traditional mission: What does bird conservation have to do with social justice?

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The society announced in March that it was keeping the Audubon name, causing an uproar among some employees and hobbyists. Some local affiliates dropped the name.Credit...Hannah Beier for The New York Times

For some people, the name John James Audubon means birding the way the name Edison means electric light. By cataloging and painting hundreds of species in the early 1800s for his seminal four-volume work, “The Birds of America,” Audubon arguably contributed more to ornithological study than any other individual in United States history. But he was also an outspoken anti-abolitionist slave owner who held repellent beliefs about African Americans. He enslaved nine people to work in his Kentucky home, bought and sold several people, and argued against emancipation, according to a biographer, Gregory Nobles.

In the aftermath of Mr. Floyd’s murder, prominent members of the birding community urged the National Audubon Society’s board of directors to consider a name change.

Those in favor argued that a name change would not only break the link to a shameful history, but also help create a more welcoming atmosphere for members and employees. That, in turn, would help the organization thrive.

“Why would you not take the step of being brave and moving forward?” said Jason Hall, a 40-year-old Black man who founded the In Color Birding Clubas a way to “open birding and access to outdoors to people of color.”

Mr. Hall said the Audubon Society’s position should be: “We need to consider this name change because it gives us an opportunity to reconcile the history of this person, but also keep our core mission of bringing birds to people. And by doing that we can bring more birds to more people, more, different kinds of people.”

Mr. Yarnold, the society’s former head, described the summer of 2020 as a “pressure cooker at Audubon,” brought on by isolation from the Covid pandemic and the hurt and anger over Mr. Floyd’s murder.

“It was monumentally hard to comprehend the zeitgeist in the moment,” Mr. Yarnold said. “You can’t run a complex, nuanced, nonpartisan 50-state operation over Zoom.”

At the end of 2020, Politico reported on complaints from employees that the Audubon Society was a dysfunctional and hostile workplace for racial minorities and women.

An audit commissioned by the Audubon board and conducted by an outside law firm substantiated some of the complaints. The report found that “managers at all levels — including women — perpetuate an environment that diminishes the contributions of women and people of color.” In 2021, the board promised to make changes.

For Mr. Yarnold, who had hired the organization’s first vice president of equity, diversity and inclusion, the report stung. Just before the report was released, he said he would step down.

“I was not asked to leave,” Mr. Yarnold said, adding that he decided to “accelerate the transition” that was already planned.

His departure did not quell employees, who formed a union in September 2021, known as the “Bird Union” to distance itself from the Audubon name.

Some staffers said it was an uphill battle trying to change an organization that they said was just as interested in conserving its status quo as it was conserving wildlife.

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“Why would you not take the step of being brave and moving forward?” said Jason Hall, a birder in Pennsylvania, adding that dropping the Audubon name would help the organization appeal to a younger, more diverse crowd.Credit...Kriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times

“At some point, that mission needs to evolve,” said Andres Villalon, who identifies as non-binary and was Audubon’s senior director of equity, diversity, inclusion and belonging before resigning last December, frustrated, they said, that the organization was falling short of its values.

Mx. Villalon said there was a pervasive attitude among the board that social justice was a distraction from protecting birds.

Birding has a reputation as a hobby for affluent white people who aren’t always welcoming to Black people, according to Mr. Hall, who founded the In Color Birding Club.

When Sam DeJarnett, 33, first began working at Portland Audubon, she was into wildlife conservation but didn’t know what birding was. She went on some official Audubon birding outings, “but it was all old white folks,” she said. “And I was really made to feel like an outsider, both as a woman of color — a Black woman — and as a new birder.”

In 2022, 81 percent of the society’s senior leaders and 77 percent of its full-time employees identified as white, according to an Audubon survey.

The board hired Elizabeth Gray to replace Mr. Yarnold. In an interview Ms. Gray, the first woman to head the society, said its commitment to diversity and equity was “mission critical work.”

“When we do what’s right for birds, we do what’s right for people,” she said.

While the national organization debated, the Seattle chapter announced it would drop the Audubon name, later changing it to “Birds Connect Seattle.” Several other local chapters — including those in New York City and Chicago — dropped the Audubon moniker.

“Knowing what we now know, and hearing from community members how the Audubon name is harmful to our cause, there is no other choice but to change,” the head of the Seattle group wrote last year.

An internal survey of employees, members, donors and volunteers in the fall of 2022 revealed an organization deeply divided over a fundamental question of identity.

Around 43 percent of respondents said changing the name would have a negative impact on people’s ability “to feel they are a part of the organization,” while 35 percent said it would have a positive impact.

The internal report, obtained by The New York Times, said the society faced intense pressure not to alienate “older, conservative individuals” who provide the organization with “generous funding, time and support” through dues and donations.

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When Sam DeJarnett started working for Portland Audubon, she was interested in conservation but unfamiliar with birding.Credit...Will Matsuda for The New York Times

One donor, who was not named, was quoted in the report as saying: “If there was even the remotest thought of changing the name of National Audubon because John James Audubon, in a different time, in a different world and a different century owned, whatever it was, six slaves, I would resign from the Audubon. There’d be no further gifts from me for the Audubon.”

One student interviewed in the report as part of a focus group said, “I hate their current name and would not join" Audubon “if it keeps its current name.”

Audubon redacted names from the document to protect respondents’ privacy, and recently released the full report to employees after questions from The New York Times.

The 32-member board voted against making a change, and on March 15, the National Audubon Society announced that it was keeping its name. The group’s leaders saw the decision as a statement of neutrality, those involved in the discussions said, and as a way to avoid taking sides in the culture wars.

Later that day, when the leaders convened a virtual all-hands meeting to inform the society’s staff of the decision, comments began unfurling in the chat, as angry employees peppered them with questions. Did they understand the impact that the decision would have on morale? On reaching communities of color?

“‘It’s one thing for Audubon to be named after a slaveholder, but what we’re saying today is that we’re doubling down on it,’” said a moderator who was reading staff questions aloud, according to an audio recording obtained by The New York Times. “‘It doesn’t feel like I’m valued or welcomed here, as I used to be.’”

Ms. Gray wrote an open letter to members about the decision. “Dear Flock,” it began, “Regardless of the name we use, this organization must and will address the inequalities and injustices that have historically existed within the conservation movement,” the letter said in part.

Ms. Gray acknowledged that the organization has some work to do in reaching communities of color.

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An Audubon outing at Cape May, N.J., in 1937. The society, founded in 1905, is named for John James Audubon, a conservationist and artist who owned slaves and outspokenly opposed abolition; he died in 1851. Credit...William Eckenberg/The New York Times

Maxine Griffin Somerville, the organization’s chief people and culture officer, said the society was committed to having “an average of at least two people from underrepresented groups in our final candidate pool for at least 80 percent of our permanent and seasonal roles.”

Three board members resigned after the vote. The organization postponed its annual fund-raising gala after the Bird Union, with about 250 members, planned a protest outside the venue. The 2019 gala at the Plaza Hotel brought in $2.5 million.

Fieldstone Publishing, the maker of Audubon’s ubiquitous field guides, swiftly condemned the board’s decision, calling on its publishing partners to remove the Audubon name from the guides. Knopf said it would remove the Audubon name and logo from future guides and reprints. Fieldstone said it would donate sales proceeds from two recently published guides to the National African American Reparation Commission.

The union said retaining the name of an “enslaver” and “white supremacist” showed that Ms. Gray and the board “have no interest in following through on their commitments to cultivate a fair and equitable workplace.” The two sides have yet to agree on a labor contract.

Christian Cooper, a member of New York City chapter’s board, was among those condemning the decision. “If we fail to engage new audiences with the natural world — if concern for the welfare of our wild birds is perceived as something for ‘Whites only’ — then only a dwindling group of Americans will fight for the birds,” Mr. Cooper wrote in The Washington Post.

National Audubon Society leaders pledged to raise $25 million to support “marginalized communities,” and said there had been little change in the organization’s fundraising capabilities.

“The vast number of donors and staff continue to stay with us,” Ms. Gray said. “Our name is just part of our identity.”

Clyde McGrady is a national correspondent covering race from Washington. He previously covered race and identity for The Washington Post.
 
When Sam DeJarnett, 33, first began working at Portland Audubon, she was into wildlife conservation but didn’t know what birding was. She went on some official Audubon birding outings, “but it was all old white folks,” she said. “And I was really made to feel like an outsider, both as a woman of color — a Black woman — and as a new birder.”
Yeah welcome to birding you fat black cunt. Old birders are insufferable, stand-offish, know-it-alls, you're not special. If anything in sure the liberal nigger-worshipers of Portland were so overjoyed at having a real life sheboon in their group they gave you special attention. Same with Cooper, yeah that bitches freak out was stupid and putting the video online was funny but then he launched into the "woe-is-me" bullshit about how she tried to MURDER HIM as a black man. Meanwhile every birder who confronts a person with an offleash dog has a story about their freak outs and how they called the cops/threatened to beat your ass/destroy the park, again it's nothing special.

Anyways I haven't donated or bought anything from Audubon since 2020 but I think I'll chuck $20 at them and congratulate them for finding their balls enough to keep their own name.

Also if you want more fun 2020 race stories in the birding world look up Jason Ward.
 
The society announced in March that it was keeping the Audubon name, causing an uproar among some employees and hobbyists.
Good.

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When Sam DeJarnett started working for Portland Audubon, she was interested in conservation but unfamiliar with birding.Credit...Will Matsuda for The New York Times
Don't tell me this whale has ever been to one birdwatching trip.
 
birds01.jpg
Sam DeJarnett, a birder who worked at Portland Audubon, struggled to find inclusion in a group of predominantly older, white birders.Credit...Will Matsuda for The New York Times
Have you tried not looking like some combination of a comedy skit cannibal and a circus clown?
In the aftermath of Mr. Floyd’s murder, prominent members of the birding community urged the National Audubon Society’s board of directors to consider a name change.
Oh, hell, this again. When I picked up the latest expansion to Wingspan there was a note inside saying "You need to remove this goal from the game because did you know that some problematic people have birds named after them?"
 
Golden Gate Audubon Society picks new name to distance itself from naturalist with racist legacy
San Francisco Chronicle (archive.ph)
By Megan Fan Munce
2023-08-19 01:18:26GMT

Golden Gate Audubon Society is now officially the Golden Gate Bird Alliance, dropping its ties to a famous naturalist with a racist legacy, the organization announced Friday.

Members of the group voted to drop “Audubon” from the name in April after the National Audubon Society announced it would not change its name. A committee met weekly from late May through July to discuss a new name, which members ratified at a Thursday meeting.

Glen Phillips, executive director of the Golden Gate society, told the San Francisco Chronicle in April that the group had been considering a name change for a couple years, but thought the national organization might make a move first. Despite the National Audubon Society’s decision not to change its name, the Golden Gate Bird Alliance will still remain affiliated with it and other local chapters, the group said in its announcement.

“Our new name will make the organization more accessible to a broader range of people,” Phillips said in a statement. “With the threats facing birds today, we need everyone to be able to protect them.”

John James Audubon was a 19th century naturalist known for his documentation of avian life, according to the National Audubon Society. He also owned enslaved Black people, stole skulls from Native American graves and opposed the abolitionist movement.

Several other local chapters, including ones in Seattle and Chicago, have also voted to remove “Audubon” from their name.

The Berkeley-based chapter dates back to 1917 and has more than 3,000 members from San Francisco to the East Bay. Its new name was chosen to retain its regional descriptor while also referencing “collaboration by a broad community of people working together on behalf of birds and wildlife,” the group said in a statement.
 
John James Audubon was a 19th century naturalist known for his documentation of avian life, according to the National Audubon Society. He also owned enslaved Black people, stole skulls from Native American graves and opposed the abolitionist movement.
#BASED
Seriously I am so sick of every facet of every hobby being subject to "social justice" that it's gotten to the point I think life would have been better worldwide if we just opted for extermination instead of cheap farm equipment.
 
Golden Gate Audubon Society is now officially the Golden Gate Bird Alliance, dropping its ties to a famous naturalist with a racist legacy, the organization announced Friday.
Welp, glad that's settled then. Now we can focus on the really important matters, like 'how many racist angels can dance on the head of a pin?'
 
“Our new name will make the organization more accessible to a broader range of people,” Phillips said in a statement. “With the threats facing birds today, we need everyone to be able to protect them.”
I suspect the range will be pretty narrow but at least normal people will not have to deal with your shit anymore.

Edit for: Not narrow as in skinny mind you narrow as in thinking.
 
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Detroit Audubon to change name over namesake's racist history
Detroit Free Press (archive.ph)
By Marina Johnson
2023-10-22T19:10:41GMT

The Detroit Audubon Society is changing its name in response to national controversy over namesake John James Audubon's involvement and promotion of slavery during his lifetime.

The Detroit chapter recently announced its new organization name, along with other chapters throughout the Midwest also affiliated with the National Audubon Society.

The Detroit Audubon will adopt the name Detroit Bird Alliance, Chicago Audubon Society will adopt Chicago Bird Alliance, and Madison Audubon will adopt Badgerland Bird Alliance, according to a news release from the Detroit chapter.

The three organizations desire a more inclusive name to create unity and collaboration amongst the bird community following the national organization’s decision to retain the current name, despite research showing the 19th century naturalist was a racist who kept slaves and was an anti-abolitionist, the release said.

“Our chapters believe that bird conservation should center birds and collaboration, rather than celebrate a historical figure that is aligned with systemic racism,” said Judy Pollock, president of the Chicago Audubon, soon to be Chicago Bird Alliance.. “We are happy to be part of a new group of chapters using this name, and welcome other chapters, community members, and partners to join us in our work.”

According to the Detroit Audubon website, the once positive association with Audubon’s name drastically shifted in recent years after research was released on his support of the eugenics movement, his involvement in the anti-abolitionist movement, and his use of slaves to help with his artwork.

“We hoped National Audubon was laying the groundwork to change its name to one that would better illustrate the mission and without an honorific or eponymous title. Unfortunately, National Audubon has chosen to keep Audubon in its name,” said Detroit Audubon’s website. “Our staff, board, and many of our members believe that continued association with the Audubon name is in direct conflict to our core values and only impedes our efforts to include everyone in the work to save birds.”

Gretchen Abrams, executive director at the Detroit Audubon, said the decision took collaboration with various chapters to create a more inclusive title.

“Our approach has always been to bring nature and people together in a way that serves both,” Abrams said. “It was important for us to collaborate with other Audubon chapters — especially those in our region — in adopting a name that unifies our members and unifies us as organizations.”
 
I for one think it's pretty thoughtful for organizations that employ or otherwise work with niggers and other variations of subhuman and/or degenerate to stop sullying the name of someone as based as John James Audubon.
 
Chicago Audubon Society changes name to Chicago Bird Alliance, distancing chapter from problematic namesake
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Alysa Guffey
2023-10-23 20:17:00GMT

The Chicago Bird Alliance has taken flight.

The local organization, founded in 1971, announced Friday its new name to replace its former title of Chicago Audubon Society.

The announcement ends a monthslong process for the Chicago chapter in deciding how to distance itself from the legacy of John James Audubon, a naturalist with racist and anti-abolitionist views.

While the chapter will still operate as part of the National Audubon Society, the name “removes one possible barrier in working with different groups,” Executive Director Matt Igleski said Friday.

In rebranding, Igleski said the chapter wanted the name to be “bird forward.”

“Bird conservation should be centered around the birds,” Igleski said. “Why not put the birds first?”

In March, the National Audubon Society board of directors voted to keep its current name after a yearlong re-examination of John Audubon while reaffirming its commitment to diversity and inclusion.

“Regardless of the name we use, this organization must and will address the inequalities and injustices that have historically existed within the conservation movement,” wrote CEO Elizabeth Gray in an open letter on the decision.

Chicago’s chapter will continue to operate under the National Audubon Society and keep its signature heron logo.

Chicago joined the Detroit and southern Wisconsin chapters in taking up the name Bird Alliance.

“We’re very proud to be one of the leaders of this movement for a name that is welcoming and inclusive,” Chicago chapter President Judy Pollock said in the joint news release.

The three Midwest chapters had met to discuss names that would meet that goal yet still provide consistency in the region.

Then last month, leaders of the Chicago chapter sent a poll to members, with about 75% of people voting in favor of the Chicago Bird Alliance name, Igleski said. It beat out Birds Connect, a play on the renaming of Seattle’s local chapter.

“People were very in favor. There were not many negative comments,” Igleski said.

Brands such as the Audubon Society are different in that it is fueled by voluntary memberships, not revenue, said James O’Rourke, who studies brands with fraught and racist connections to the past as a business professor at the University of Notre Dame.

The national society cannot control its members, O’Rourke said, so there is little the society can do to prevent the rebranding of local chapters. Though he added that it is a moment for the national brand to listen carefully and see whether the angst is gaining traction.

“It is going to be a source of tension for years to come,” O’Rourke said. “The question for the Audubon Society is: Is Audubon toxic or can we live with who he is?”

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https://twitter.com/chgobirdallianc/status/1715356975381307768 (archive.ph)

The Chicago Bird Alliance organizes engaging programming for the community and advocates for birds and bird-friendly policies, including for the protection of thousands of migrating birds who crash into Chicago skyscrapers each year.

Chicago’s chapter has about 370 members, and there are roughly 400,000 Chicagoland birders with ties to the national society, Igleski said Friday. The group serves the city of Chicago and most suburbs in Cook County.
 
The Audubon society was one of my most treasured childhood memories. I would go for summer excursions to learn about local wildlife. I remember us catching bugs and then bringing them back to learn about each specific insect and put them on a board.

I donate to my local one, it maintains wetlands around my area and has some really good programs for kids, especially kids that would normally not be able to experience nature from the inner city.

So in my opinion your local Audubon is going to vary by location, but I know mine is filled with decent folk that work hard to educate about our natural environment. I havnt been in a few months but I would frequently walk its trails and visit its lodge and never saw any identity politics.
 
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