Wildsight is an environmental advocacy group headquartered in Kimberly BC. It is an active participant in East Kootenay land use discussions and decisions. It is a registered charity and is required to file annual financial returns with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).
A financial summary extracted from its CRA filings is shown below. Wildsight does not disclose this financial information in its annual report on its web site.

This cry of a threat to the Flathead and environmental fear mongering has been going on for decades and oddly enough the special values have not been harmed by the province’s management of the region but in fact enhanced if we can believe any of the environmental groups’ rhetoric.
The Geological Survey of Canada found oil seeps in the Flathead in 1892 and since then the Flathead has seen continuous human activities over the past century including logging and fighting a major pine beetle outbreak in the Akamina/Kishinena.
The parks are in danger? What is the threat? Is it mining, oil and gas? Tel us why you are doing this, tell us who funds your group for $1 million per year (your friends in the USA).
You say you don't want a park, but what do you want? You say that mining and oil and gas has priority, but why has the Lodgepole project been sidelined for more than four years and BP has withdrawn their request for permits to the Flathead?
I feel it is important to provide relevant information on the other side of the debate in relation to the proposed National Park for the Flathead Valley. Contrary to what the media has portrayed along with the multimillion-dollar lobby groups of Wildsight and the Sierra Club of B.C, the claim that the majority of residents of the East Kootenays favor a National Park is misleading.
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The mountain pine beetle has been the most important forest insect pest in the Province of British Columbia for decades. One of the most significant of the outbreaks of this insect occurred in the southeast corner of the Province, in the Flathead River drainage, during the late 1970's and early 1980's.
It is rumoured that Hillary Clinton may wish to add her name to the list of proponents for a National Park in the Flathead Valley of South Eastern BC. It is a concern of BC residents that many voices from the US have jumped on this "bandwagon" without doing their homework or taking into consideration the real needs, local wishes, or the economic consequences to British Columbians.
Ever since we started grossly subsidizing post-secondary education and indulging of the bootless caprices of youth, university graduates in the social sciences and humanities have been churned out in preposterous numbers without any particularly desired or useful skills or talents. Otherwise cast adrift in an economy that places greater value on usefulness and productivity, a massive industry in NGOs, academia and professional advocacy groups has been generated to meet the demand for their employment, and subsidized in force by politicians who rightfully see them as their perfect constituents, demanding political action in accordance with the principles that enrich their livelihoods.
The only practical aspect of their education has been the art of grant proposals, and the utter vacancy of their endeavours compels them to believe in the good works of the requisite form rationales. The media are honorary members of their fraternity, famously friendly with them as the source of quotes and context for the sensationally baneful and harping missionary news of the day. Politicians defer to the excesses of their loudest subsidized constituencies not because they believe for an instant their imprecations or care about their fastidious causes but because each one of them offers to them the chance to compete for distribution of their advertising, advocacy and research slush funds.