(The others are Medicine Hat and Central Alberta Pregnancy Care Centre.)
Hinton CPC seems to be doing business as West Yellowhead Pregnancy Care Centre; the address is the same on its Canadian Revenue Agency (CRA) annual filings.
The first thing to know about Hinton is that it's pretty small, with a population of 9,640 souls as of the 2011 census.
Another thing about HInton is that it has a photo radar system, the proceeds of which are doled out to deserving community organizations. More on that in a bit.
And now we've run out of things to say about Hinton.
The fake clinic seems a bit shy for these sorts of organizations. Its website is under construction and its Facebook page is rather desultorily maintained.
It is a member of the
I found a profile of the outfit in the local paper from 2007.
The pregnancy centre is a faith-based organization made up of volunteers from various Hinton churches. Church members also make up the board that operates behind the scenes.Now to the CRA filings.
…
The centre is made possible by donations from churches, local businesses and the United Way. In addition, the centre does three fundraisers per year including a banquet in October, a baby bottle campaign and usually a spring fundraiser. . .
Giffin said that his organization hasn't had much luck obtaining government grants, but that they are going to try again.
2011
2012
2013
Expenses and revenue seem to run at around $100K a year. That's pretty impressive considering that costs at the Medicine Hat fake clinic, with a population six times Hinton's, run about $60K. (Maybe Medicine Hat has competition? Maybe the sluts in Hinton are extra slutty?)
And hey look, the Hinton fake clinic has been successful in getting the government money they were coveting back in 2007.
Some of that would be from the Alberta Lottery Foundation. From 2009 to 2012, it received $50K from ALF or more than half of all such funds given out to fake clinics in the province.
But the really genius part is that it has tapped into another source of public funds -- the aforementioned photo radar tribute.
In April this year, the local paper reported that it had done rather nicely.
Quality of Life grants were doled out last week, with a total of $97,116 for 18 local community groups.So unsuspecting Albertans have TWO ways to contribute involuntarily to the fake clinic: through their lottery tickets and their traffic tickets.
Town council approved the grants at the April 15 meeting. Nineteen applicants had requested $281,068 in funding, which is nearly triple the $100,000 available. Recommendations to council on how to award the available funds were made by the Grant Funding Advisory Committee, which has five voting members. Quality of Life grants are allocated from photo radar fees. . .
The West Yellowhead Pregnancy Care Centre received the largest amount of core funding applied for ($10,000).
If one is of a religious, anti-choice, misogynist bent, it's beauty. One can say: Well, sheee-it, I didn't win the lottery/I got a damn speeding ticket, but at least the money is going to a Christ-fearing, slut-shaming, human rights-denying outfit.
Of course, if one is not of a religious, anti-choice, misogynist bent, one might say: Well, sheee-it. WTF?
You gotta admire these Christers though. Tricksy with pregnancy/abortion information, tricksy with fund-raising.
h/t to Kathy Dawson for the photo radar link
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