TransCanada Charitable Fund Launches Keystone XL "Good Neighbor" Charm Offensive

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TransCanada has taken a page out of former U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s playbook and deployed a public relations โ€œcharm offensiveโ€ in Texas, home of the southern leg of its Keystone XLย tar sands pipeline now known as the Gulf Coast Pipeline Project.

In the 1930s and 1940s, Roosevelt utilized a โ€œgood neighbor policyโ€œย โ€” conceptualized today as โ€œsoft powerโ€ by U.S. foreign policy practitioners โ€” to curry favor in Latin America and win over its public. Recently, TransCanada announced it would do something similar in Texas with its newly formed TransCanada Charitable Fund.

TransCanada has pledged $125,000 to 18 Texas counties over the next four years, funds it channeled through the East Texas Communities Foundation. In February,ย the company announced the first non-profit recipients of its initial $50,000 grant cycle.ย ย 

โ€œThe fund is designed to help improve East Texas communities and the lives of their residents through grants to qualifying non-profit organizations in the counties where TransCanada pipeline operations and projects exist,โ€ explainedย a press release. โ€œAll funded projects and programs fall within three charitable categories: community, safety, and theย environment.โ€

TransCanada utilizes the โ€œgood neighborโ€ language in deploying its own public relationsย pitch.

โ€œAt TransCanada, being a good neighbor and contributing to communities is an integral part of our success,โ€ TransCanada’s Corey Gouletย said in a press release. โ€œThe establishment of the fund is another example of our commitment to long-term community investment and our dedication to the people of Eastย Texas.โ€

Fund Launched After Safety Issuesย Revealed

Less than a week after Public Citizen published its November 2013 report addressing safety issues discovered during the construction phase of Keystone XL‘s southern leg,ย TransCanada announced the launch of its charitableย fund.ย 

Public Citizen‘s report, โ€œConstruction Problems Raise Questions About the Integrity of the Pipeline,โ€ย found 250 miles of the pipelines’ 485-mile route had faulty welding, dents and several parts patched up, among otherย anomalies.


Photo Credit: Publicย Citizen

Julia Trigg Crawford, a Lamar County resident (one of the counties eligible for TransCanada’s grants) best known as the landowner who filed a major eminent domain lawsuit against TransCanada for Keystone XL South, told DeSmogBlog she believes the timing of the fund’s launch isย suspect.

โ€œTexans are smart enough to see what’s going on here,โ€ Crawfordย said.

โ€œBefore the heat got turned up with the Public Citizen report, TransCanada’s community involvement consisted of half-page newspaper ads across Northeast Texas saying, ‘We want to be more than just a pipeline company. We want to be a trusted neighbor.’โ€

Environment and Safetyย Grants

Despite the concerns about the ecological impacts and safety issues related to Keystone XL‘s southern half (or perhaps because of them), environment and safety are two of the categories TransCanada will give grants to out of theย fund.

Safety grant โ€œprojects will enable emergency personnel to respond quickly and effectively to local needs and focus on emergency preparedness, accident prevention, and education and training,โ€ says TransCanada on its grant application form, while environment grant โ€œprograms will conserve important habitat, protect species at risk, and educate individuals about the importance of theย environment.โ€

Non-profits are eligible for grants of up toย $5,000.ย 

Not Charming, Ratherย Offensive

The $125,000 TransCanada has pledged to its charitable fund equates to 0.04 percent of the expense of building Keystone XL Southย and itsย โ€œfork in the road,โ€ the Houston Lateral Project.ย 

TransCanada says constructing Keystone XL South and Houston Lateralย rang them up to a grand total of $3 billionย in its 2013 Annual Report.ย Put another way, that meansย $400 for every $1 million it spent to buildย it.

The fewer than pennies to the dollar the company has offered as part of its charitable fund is clearly charming to some of the grantees, based on their public reactions after winning theย cash.

But to those concerned aboutย climate change and ecological costs of sending vast amounts of tar sandsย oil via TransCanada’s pipelines to Texas refineries on a daily basisย โ€” located in towns such as Port Arthur and Houston that are akin to โ€œsacrifice zonesโ€ย โ€” the company’s latest PR maneuver is just downrightย offensive.

As Crawford put it bluntly, โ€œTransCanada’s hush money is as dirty as itsย oil.โ€

Image Credit:ย East Texas Communitiesย Foundation

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Steve Horn is the owner of the consultancy Horn Communications & Research Services, which provides public relations, content writing, and investigative research work products to a wide range of nonprofit and for-profit clients across the world. He is an investigative reporter on the climate beat for over a decade and former Research Fellow for DeSmog.

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