Jason Miller
AH veteran
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2018
- Messages
- 234
- Reaction score
- 571
- Location
- Africa/ Colorado/ Texas
- Media
- 6
- Hunted
- South Africa, Namibia
So I have a question for the hunting outfitters in Africa,
So I work for a large NGO in Kenya, been their development director for five years. I oversee capital projects, sustainability projects, lead multiple trips with hundreds of guests per year. I also consult for multiple other NGO's both Africa based and US/ Europe based working in Africa. Most of all I am VERY aware of "When helping hurts" and the damage NGO's can do to communities when "meaning well" I refuse to work for any organization that contributes to the "Charity Mindset" we see so much in Africa. I have been working and living in over 13 countries since the 1990's and I have raised tens of millions in the US to help in Africa...
Some of the organizations I work with handle water projects, solar power, building schools, sustainable farms, chicken growing operations, fish growing and on and on.
I attend the DSC show every year for the past 25 years, I meet my large donors there and we plan a fun few days, I usually share a booth with a PH based in SA that I bring some of my donors to hunt once a year and then we go to Kenya / Rwanda together to see some of the fruits of their investments.
While at the Safari show something interesting happened as one of my donor/clients said that a large hunting outfit wanted to speak with me. The outfitter had heard from a mutual client about the work I do. They explained that in many cases when a PH or outfitter applies for a hunting block or concession they are required or they offer to give some kind of aid to the local communities within the hunting block, not only to the locals get free meat and work for the outfitter but for example the outfitter will promise schools or water wells or things that will offer a better quality of life for the locals. He stated that they wanted someone such as myself to help implement these ideas as they were hunters and didn't really have the capacity to oversee building schools etc and asked if I would be interested. Also they did not want to go into starting and maintaining a non profit etc. for these projects even though they had money already set aside for projects.
So after speaking with this particular outfitter we decided that a solar power plant would be great to start with in some of the villages that have no access to power. I contacted my friend who I have worked with in Malawi who supplies shipping containers that have been modified into mobile solar power plants that can run a small village, raised some additional funding to import the containers and were off an running for late 2023.
So, all this to ask, when applying for hunting blocks are outfitters required to offer aid (like building schools etc) to the local communities and if so, would there be a need for an outside person to facilitate these projects so the outfitter can focus on what they do best? Or was this just a fluke situation where a mutual client thought he was helping out ....
So I work for a large NGO in Kenya, been their development director for five years. I oversee capital projects, sustainability projects, lead multiple trips with hundreds of guests per year. I also consult for multiple other NGO's both Africa based and US/ Europe based working in Africa. Most of all I am VERY aware of "When helping hurts" and the damage NGO's can do to communities when "meaning well" I refuse to work for any organization that contributes to the "Charity Mindset" we see so much in Africa. I have been working and living in over 13 countries since the 1990's and I have raised tens of millions in the US to help in Africa...
Some of the organizations I work with handle water projects, solar power, building schools, sustainable farms, chicken growing operations, fish growing and on and on.
I attend the DSC show every year for the past 25 years, I meet my large donors there and we plan a fun few days, I usually share a booth with a PH based in SA that I bring some of my donors to hunt once a year and then we go to Kenya / Rwanda together to see some of the fruits of their investments.
While at the Safari show something interesting happened as one of my donor/clients said that a large hunting outfit wanted to speak with me. The outfitter had heard from a mutual client about the work I do. They explained that in many cases when a PH or outfitter applies for a hunting block or concession they are required or they offer to give some kind of aid to the local communities within the hunting block, not only to the locals get free meat and work for the outfitter but for example the outfitter will promise schools or water wells or things that will offer a better quality of life for the locals. He stated that they wanted someone such as myself to help implement these ideas as they were hunters and didn't really have the capacity to oversee building schools etc and asked if I would be interested. Also they did not want to go into starting and maintaining a non profit etc. for these projects even though they had money already set aside for projects.
So after speaking with this particular outfitter we decided that a solar power plant would be great to start with in some of the villages that have no access to power. I contacted my friend who I have worked with in Malawi who supplies shipping containers that have been modified into mobile solar power plants that can run a small village, raised some additional funding to import the containers and were off an running for late 2023.
So, all this to ask, when applying for hunting blocks are outfitters required to offer aid (like building schools etc) to the local communities and if so, would there be a need for an outside person to facilitate these projects so the outfitter can focus on what they do best? Or was this just a fluke situation where a mutual client thought he was helping out ....