Saturday, May 31, 2025, 3:37AM |  55°
MENU
Advertisement
Guillermo Perez, president of the Pittsburgh Chapter of Labor Council for Latin American Advancement leads protestors in a chant during a rally to begin a public campaign calling on Pittsburgh's leading civic and environmental nonprofit organizations to refuse funding from the Colcom Foundation outside the foundation's office at Two Gateway Center downtown Thursday, Mar. 5, 2020 in Pittsburgh.
3
MORE

Activists launch campaign against Colcom Foundation

Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette

Activists launch campaign against Colcom Foundation

“Dime con quien andas y te dire quien eres ... Tell me who you associate with, and I’ll tell you who you are.”

In opening remarks, Guillermo Perez ended his statement by speaking in Spanish, then translating. It was a key point that would be stressed during a rally Thursday morning Downtown outside the office of the Colcom Foundation — a group known for its historic immigrant population-control campaigns and hefty funding of national immigration-reform groups.

Several members of local immigrant rights activist groups gathered near Stanwix Street and the Gateway T station and held signs critical of Colcom, asking that local civic and environmental nonprofit groups reject support from them. Members from the Pittsburgh Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, Thomas Merton Center, Veterans for Peace and Bend the Arc participated.

Advertisement

Moderated by Mr. Perez, president the Pittsburgh chapter of the LCLAA, additional members from each group also spoke and called for Pittsburgh to “drop Colcom,” and reject support from the organization during the brief rally that lasted less than an hour. The occasion marked the launching of a public campaign calling for thousands of groups in southwestern Pennsylvania to end their association with Colcom.

Founded in 1996 by Cordelia Scaife May, a philanthropic conservationist who served as chairman until her death in 2005, the Colcom Foundation has poured millions into a network of groups that have backed policies now pursued by President Donald Trump: militarizing the border, capping legal immigration, prioritizing skills over family ties for entry and reducing access to public benefits for migrants, according to the New York Times.

The foundation supports and helps fund many groups that have nothing to do with immigration reform or population control, however. The American Bird Conservancy, Tree Pittsburgh and the League Of Women Voters Of PA Citizen Education are a few examples.

“I cannot say that they’ve only done bad things,” said Ben Gutschow, a junior at Winchester Thurston School and member of the youth-led environmental movement Fridays for the Future PGH. “Planting trees, providing crucial funds and promoting a positive quality of life, I consider a good thing [by the Colcom Foundation]. But if we must compromise our values to allow discrimination, there should be no such place for this foundation here in Pittsburgh.”

Advertisement

“I am tired and fed up with being told to go back to my country,” Mr. Gutschow said during Thursday’s protest.

In line with remarks made by Mr. Perez during the rally’s opening, others called for local business entities to “cease legitimizing” the Colcom name, “until they divest from this mission of hatred and fear,” said Dan Galvin, of Veterans for Peace.

“Colcom’s racist ideology shifts the blame toward the blameless and away from those who are most responsible for the environmental threats we face — namely those who poison our planet through fossil fuels.”

At the end of Thursday’s protest, participants handed out green pieces of paper listing a number for the foundation. “Call the Colcom Foundation and ask them to STOP funding white nationalist hate groups,” the paper reads. 

Several local civic and environmental groups are listed on the foundation’s website as major grant recipients last year, including the Federation for American Immigration Reform and the Center for Immigration Studies. Nearly 70 Pittsburgh organizations received grants of $50,000 or more in the fiscal year ending fin June 2019, according the foundation’s website. The total amount of grants paid that fiscal year was $30,709,777. 

Despite the criticism, the foundation’s vice president, John Rohe, said Thursday the foundation is “pro-immigrant, and has zero-tolerance for the white nationalists.” As the child of German immigrants himself, he said it’s a misconception to think the organization is against immigrants. 

“To be concerned about the level of immigrants due to overpopulation is not anti-immigrant,” he said. “We hope to nurture the American dream for people who do come here.”

The foundation’s goal, according to Mr. Rohe, is to consider the long-term sustainable level of immigration. “How do we protect jobs and wages for underprivileged people in the U.S.?” he said. Protesters claimed Thursday that the foundation hides anti-immigrant sentiments in environmentalism. Yet, Mr. Rohe said he invites everyone, including the groups who protested Thursday, to an “informed conversation” in a “pro-immigrant, racially neutral manner.” 

“The long-term solution is to think of what level of immigration incentivizes employers to pay a living wage and to employ dignity upon labor,” he said. “If you flood the labor pool, wages will be reduced, competition for jobs will reduce opportunities. We have 40 states that are confronting water issues in the foreseeable future.”

“If we ignore these issues, it will be the underprivileged minorities who will be the first to pay the price.”

 

Lacretia Wimbley: lwimbley@post-gazette.com, 412-263-1510 or on Twitter @Wimbleyjourno.

First Published: March 5, 2020, 4:46 p.m.

RELATED
Comments Disabled For This Story
Partners
Advertisement
President Donald Trump arrives to speak at U.S. Steel Mon Valley Works-Irvin Plant, Friday, May 30, 2025, in West Mifflin, Pa.
1
news
Trump announces new tariffs, bonuses and no layoffs in touting U.S. Steel-Nippon deal
Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker T.J. Watt (90) talks with linebackers coach Aaron Curry as they walk off the field during halftime of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024, in Philadelphia. The Eagles defeated the Steelers 27-13.
2
sports
Paul Zeise: Giving T.J. Watt a historic big-money deal would be bad business for the Steelers
Guest take photos ahead of President Donald Trump's rally at U.S. Steel's Irvin Works in West Mifflin on Friday, May 30, 2025."on Friday May 30, 2025.
3
business
Trump is visiting the Mon Valley to tout the U.S. Steel-Nippon deal. Here's what we know
The Downtown Pittsburgh skyline, with the view from Station Square on Thursday, May 30, 2024.
4
news
Pittsburgh leaders fear for immigrants after city, county land on Trump list of sanctuary jurisdictions
The full cast of "Hershey," releasing in 2026, has been revealed.
5
a&e
'Hershey' movie announces full cast for Western Pa.-shot production
Guillermo Perez, president of the Pittsburgh Chapter of Labor Council for Latin American Advancement leads protestors in a chant during a rally to begin a public campaign calling on Pittsburgh's leading civic and environmental nonprofit organizations to refuse funding from the Colcom Foundation outside the foundation's office at Two Gateway Center downtown Thursday, Mar. 5, 2020 in Pittsburgh.  (Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette)
Avigail Oren with Bend the Arc Pittsburgh speaks at a protest to begin a public campaign calling on Pittsburgh's leading civic and environmental nonprofit organizations to refuse funding from Colcom Foundation outside the foundation's office at Two Gateway Center downtown Thursday, Mar. 5, 2020 in Pittsburgh.  (Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette)
Dee Kochirka from Bethel Park joined the Thomas Merton Center, Veterans for Peace, Bend the Arc and other social justice organizations in a rally to begin a public campaign calling on Pittsburgh's leading civic and environmental nonprofit organizations to refuse funding from Colcom Foundation outside their the foundation's office at Two Gateway Center downtown Thursday, Mar. 5, 2020 in Pittsburgh.  (Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette)
Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette
Advertisement
LATEST local
Advertisement
TOP
Email a Story