Elk Network$30 Million Torstenson Family Endowment a “Game Changer” for RMEF Conservation

News Releases | March 1, 2013

March 1, 2013

$30 Million Torstenson Family Endowment a “Game Changer” for RMEF Conservation

MISSOULA, Mont.—The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation is the recipient of one of the largest endowments ever gifted to a hunter-based, wildlife conservation organization. The $30 million Torstenson Family Endowment will allow RMEF to vastly accelerate the rate at which its carries out its mission to ensure the future of elk, other wildlife, their habitat and our hunting heritage.

“This is a monumental game-changer for RMEF,” said David Allen, RMEF president and CEO. “Thanks to the generosity of the Torstenson family, this endowment allows RMEF to expand Bob Torstenson’s passion and vision for wildlife and conservation in ways we could have never imagined.”

The Torstenson Family Endowment (TFE) comes as a result of the sale of the Torstenson Wildlife Center, former known as the Double H Ranch, a sprawling 93,403 acre ranch in west-central New Mexico gifted to the RMEF by Bob Torstenson in 2002.

RMEF will use proceeds from the TFE to further its core mission programs:  permanent land protection, habitat stewardship, elk restoration and hunting heritage.

“The impact this endowment will have on RMEF’s on-the-ground projects is incredibly far-reaching,” said Blake Henning, RMEF vice president of Lands and Conservation. “This gives us the potential to increase our mission accomplishments substantially. RMEF plans to invest half a million dollars this year alone toward improving elk habitat and supporting hunting heritage projects.”

The TFE allows RMEF to increase project funding by attracting matching funds both from the private and public sectors. It also allows RMEF to much more quickly meet and head off the habitat changes and challenges taking place across the United States.

RMEF also maintains a conservation easement on the entire 93,403.4 acres of deeded land which stretches between two mountain ranges—the Datils and the Gallinas—and two portions of the Cibola National Forest. It harbors thickly timbered ridges, deep coulees and steep hillsides. At the property’s center is an expansive plain, 80-acre lake and accompanying riparian habitat. It is home to elk, deer, pronghorns, mountain lions, coyotes, quail and a variety of song bird and other species. The easement looks the same today as when Bob Torstenson originally placed it on the property, meaning the habitat remains conserved and protected forever.