Hi everyone,
Recently, I decided to read one of ACE’s charity evaluations in detail, and I was extremely disappointed with what I read. I felt that ACE's charity evaluation was long and wordy, but said very little.
Upon further investigation, I realized that ACE’s methodology for evaluating charities often rates charities more cost-effective for spending more money to achieve the exact same results. This rewards charities for being inefficient, and punishes them for being efficient.
ACE’s poor evaluation process leads to ineffective charities receiving recommendations, and many animals are suffering as a result. After realizing this, I decided to start a new charity evaluator for animal charities called Vetted Causes. We wrote our first charity evaluation assessing ACE, and you can read it by clicking the attached link.
Best,
Isaac
Hi Ben,
Thank you for your response!
I will address your points, but first I would like to clarify what we believe the crux of the problem is with LIC being deemed a top 11 animal charity by ACE.
In Problem 1 of our review, we state the following:
We go on how to detail how if LIC had spent less than $2,000 on the lawsuit (saving over $200,000) and achieved the exact same outcome, ACE would have assigned LIC a Cost-Effectiveness Score of 1.8. The lowest Cost-Effectiveness Score ACE assigned to any charity in 2023 was 3.3. This means if LIC had spent less than $2,000 on the lawsuit, LIC's Cost-Effectiveness Score would have been significantly worse than any charity ACE evaluated in 2023.
Instead, LIC spent over $200,000 on the lawsuit, and LIC rewarded them for this inefficiency by giving them a Cost-Effectiveness Score of 3.7, and deeming LIC a top 11 animal charity.
This is the crux of the problem, and it is really an issue with ACE deeming LIC a top 11 animal charity, not with LIC itself. ACE elected to give LIC this distinction, and LIC merely accepted it.
I would also like to note encouraging or valuing lawsuits that fail to state valid legal claims (but burden defendants/garner publicity) risks causing the legal system to take animal rights/welfare cases less seriously. If courts observe a pattern of weak or legally insufficient cases being filed for publicity/to burden the defendant, they will become skeptical of all animal rights/welfare lawsuits--even those with strong legal merit. Prior to being deemed a top 11 animal charity by ACE, every single lawsuit filed by LIC failed to state a valid legal claim.
ACE’s review of LIC contains a section titled “Our Assessment of Legal Impact for Chickens’ Cost Effectiveness”, and the quote you have provided is not part of this section. Our entire review of ACE is about ACE incorrectly calculating cost-effectiveness; consequently, this is the section we decided to focus on. ACE’s review of LIC is over 5,000 words, and we cannot include every quote from ACE’s review of LIC.
Additionally, the quote you’ve provided gives no metrics to gauge how much media attention was received. If media attention is a strong justification for stating a $200,000 lawsuit that failed to state a valid legal claim is “particularly cost-effective” (as ACE put it), ACE should provide metrics regarding how much media attention was received. Ironically, the Facebook post you mentioned appears to have more metrics than ACE's review of LIC regarding amount of media attention caused by the Costco lawsuit, since the Facebook post lists the numbers of likes and comments the post received.
The Facebook post you referred to received 56 likes and 83 comments. To my understanding, the post is also not pinned to the top, it is simply the last post the Facebook page has made (it appears that the page has not posted in over 2 years). I do not think this is very strong evidence that LIC’s $200,000 lawsuit that was dismissed for failing to state a valid legal claim was “particularly cost-effective” (as ACE put it).
Correct, the Costco board took official action by rejecting LIC’s demands.
Could you please define what “a bunch of bad publicity for Costco” means? And could you provide evidence that this level of publicity was caused by LIC’s lawsuit?
Costco’s board formed a committee to review and investigate LIC’s demands. The committee then recommended that the board reject the demand, which they did. This does not appear to be a very good outcome.
It is ACE’s job to write charity reviews that provide the empirics necessary to answer questions like the one you’ve asked. From your own statement, it seems like ACE has failed to do this. ACE did not provide metrics on how much media attention the Costco lawsuit caused, and did not provide any insight into how much of a burden it was to form a committee to review and investigate LIC's demands (I don’t recall ACE’s review even mentioning this).