Police play final show in New York where they started 1st American tour

By: Sara Kugler, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK - The Police will cap their reunion tour with a final concert this summer in New York, where they started their first U.S. tour 30 years ago.
At a news conference Tuesday in Times Square, frontman Sting, guitarist Andy Summers and drummer Stewart Copeland also said they wanted to make a lasting contribution to New York.
They said they would donate $1 million to a city program that aims to plant one million trees by 2017.
"We have a long history here," Sting said. "We wanted to leave a gift with our last performance that would keep on giving year after year, decade after decade - the gift of trees does do that."
The Police split up in 1984 but reunited for an anniversary tour last year. They said details about the date, venue and tickets for the final show will be released soon. Proceeds will benefit public television.
"We kicked off our very first American tour at CBGB's in 1978, and this summer, 30 years later, our journey will come full circle as we play our final show here in New York City," the group said in a statement.
The CBGB nightclub closed in October 2006 after 33 years in downtown New York.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the group's donation to the tree program, plus $1 million in matching money from the city, would pay for the planting of 10,000 trees citywide.
In a nod to one of the Police's hits, Bloomberg said the gift helps "ensure that every breath we take is cleaner and greener."
Bloomberg also praised the Police as a group that has set a philanthropic standard.
But Sting's charitable organization, the Rainforest Foundation, has come under criticism recently for the percentage of contributions it spends on programs.
The independent philanthropy watchdog, Charity Navigator, said the Rainforest Foundation spent less than 61 per cent of its revenue for the 2006 fiscal year. The organization, which tracks the 5,000 largest charities in the country, rates Rainforest Foundation with zero stars.
Charity Navigator spokeswoman Sandra Miniutti said most charities spend 75 per cent or more, and that only about two per cent of the charities it follows get a zero-star rating.
Asked Tuesday about the claims against his foundation, Sting noted that in the charity's 20-year history, it has raised $25 million and spent more than $21 million, or 84 per cent.
"That's a very good record," he said.
It is unfair to look at the organization's yearly expenditures, he added, because it operates on a two-year cycle.
"It's not only misleading but irresponsible to reflect our numbers in any other way," he said.



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