Keep the map public

KEEP THE 1080 WATCH MAP PUBLIC

The 1080 Watch Map is free to use because this information should be public. But keeping it updated, auditing the gap between chemical controls and public disclosure and challenging government disclosure gaps takes work. Choose what this public-interest work is worth to you.

FreePublic access
MonthlyMap updates
NationalExpansion work
Why this matters

This map should not have to exist.

If a lethal and indiscriminate poison is being laid across parks, reserves, public lands and private landscapes, communities should not have to pay to understand what governments have publicly listed near them.

The 1080 Watch Map turns scattered public information into public accountability. Each monthly update helps people check their area, download a snapshot, ask responsible offices for answers, and see where government disclosure is still failing.

That is why the map remains free — and why we ask the people who value it to help fund it. Choose the contribution that reflects what this public-interest work is worth to you.

Searchable

A public map that lets people search sites, regions and nearby baiting programs.

Monthly

Updated snapshots that show what changed from one month to the next.

Actionable

Prefilled emails help you ask responsible authorities for answers.

Shareable

Downloadable briefs support media, MP and community advocacy.

Choose your contribution

Fund the work behind the map.

The map is free to use because this information should be public. Your donation helps fund the monthly research, data collection, technical maintenance, auditing the gap between chemical controls and public disclosure, and campaign pressure behind the 1080 Watch Map.

Choose what this public-interest work is worth to you. Monthly donations are especially powerful because this is an ongoing accountability project, not a one-off launch.

Secure donation module
Secure donation

Choose your contribution

Use the secure Action Network form below to choose the amount and frequency that feels right. Monthly support is strongest for ongoing map updates, but one-off gifts help too.

Secure Payment Monthly or One-Off
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What happens next

Your gift keeps public pressure moving.

When supporters fund the map, they help turn scattered 1080 notices into a repeatable accountability cycle: collect the data, publish the snapshot, activate supporters, brief decision-makers, expand the national audit, and keep asking for transparency.

01

Track

We monitor public alerts, notices and operator updates so listed 1080 baiting programs can be consistently captured.

02

Publish

We collect the data, update the interactive map, and produce monthly updates that you can save and share.

03

Pressure

We use the map to help communities, media and decision-makers ask responsible offices for evidence, monitoring and non-target animal protections.

Questions you may ask

Is this different from a general donation?

Yes. This page is specifically for donations to fund the 1080 Watch Map, national transparency work, and the monthly research, technical and campaign labour needed to keep the tool public.

How much should I give?

Choose what this public-interest work is worth to you. A small gift helps keep the tool public; a larger or monthly gift helps make the work more sustainable.

Why prioritise monthly giving?

The map is a recurring accountability project. Monthly gifts help make ongoing updates, maintenance and public snapshots more sustainable.

What does my contribution help fund?

Your contribution helps fund the monitoring of alerts, verifying sources, data updates, maintaining the map, producing monthly updates, and the audit work required to compare chemical controls with public disclosure.

Where can I see the map this supports?

You can view the 1080 Watch Map at ban1080.org.au/map.

Keep public 1080 information accessible.

If the map helped you understand what is publicly listed — or what governments still fail to disclose — please choose a contribution to help keep it free, updated and auditing the gap between chemical controls and public disclosure.