Whale research is booming

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

KAILUA KONA, Hawaii– – Ocean
Mammal Institute volunteers tried apparently unsuccessfully
to amplify last-minute opposition to
Surveillance Towed Array Sonar System Low
Frequency Sound testing northwest of Hawaii,
begun by the U.S. Navy in February, scheduled to
continue through March.
The area is “immediately adjacent to the
Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National
Marine Sanctuary,” explains a newly leaked August
1997 memo from Hawaii Division of Aquatic
Resources staffer Emily Gardner to state Board of
Land and Natural Resources chair Michael D.
Wilson. ANIMAL PEOPLE obtained the memo
from Carroll Cox of EnviroWatch, who said he
received it from an anonymous source.

Read more

MARINE MAMMALS

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

Days before former U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service CITES
Operations Branch chief Susan
Lieberman was promoted to head the
Office of Scientific Authority ( page
14), she told ANIMAL PEOPLE that
while the Makah Tribal Council h a s
reportedly “made assurances to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration that” the grey whales it
intends to kill in Washington coastal
waters this fall “will be used exclusively
for local consumption and ceremonial
purposes, and will not be sold or offered
for sale, the USFWS has not had any
official communication with the Makah
Tribal Council on this issue. In the
event that the Service does communicate
officially with the Makah Tribal
Council on this issue,” Lieberman continued,

Read more

OBITUARIES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

Max Corkill, 50, his motorcycling
cat Rastus, and sidecar passenger
Gaynor Martin, 48, died on January 20
about twenty miles from their home in New
Plymouth, New Zealand, when a car hit
them head-on. Corkill found Rastus about
nine years ago as an abandoned kitten at a
motorcycling meet in Canada. They moved
from Canada to New Zealand in 1994, but
planned to return to Canada this year with
Martin. Riding everywhere with Corkill in a
custom-made zipper pouch, Rastus was a
major fundraiser for the Royal New Zealand
SPCA. “Max and Rastus were completely
irreplaceable,” mourned RNZSPCA committee
chair Jackie Poles. Hundreds of bikers
turned out for their funeral.

Read more

Saga of a running dog

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

MEDFORD, Oregon––The Oregon law
protecting livestock from canine harassment came
under fire as a February 17 execution date approached
for Nadas, a collie/Malamute mix held by Jackson
County since September 1996 for allegedly repeatedly
chasing a neighbor’s horse.
Nadas’ owner, Sean Roach, was convicted
of criminal mischief for appearing at the county shelter
wearing a clown suit, in an apparent attempt to
recover Nadas on Halloween 1996. Roach and Nadas
were represented in subsequent appeals by Lake
Oswego attorney/activists Robert and Gail Babcock,
who took the case––unsuccessfully––to the Oregon
Supreme Court. The Babcocks, allied with Portland
activist Roger Troen, have long opposed Oregon and
Portland/Multnomah County dangerous dog laws.

Read more

ANIMAL CONTROL, RESCUE, & SHELTERING

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

Not doing the job
“Fearing lawsuits charging poor
enforcement” of public safety and
humane laws, Los Angeles city attorney
James Hahn’s office in January moved “to
change city law so that the Animal Regulation
Department no longer is bound to
impound abused or neglected animals on
private property,” Los Angeles Daily News
reporter Patrick McGreevy revealed on
January 29. “The department also would no
longer have to keep detailed records on all
impounded animals, a change that would
reduce the city’s liability is a pet is killed by
mistake,” McGreevy continued. The effort
was delayed, pending public hearings, by
city councillor Laura Chick. Hahn’s office
in late 1997 defended the Animal Regulation
Department against a suit by C i t i z e n s
for a Humane Los Angeles, who alleged
that former Animal Regulation Department
head Gary Olsen for at least eight months
improperly ignored an illegal cat shelter
housing more than 600 cats, to avoid the
political and fiscal fallout that might have
resulted from closing it and seizing the cats.

Read more

GREYHOUNDS

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

Arkansas state representative Ben
McGee (D-Marion), 54, was indicted on
January 14 for allegedly taking $20,000 from
Southland Racing Corportation and $2,000
from Arkansas Greyhound Association president
Darby Henry and member Carroll Blair to
push bills favoring their interests. McGee was
also charged with allegedly extorting funds
from a suspected drug dealer, and with evading
taxes 1984-1988. Elected to the Arkansas
legislature in 1989, McGee receives just $1
per legislative paycheck because the balance
has been garnisheed in settlement of unpaid
taxes on beer sold by a liquor store he formerly
owned. His total tax debt, said the indictment,
is $511,177. Reported Noel E. Oman
of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, “The
Southland track employed McGee from 1967
to 1977. His wife Rose also worked there,
most recently in 1991. His son Ben Jr. was
employed until recently by the Arkansas
Racing Commission as a judge at the track.

Read more

Savoir

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

PARIS––An estimated 130,000 to
150,000 French hunters mobbed Paris on
Valentine’s Day to protest a European Union
directive that France must protect migratory
birds. Headed by leaders of both the
Communist Party and the far-right National
Front, the hunters repeatedly hanged French
environment minister and Green Party member
Dominique Voynet in effigy.
“Men with whips drove forward a
pack of dogs and a wild pig at the head of the
parade,” Jean-Marie Godard reported for
Associated Press. “The marchers sounded
hunting horns and tossed firecrackers the
length of the protest route.”

Read more

Horse stuff

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

SAN FRANCISCO––Horse gentling
expert and racehorse trainer Monty
Roberts’ account of being abused by his
policeman father, forming the opening chapter
of his runaway best-selling autobiography
The Man Who Listens to Horses, is fiction,
family and longtime friends asserted in an
expose by Eric Brazil of the San Francisco
Examiner, published on January 11.
They also refuted Roberts’ claim
that he learned his gentling method during a
wild horse round-up done for the California
Rodeo Association in 1948, with his younger
brother Larry and friends Dick Gillott and
Tony Vargas, as well as a claim that he did
the jumping for Elizabeth Taylor as her double
in her first hit film, National Velvet.

Read more

Wildlife agencies & advocates

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1998:

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
director Jamie Rappaport Clark has named
Susan Lieberman, previously chief of the
Branch of Convention on International Trade
in Endangered Species Operations, to succeed
Charles Dane, who retired, as chief of the
Office of Scientific Authority. USFWS
recruited Lieberman from the Humane
Society of the U.S. in 1990.
Joseph Lamp, 48, a speech professor
at Anne Arundel Community College
and Johns Hopkins University, as well as an
active member of the Humane Society of
Anne Arundel County, was in January
named to the Maryland Wildlife Advisory
Commission by governor Paris Glendening.
Lamp may be the first non-hunter to serve on
the commission. Also appointed was avid
hunter Robert Gregory Jr., the first AfroAmerican
commissioner.

Read more

1 2 3 5