SHOWDOWN AT THE HORSE BUTTE CORRAL

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

WEST YELLOWSTONE––A month after
U.S. District Judge Charles Lovell refused to reimpose
the 1997-1998 limit of 100 on the number of
Yellowstone bison the Montana Department of
Livestock may kill without specific reauthorization,
the 1998-1999 toll zoomed from 17 to 94, with no
end in sight.
Lovell held that the limit and reauthorization
requirement did not seem necessary because the
bison toll was likely to be insignificant.
The Montana Department of Livestock evidently
took that to mean Lovell had declared an open
season, building a bison trap at Horse Butte over
ongoing protest and herding bison into it with snowmobiles.

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Hunted animals win a few rounds

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

EAGLE, Colorado– –
USDA Wildlife Services, on April
8 withdrew a Bureau of Land
Management-approved plan to
strafe coyotes for five months at
the Castle Peaks Wilderness Study
Area near Eagle, Colorado.
USDA Wildlife Services,
formerly called Animal
Damage Control, proposed the
coyote killing on behalf of a
rancher who claims to have lost
2,000 lambs to coyotes since 1991.
But the agency backed off when
the Aspen Wilderness Workshop,
the Colorado Wilderness Network,
and the activist group Sinapu
pointed out that federal rules
require USDA Wildlife Services to
identify specific animals when
doing predator control in designated
wilderness research zones.

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Malaysian pig crisis waning

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

KUALA LUMPUR––The previously
unidentified Hendra-like virus
ravaging the Malaysian pig industry for
the past six months was on April 10,
1999 formally named the Nipah virus,
after the village of Baru Sungai Nipah in
Negri Sembilan, the district where it was
first isolated by virologist Chan Kaw
Bing, MD.
The Hendra virus was named
after Hendra, Australia, where a similar
disease killed 15 horses and three humans
who worked with horses in 1994.

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Our search for the Bishnois by Bonny Shah

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

Texas-based animal advocates
Bonny and Ratilal Shah on Christmas Day
1998 took time out from working on other
humane projects in India to visit two Bishnois
villages in the Rajasthan desert.
Valmik Thapar, executive director
of the Ranthambore Foundation, described
the Bishnoi in his 1997 book Land of the Tiger
as “the primary reason that desert wildlife still
exists on the subcontinent. The women of the
community have been known to breastfeed
black buck fawns and save insect life, while
many of the men have died in their efforts to
counter armed poaching gangs.

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LETTERS [May 1999]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

Bequests
I’m looking for information
on how animal welfare groups
use endowments and how they
decide how bequests will be allocated.
I’m a board member for a shelter
which places all bequests in its
endowment fund. We then have an
across-the-board unwritten policy
that only the income may be used
for operating costs, but that principal
may be used for capital costs.
Is this the common practice
among animal protection organizations?
If not, how do most such
organizations handle bequests and
endowments?

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Editorial: Peace may begin with petting the same dog or cat

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

One possible casualty of the fighting underway for more than a month now in
Kosovo may be the International Companion Animal Conference scheduled for October 21-22
in Sophia, Bulgaria. Though Bulgaria is a nation long at peace, it borders on both Serbia and
Macedonia, and Sophia is just 50 miles from either border.
Eager to assist the young humane movement in eastern Europe, the sponsoring
National Canine Defense League and North Shore Animal League are reluctant to accept postponement
if the conference can go ahead, the second of an intended annual series of teachingand-sharing
opportunities growing out of more than five years of outreach.
Except for our conversations with International Companion Animal Conference
planners, we have heard little or nothing about the war in Kosovo from animal protection
organizations. Under the chaotic circumstances, with hundreds of thousands of hungry, often
injured, penniless, shellshocked, and bereaved human refugees on the move, it is understandable
that no one is able to mount any sort of relief mission on behalf of the millions of
animals going unfed. Still, there are words to be said and points to be made.

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Reptile refuges are real rarity

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:
Tens of thousands of former pet reptiles are abandoned each year in the U.S. and Canada–and ANIMAL PEOPLE files indicate the numbers are rapidly rising. Yet the number of sanctuaries able to give reptiles quality care can just about be counted on the fingers of one hand.

Apart from the Rainforest Reptile Refuge, ANIMAL PEOPLE has identified only two other sanctuaries which either specialize in reptiles or have reptile experts on staff: Wildlife Waystation, of Angeles National Forest, California, which mainly handles mammals and birds but also has a reptile house; and Star Inc., of Culver City, California, whose storefront facilities reportedly resemble Rainforest Reptile Refuge. A few others focus on mammals and birds but also keep some reptiles, notably Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation and Primarily Primates, both near San Antonio, Texas.

Otherwise, herpetological rescue is left to individual members of local herpetological societies. Rescue networks are
usually not in close touch with animal control agencies and humane societies. The public tends to be unaware of them. One can hardly criticize individual rescuers for lying low, as more reptiles are dumped than any one person could handle, and thefts of reptiles are increasingly common, due to a misplaced belief that they can be sold for big money. In truth, only the healthiest reptiles of the rarest species have resale value. For most legal dealers, the money is not in the animals but in the paraphernalia needed to keep them.

Maneka survives Indian gov’t fall

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

NEW DELHI––Despite the April
16 collapse of the coalition government of
India, of which she was part, animal advocate
Maneka Gandhi will remain minister of
state for social welfare and empowerment
until new national elections are held––in June
at earliest, but possibly not until September.
The uncertainty, as ANIMAL
PEOPLE went to press, had to do with
whether elections could be completed before
the summer monsoons.
Meanwhile, Maneka keeps the
supervisory authority over animal protection
that she has built into her office since she
joined the present cabinet in March 1998.

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Missing link in Littleton

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 1999:

LITTLETON, Colo.––Of the mob
of reporters who tried to find out why Eric
Harris, 18, and Dylan Klebold, 17, killed 12
fellow students and a teacher, then shot themselves
on April 20 at Columbine High School in
Littleton, Colorado, only Mitchell Zuckoff of
the Boston Globe mentioned––even in passing––the
clue that seemed to explain the most.
“Several students,” Zuckoff wrote,
“said Harris, Klebold, and their friends spoke
of mutilating animals.”
Columbine High School is an easy
jog from the offices of the American Humane
Association in Englewood, a neighboring suburb
of Denver. The AHA has promoted awareness
of the link between violence toward animals
and violence toward humans since 1876––
to wit, that people who harm animals are highly
likely to harm people, too, especially if the
actions toward animals go unpunished.

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