Editorial: Opportunities for humane education

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1995:

News clips from readers provide our best index of public concern about current
events. Our regular clippers notice anything about animals, no matter how small and
buried, but when clips flood our desk from folks who don’t even read ANIMAL PEOPLE,
yet find out about us in their desperation to address an outrage, we know a groundswell of
concern can be channeled into positive action.
Four events in particular have lately brought tidal waves of clips, faxes, e-mail,
and telephone calls. One was the torture-killing of Duke the Dalmatian in Bucks County,
Pennsylvania, by three Beavis-and-Butthead imitators. The second was the death of a pig
at a county fair in Tyler, Texas, when an adolescent pushed a hose down the animal’s
throat and turned on the water, hoping to achieve last-minute weight gain sufficient to win a
prize. The third case was the September 14 torture-killing of a quarterhorse named Mr.
Wilson Boy in a pasture near Silsbee, Texas. Ten boys and a girl, ages 8 to 14, chased the
horse into barbed wire, beat him to death, and bragged about it.

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A wild horse story

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1995:

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.––The Wild Free-Roaming Horse and Burro Act is perilously
close to becoming an unfunded mandate, due to Congressional budget cuts.
If that happens, the Bureau of Land Management will be forced to return to the
range more than 8,000 horses and burros now in adoption programs and sanctuaries––without
the money to protect them from snipers and horsemeat contractors.
Since 1970, the BLM has been responsible for keeping the wild horse and burro
population on federal land at a level acceptable to grazing lease holders, without killing horses
or burros, and without allowing anyone else to. In that time the wild horse population has
officially quadrupled, to circa 50,000. Citing private surveys, wild horse advocates say it’s
less than half that number.
Either way, western ranchers say it’s too many. About 3.2 million cattle compete
for water and forage within the equines’ habitat. Ranchers used to just round up wild horses
and burros for slaughter. Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable drew attention to that practice in
their last film, The Misfits (1961), which gave impetus to Nevada secretary Velma Johnson’s
then little noted efforts to protect wild equines. When the “Wild Horse Annie Act” finally
outlawed the slaughter roundups in 1970, it was nicknamed in Johnson’s honor.

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COURT CALENDAR

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

Crimes against wildlife
The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals on
September 5 for the second time denied Miami
monkey dealer Matthew Block’s attempt to overturn
a 13-month jail sentence he received in April
1993 after pleading guilty to felony conspiracy in
the “Bangkok Six” smuggling case. The “Six”
were baby orangutans whom Block attempted to
have shipped from Singapore to Belgrade in
February 1990, along with two siamang gibbons.
Tightly packed into a crate marked “Birds,” they
were intercepted at the Bangkok airport. Four of
the six orangs died from complications of the conditions
of their transport.

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Paul Watson goes to trial

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

ST. JOHN’S, Newfoundland– –
Captain Paul Watson of the Sea Shepherd
Conservation Society seemed to be the most
relaxed person in the courtroom through the
first week of his trial for allegedly recklessly
endangering the lives of the crew of Cuban drag
trawler Rio Las Casas and his own 29 crew
members as well, including his wife Lisa
DiStefano, during a July 28, 1993 action in
defense of the Atlantic Canadian cod fishery. If
convicted, Watson could be sentenced to life in
prison. But Canadian fisheries officer Wayne
Evans, the first prosecution witness, testified
that Watson was arrested outside Canadian
waters. Extensive video of the encounter presented
by the prosecution showed no contact
between Watson’s vessel, the Cleveland
Amory, and the Rio Las Casas. And three
Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers who
were on the scene testified that they saw no
bumping.

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Hegins 1995: love and mayhem

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

HEGINS, Pennsylvania––If law enforcement
officials really believed, as some said, that locking
up Rod Coronado killed the Animal Liberation
Front (Court Calendar, September), they got notice
to the contrary on August 27 when persons claiming to
be the ALF briefly freed 500 pigeons who were to be
killed at the 52nd annual Hegins pigeon shoot. An
ALF communique said the pigeons were taken from
Mike’s Feed Barn in Weishampie, near Hegins, and
released in a park.
But whoever purports to be the ALF these
days learned a lesson about rehoming pigeons––no
quick job––when according to shoot organizer Bob
Tobash, “All but about 50 came back.”

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Republicans charge against ESA

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

WASHINGTON D.C. – – T h e
Congressional rush to gut the Endangered
Species Act gained momentum on September
7 when Republican representatives Don
Young (R-Alaska) and Richard Pombo (RCalifornia)
introduced the most aggressive
rollback measure yet. Titled HR 2275, the
Endangered Species Conservation
Management Act of 1995, it was immediately
endorsed by Rep. Billy Lauzin (R-La.) and
Rep. Bill Brewster (D-Okla.) Young
claimed to have 95 cosponsors in all.
The Young/Pombo bill would
repeal the portion of the ESA cited in the
Supreme Court’s June 29 verdict that it does
cover critical habitat as well as individuals of
protected species. Tax breaks would be
given to landowners who protect habitat, but
the government would have to compensate
landowners for any mandatory conservation
measures that harm property values. The
Secretary of the Interior would be allowed to
determine that a species should go extinct.
A peer review requirement for all
listing decisions was cited by Defenders of
Wildlife analysts as a prescription for indefinite
delay. Added Defenders, “Under the
pretense of creating a National Biological
Diversity Reserve, the Young/Pombo bill
would eliminate habitat protection requirements
on many federal lands. In addition,
the consultation requirements of the ESA
would be drastically altered to allow federal
agencies to destroy habitat and needlessly
harm threatened and endangered species.”
Subspecies and geographically or
biologically isolated populations, such as
particular salmon runs, could only be protected
through special acts of Congress.
While Young pledged that his bill
would be on the floor of the House for a vote
by November, it is not expected to advance
unamended. However, as chair of the House
Resources Committee, with fellow Alaska
Republican Frank Murkowski chairing the
counterpart Senate committee, Young is
well-positioned to push for passage of the
central features of his bill, which are likely
to be merged with similar features from previously
introduced bills addressing the ESA.
The Young/Pombo bill most resembles
the Endangered Species Act Reform Act
of 1995, drafted by a coalition of lobbyists
for the timber and construction industries,
and introduced last spring by Sen. Slade
Gorton (R-Wash..) Like the Gorton bill, it is
opposed not only by animal and habitat protection
groups, but also by the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermen’s Associations,
which is engaged in an ongoing conflict with
timber interests over the preservation of
spawning streams.
Traffic encouraged
The Endangered Species Coalition
online briefing for September 8 noted that
“Provisions in the ESA which protect foreign
wildlife including elephants, leopards, and
antelope would be eliminated” by the
Young/Pombo bill, reflecting “recommendations
made to Young in a March 10 letter
from the governments of Zimbabwe,
Botswana, Malawi, and Namibia. The bill
lifts all ESA controls on the import of sporthunted
trophies of threatened species,” the
briefing added, “and forbids the U.S. from
imposing stronger import restrictions on
threatened species than those required by the
Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species.”
Some pressure for amendments
favorable to animals could come from House
Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), who on
July 13 took the floor during trimming of the
Interior Department budget to defend aid to
rhino, tiger, and elephant conservation programs
abroad.
Hoping for passage of the parts of
the Young/Pombo bill pertaining to international
wildlife traffic, the Southern African
Development Community is already setting
up a joint marketing plan for elephant ivory
culled from state-owned herds. Members of
the SADC include Angola, Botswana,
Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia,
South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania,
Zambia, and Zimbabwe––but not all of them
favor selling ivory.
The plan was announced in the
wake of a World Wildlife Fund warning that
the Vietnamese elephant herd has dropped
from 2,000 in 1980 to barely 300, due to
habitat loss and ivory poaching. WWF
argues that resuming the sale of ivory from
Africa will undercut Asian poachers, but the
market didn’t exactly work that way before
1989, when the present CITES moratorium
on international ivory sales was imposed.
WWF also warned that there are no
more than 1,500 tigers left in all of Indochina
due to poaching stimulated by traditional
Chinese medicinal demand for tiger bone.
Another reminder of the reality of
wildlife trafficking came from Virunga
National Park in Zaire, where six members
of an Italian family including two children
were massacred by poachers on an August 6
expedition to see gorillas. A week later, two
mountain gorillas were killed nearby.
Canada
The anti-endangered species political
mood in Congress seemed to flow north.
On August 17, more than 20 years after
Canada joined CITES, and three years after
Canada ratified the United Nations
Convention on Biological Diversity, a draft
Canadian Endangered Species Protection Act
was finally introduced into Parliament.
Purporting to protect 244 species officially
believed to be at risk, the bill was crafted to
avoid any hint of infringing on either provincial
sensibilities or private property rights.
“Canada’s proposed ‘national’
endangered species legislation will proffer
protection, if every vested interest in Canada
agrees, to the minute fraction of Canadian
wildlife inhabiting federal lands and waters,”
assessed International Wildlife Coalition representative
Anne Doncaster, “and provide
virtually no protection to wildlife habitat.”
Added Ronald Orenstein, also of
IWC, “Listing a species will not require the
federal government or anyone else to do one
thing to protect it. All it requires is that a
Response Statement be prepared––but this
statement may conclude that no effort will be
made to recover the species.”
No refuge
Other bills affecting endangered
species with a likelihood of passage include
HR 1977, the Interior Appropriations Bill,
already passed in draft form by both the
House and Senate. The House and Senate
versions are now being reconciled before
final ratification. They include a moratorium
on new endangered and threatened species
listings pending passage of a revised ESA,
and either the abolition (House) or significant
reduction of the budget of (Senate) the
National Biological Survey.
Less threatening to species but with
i 2mplications for habitat, the House has also
advanced measures that if ratified by the
Senate could reduce the National Park system,
accelerate logging in the National
Forests, and open the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling, a longtime
goal of Alaskan politicians because every
state resident would get a royalty from the
proceeds. And then there was HB 1112,
from Rep. Brewster, which would turn the
Tishomingo National Wildlife Refuge over to
the state of Oklahoma so that food plots
could be used to lure an estimated 100,000
ducks and 45,000 geese within range of
hunters’ shotguns––Brewster’s admitted goal.

Thrill-killing

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

Heeding an appeal from Brigitte Bardot, the cabinet of
Lebanon on August 30 reaffirmed a national ban on hunting imposed
effective January 1. The Association of Gun Salesmen had pushed for the
opening of a 14-week hunting season, to have begun on September 15.
The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, spending $50,000 to
restore elk to the Chequamegon National Forest in Illinois, in hopes of
building a huntable herd, has included in this year’s budget $5,500 for
30,000 posters explaining to hunters how to tell an elk from a deer and
why none of the recently released elk seed stock should be shot just yet.
Canada has begun phasing out the legal use of lead shot, to
prevent lead posioning of waterfowl and raptors who eat fish containing
lead pellets, and will ban lead shot entirely by 1997, says environment
minister Sheila Copps. The U.S. has been phasing out legal use of lead
shot for more than a decade, banning it from use over water at the
Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge in Vermont in 1985 and proposing
to ban it from more sites each year since, including use over land against
small game at 43 refuges effective in 1996 under amendments to federal
regulations published on August 16. However, U.S. ammunition makers
continue to sell lead shot; Canadians buy $6 million worth per year.

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What is brewing in Milwaukee?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

Victoria Wellens, executive director of the Wisconsin Humane
Society, wrote to ANIMAL PEOPLE to object to our September item, “What’s
Brewing in Milwaukee?”, which summarized a dispute over accountability
between WHS and the Wisconsin Animal Protection Society.
She especially objected to the line, “Wellens, hired at $90,000 a year
in mid-1994 despite having no background in animal work, recently ired both
staff and outside critics by trading in several vehicles used to haul animals and
supplies for a $28,000 Ford Bronco, from which animals are barred.”
“The figure you quoted for my salary is false and grossly inflated,”
Wellens claimed. In fact, though the higher figure has been published by
Milwaukee media, she makes $70,000––close to the national average for comparable
positions. “Further, the Ford Explorer [similar to a Bronco, but bigger] used by law enforcement officers is well-suited to our needs and did not cost
$28,000. Animals are not barred from any WHS vehicle.” The actual sticker
price was $24,602, knocked down to $12,124 with the trade-ins.

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Animal control & rescue

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

The city council of San Jose, California,
on August 29 approved a plan to turn all pet-related
licensing and complaint response duties over to the
Humane Society of Santa Clara Valley, which has
already handled pickups of dead, injured, or vicious
animals since 1993. The society will be paid $3.5
million to provide the services over the next 22
months. The San Jose cat licensing program, the
revenues of which support neutering strays, meanwhile
started fast, with 850 registrations in July
alone, well ahead of projections that about 3,000 cat
owners would comply with licensing in all this year.
HSSCV licensing manager Feryl Bird said that while
the neutering program is too new to see a decline in
stray cat pickups yet, the rate of increase in San Jose
is already lower than in neighboring communities.

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