Latest U.S. data shows shelter killing down to 4.4 million a year

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2002:

Rapid progress against pet overpopulation in some of the
fastest-growing parts of the Sunbelt and the Midwest combined with
continued low shelter killing volume in the Northeast and Northwest
to bring estimated total U.S. shelter killing in 2001 down to 4.4
million–the lowest toll on record.
Our 2001 estimate is projected from data covering every major
shelter in cities and states including 42% of the current U.S. human
population of 281 million. The shelter tolls in 1999 and 2000 were
almost identical, at 4.5 million and 4.6 million, with the
difference being in how numbers were rounded off.

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Prairie dogs

From ANIMAL PEOPLE,  September 2002:

WASHINGTON D.C.–The National Wildlife Federation on June 26,
2002 asked the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to protect blacktailed
prairie dogs throughout its holdings,  but continued to withhold any
denunciation of the 2002 Saskatchewan Wildlife Federation “gopher”
derby,  which killed more than 63,000 blacktailed prairie dogs and
Richardson’s ground squirrels.
The SWF is an affiliate of the Canadian Wildlife Federation,
which shares programs and policies with NWF.
Seven other U.S. conservation groups in early July asked the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list whitetailed prairie dogs as a
threatened species.  Utah and Mexican prairie dogs are already listed
as a threatened species,  and the Fish and Wildlife Service has
acknowledged that blacktailed prairie dogs are eligible for listing,
but has not assigned them a high priority on the waiting list of
candidate species.
Pressured by ranchers and prairie dog shooters,  the Nebraska
Game and Parks Commission on July 24 voted 5-1 against protecting
prairie dogs on state lands.

Sanctuarians respond to July/August features

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2002:

Dharma donks

Thank you for including an item about our Dharma Donkey
Sanctuary activities in Sagroli village, south Maharashtra, India,
in your July/August 2002 edition.
On June 28, the day before our third annual donkey health
care and education camp, the police of nearby Biloli village
apprehended and jailed six men who were allegedly stealing donkeys
for slaughter at an infamous slaughterhouse just across the state
border in Andra Pradesh. As soon as we heard the news, we went to
meet the police. They were very excited that we came, and I took
lots of photos of the police captain, his staff, and the two
policemen who actually caught the donkey-nappers.

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No-kill success and fiscal reality collide in Reno

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2002:

Succeeding the No-Kill Conference, after seven annual events
that transformed the ambitions of the global animal care and control
community, will be the much less provocatively named Conference on
Homeless Animal Management and Policy, convening in Reno on August
22, 2002.
Retiring the term “no-kill” in deference to the sensitivities
of conventional shelter directors, CHAMP hopes to attract a broader
constituency to learn new approaches, and join the worldwide trend
away from accepting high-volume killing of homeless animals as an
inevitable part of animal control and humane work.

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McDonald’s to pay $10 million to veg groups for steaming fries and hash browns in beef fat

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August, 2002:

CHICAGO, MIAMI–Will $10 million donated by McDonald’s
Restaurants to U.S. vegetarian groups help veggie activists to
promote the new Burger King BK Veggie sandwich?
That will not be known until after August 22, when Cook
County Circuit Judge Richard Siebel is to make his final ruling on a
proposed settlement of a series of class action lawsuits brought
against McDonald’s in May 2001 by Seattle attorney Harish Bharti, on
behalf of Hindus, Sikhs, and other vegetarians who unknowingly ate
fries and hash browns that were steamed in beef fat.
According to a notice Bharti sent in June 2002 to the class
action plaintiffs, including ANIMAL PEOPLE staff, “The Action
alleges that McDonald’s provided false and misleading nutritional
information to consumers by failing to disclose that its French fries
and hash browns contain a small amount of beef flavoring and thus are
not vegetarian,” despite representations since July 1990 that
McDonald’s fries and hash browns are cooked only in vegetable oil.
According to McDonald’s, fries and hash browns sold in India
were not steamed in beef fat, but those sold elsewhere apparently
were and are.
“McDonald’s denies the allegations made in the Action, and
denies any and all liability,” the notice from Bharti continues.
“Further, McDonald’s denies that plaintiffs are entitled to any
relief whatsoever. The Court has not decided in favor of either
plaintiffs or McDonald’s. However, McDonald’s has reached a
settlement with the plaintiffs.
“As part of the settlement,” the Bharti notice stipulates,
“McDonald’s has agreed to 1) donate $10 million to charitable
organizations in the following percentages: vegetarianism (60%);
Hinduism and/or Sikhism (20%); children’s nutrition and/or
children’s hunger relief (10%); and promotion of the understanding
of Jewish law, standards and practices with respect to Kosher foods
and dietary practices (10%); 2) issue an apology; and 3) establish
an advisory board to make reports and recommendations to McDonald’s
about dietary restrictions that apply to various types of
vegetarians, as well as guidelines for companies who market to
vegetarians. The apology is to be published concurrently with this
notice.”
The apology appeared as a paid advertisement in recent
editions of Veggie Life, VegNews, Hinduism Today, India Tribune,
Satya, and several other publications serving mainly Hindus, Sikhs,
and vegetarians.
Also as part of McDonald’s proposed settlement, the 11
individuals who first brought the lawsuits are to get $4,000 apiece.
The suits were filed in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles,
Phila-delphia, San Francisco, and Seattle.
The proposed settlement, rumored to be close to announcement
since March 2002, was open for public comment until July 8.
At least four plaintiffs have reportedly disassociated
themselves from the settlement terms and will apparently pursue
independent lawsuits.
“Given how long the deception was, $10 million is a
pittance,” said plaintiff Cherie Travers of Downers Grove,
Illinois, to Amret Sachdev of the Chicago Tribune.
Which groups will receive funding from the settlement will
not be determined until after final ruling, Bharti explained at his
web site, <www.hbharti.com>. He invited eligible groups to submit
information about themselves to <bharti@lawyer.com>. Bharti asked
that he be contacted by e-mail only.
Applicants for funding must have nonprofit status; must be
dedicated “to the values of Hindu, Sikh and other beef-less dietary
rules, vegetarianism, Kosher dietary rules, or children’s
nutrition or hunger relief,” and must concentrate their delivery of
services within the U.S.
A similar lawsuit is pending in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
In addition, in April 2002 Bharti filed a parallel suit in
Seattle on behalf of 15 million U.S. vegetarians and one million U.S.
Hindus against Pizza Hut for allegedly using beef products in
supposedly vegetarian “Veggie Lovers'” pizzas.
Both the McDonald’s and Pizza Hut cases resulted from an
investigation by Viji Sundaram, a longtime reporter for the
India-West weekly newspaper, of San Leandro, California. Her expose,
her third to win national honors since 1998, was on June 15
recognized in New York City by the South Asian Journalists
Association as the “outstanding story on South Asians of 2001”
published within the U.S.
“Viji Sundaram was a cofounder of the Blue Cross of India,
and is the sister of Blue Cross chair Chinny Krishna, currently vice
chair of the Animal Welfare Board of India,” Blue Cross honorary
secretary M. Parthasarathy told ANIMAL PEOPLE. “Sundaram is
presently a visiting professor at the Indian Institute of
Journalism–a joint project with Columbia University–at Bangalore.”

Welfare standards

The proposed McDonald’s settlement with Hindus, Sikhs, and
vegetarians almost completely overshadowed the ongoing efforts of
PETA to oblige the company to honor a 1994 agreement with the late
Henry Spira to implement animal welfare standards for suppliers.
McDonald’s had still done little or nothing of a tangible nature,
however, when Spira died in September 1998.
A year later, PETA director of vegetarian outreach Bruce
Friedman took up the campaign more-or-less where Spira left off. An
11-month series of PETA-led protests against McDonald’s ensued.
“Dr. Temple Grandin, a humane slaughter systems specialist
and a member of the McDonald’s animal welfare panel, told the BBC
that she saw more improvement during the final six months of the
campaign than she had in the previous 20 years,” Friedman told
Satya, “which is significant, because she had been working for
McDonald’s on the issue for more than five years. McDonald’s is the
#1 buyer of eggs in the U.S.,” Friedman continued. “They moved from
an industry average of seven or eight hens per cage to a maximum of
five, and the death rates fell from almost 20% down to two or three
percent per year. For those who are alive, that’s a significant
improvement,” Friedman said.
This year, Friedman continued, “after the Animal Alliance
of Canada and a coalition of 40 animal groups contacted McDonald’s
about making animal welfare improvements in Canada, we submitted a
shareholder resolution calling on McDonald’s to internationalize its
standards.”
In April, McDonald’s announced some faint movement toward
introducing the U.S. standards for suppliers in Canada, but that,
Friedman said, was “way too little, too late.” PETA and Trillium
Asset Management, a socially conscious investment firm that had
worked closely with Spira, won a legal battle with McDonald’s to ask
McDonald’s shareholders to vote on a proposal to extend the U.S.
standards for suppliers to all 121 nations in which McDonald’s does
business.
The resolution won the approval of only 5% of the
shareholders, but that was enough to allow PETA and Trillium Asset
Management to reintroduce it in 2003.
Friedman hinted that PETA may revitalize the anti-McDonald’s
protests if necessary. Fallout from the 1999 campaign meanwhile
continues to draw at least regional attention, as PETA has taken to
the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals a 2001 ruling by U.S. District
Judge Dee Benson that a Salt Lake City school district acted lawfully
in prohibiting sidewalk demonstrations near a school that flew a
McDonald’s flag after receiving corporate donations.

BK Veggie debuts

While McDonald’s sought to settle the Bharti lawsuits and
reduce vulnerability to protests over animal welfare issues, without
actually changing any menu items, arch-rival Burger King in March
2002 reached for the vegetarian market share by introducing the BK
Veggie sandwich. The low-priced vegetarian burger looked like a hit,
though Burger King did not respond to ANIMAL PEOPLE requests for
sales data.
Introducing it was an obviously prudent business decision,
as young adults are the customers of tomorrow, women are the primary
U.S. food purchasers, and in the U.S. and Britain, meat consumption
per capita has rapidly fallen among both young adults and women of
all ages for approximately 15 years.
The introduction was long awaited.
Remembered VegNews editor Joseph Connelly, “Nearly a decade
ago, Farm Sanctuary persuaded Burger King to import a supply of
Spicy Bean Burgers from England, where BK has sold veggie burgers
since the 1980s.” The burger was offered at 39 Burger King
restaurants in upstate New York. “Within a month,” Connelly
continued, “the supply was exhausted. Burger King substituted a
different product, called The Griller, and it also sold well. Then
it disappeared. Burger King claimed there wasn’t a market. While
some of us have our doubts, one thing is certain: over the last
nine years many fewer cows would have felt the knife if a meatless
burger had been an option at restaurants that serve nearly 25% of the
population on a daily basis.”
Yet ANIMAL PEOPLE observed at Burger King restaurants in
Chicago, Minneapolis, and Seattle that the BK Veggie seemed to be
welcomed with more enthusiasm among the general public than among
many activists, for whom animal advocacy and vegetarianism are often
mingled with other causes.
Opposition to globalization, for instance, explains the
paradox of some vegetarians aligning themselves with French farmer/
activist Jose Bove, who was ordered to jail for at least 40 days on
June 18 for demolishing a partially built McDonald’s restaurant in
Millau, France, in 1999. Bove, a leader of the Confederation
Paysanne agricultural union, attacked McDonald’s in protest against
U.S. punitive tariffs which had been imposed on imports of French
animal-based food specialties. Because France refused to accept U.S.
beef produced with the use of steroids, the U.S. more heavily taxed
Roquefort cheese and foie gras (goose or duck liver paste), among
other items.
For Satya editor Catherine Clyne, the issue is opposition to
capitalism. “Burger King wouldn’t serve a veggie burger if they
didn’t think they would profit from it–they’ll drop the option
faster than you can say ‘BK Veggie’ if it flops. Fast food giants
like Burger King and McDonald’s are fueled by exploitation,” Clyne
railed, “and they have made clear that they do not intend to
change.” Clyne appealed to ethical vegetarians to “refuse to
participate in a rapacious system sustained by greed.”
Wrote Friends of Animals president Priscilla Feral in a May
20 open letter against the BK Veggie, “We urge vegetarians to
support our local vegetarian restaurants and co-ops, helping them to
survive and thrive in an environment which has become increasingly
occupied by fast-food multinationals.”
But Feral objected to the BK Veggie primarily because,
“Burger King’s buns contain butter. Butter comes from an industry
which exploits the reproductive cycles of cows throughout their
lives,” she wrote, and is “an enterprise which directly results in
the production of veal. Friends of Animals, a pro-feminist group,”
Feral stipulated, “observes that criticism of meat production
without criticism of dairy production trivializes a serious concern
about the exploitation of female animals.”
Responded Patrick Kwan of the New York City-based Student
Animal Rights Alliance, “The Moosewood Restaurant Daily Special
Cookbook, promoted and sold by FoA not only calls for use of dairy
products such as butter, but also for use of fish and shrimp.”

Vegan endorsements

Said Vegan Outreach cofounder Matt Ball, “Being vegan, for
me, is about lessening suffering and working for animal liberation
as efficiently as possible. It has nothing to do with personal
purity, or my ego. If, by some bizarre twist, eating a burger
were to advance animal liberation significantly, then I would do it.”
Agreed Eric Marcus, author of Vegan: The New Ethics of
Eating, and the publisher of Vegan.com, “The BK Veggie represents
an unprecedented opportunity in animal rights movement history. But
if it flops, it might set the spread of vegetarianism back 10 years.
And chances are, if the vegetarian/vegan movement does not embrace
this product, it will fail. I have exchanged e-mails with people at
BK. Their food scientists calculate that by weight, the BK Veggie
is better than 99% vegan. I’d be reluctant to eat a small amount of
animal product in the hope that it would help produce animal
liberation. But with the BK Veggie, the quantities involved are
trivial, and the success of this product is of the utmost importance
to farm animals everywhere. We have one chance, and if we turn our
back on it for the sake of maintaining the illusion of 100% purity,
then shame on us.”
PETA, which has picketed Burger King in the past, gave away
200 free BK Veggies in a March 2002 demonstration near the Burger
King head office in Miami.
“We’re sending our activists to Burger King again this year,
but this time it’s for lunch,” PETA self-described “sexy vegetarian
lettuce lady” Kristie Phelps told Scott Sonner of Associated Press.
“We think going vegetarian is the best thing people can do, and
Burger King has made that easier.”

Burger King & USDA

Humane Farming Association chief investigator Gail Eisnitz,
author of Slaughterhouse, said nothing bad about the BK Veggie in a
guest essay for the June/July 2002 edition of Satya, but ripped the
Burger King response after HFA petitioned the USDA to enforce the
Humane Slaughter Act, which has not been actively enforced in more
than a decade.
“In a press release,” Eisnitz wrote, “Burger King [also] declared USDA enforcement of the Humane Slaughter Act ‘unacceptable,’
and then announced that it too was filing a petition,” which Eisnitz
called “a smorgasbord of essentially meaningless demands designed to
supersede HFA’s petition. Burger King also announced that it had
established an ‘animal well-being advisory council’ to examine
slaughter and production practices,” Eisnitz continued. “Even the
meat industry’s own newspaper, Feedstuffs, found the effort
transparent. Burger King then stated that, as McDonald’s and
Wendy’s have recently done, it intended to institute a
self-inspection program to audit slaughterhouses…These
pseudo-inspections are intended to lull American consumers into a
false sense of security about how their burgers and bacon are
produced while providing fast food restaurant chains with significant
opportunities for favorable media.”
The USDA announced in February that it would hire 17
additional veterinarians to help enforce the Humane Slaughter
Act–but the vets will not be stationed inside slaughterhouses where
they can see what goes on.
“What they did was hire a bunch of bureaucrats,” Northeast
Council of Food Inspection Locals president Arthur Hughes told
Associated Press writer Philip Brasher.
The vets’ main job is expected to be monitoring carcass
samples to detect any signs of illnesses such as “mad cow disease”
which might be transmitted to humans–and any hint that bioterrorists
may be trying to contaminate the U.S. meat supply, a role which is
expected to gain prominence if the Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service is transferred from the USDA to a new cabinet-level
Department of Homeland Security, as President George W. Bush
proposed on June 6.
The transfer was opposed on June 9 by the National
Association of State Departments of Agriculture.
Animal advocates have often suggested that APHIS might better
enforce the Animal Welfare Act, Humane Slaughter Act, and other
animal-protective legislation if removed from control of the USDA,
which has a mandate to promote agriculture.
But Humane Society of the U.S. senior vice president Wayne
Pacelle on June 20 said that, “Transferring animal welfare programs
to the Department of Homeland Security is an obvious misfit, and
would relegate important programs to the margins of a department
focused on matters entirely unrelated to the well-being of animals.”

Congress delivers 9/11 to the Animal Welfare Act

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August, 2002:

Monday, May 13, 2002, was a date which should live in
infamy among American animal advocates. On that day, U.S.
president George W. Bush signed into law a new federal Farm Bill
which erased Animal Welfare Act protection of rats, mice, and birds
used in laboratories.
Rats, mice, and birds constitute more than 95% of all of
the warmblooded animals who suffer and die in U.S. biomedical
research, testing, and teaching: about 30 million per year.
Entrusted with enforcing the Animal Welfare Act, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture in truth never actually did protect rats,
mice, and birds as the law directed. Yet for 32 years the Animal
Welfare Act did say that the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service was supposed to protect rats, mice, and birds.

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Principle Must Come First

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August, 2002:

Principle must come first, by Patrice Greanville
ANIMAL PEOPLE board of directors

“Downplaying the ‘animal rights angle’ will be
counterproductive,” ANIMAL PEOPLE publisher Kim Bartlett advised
animal advocates who were preparing their lobbying strategy for the
spring 2002 legislative sessions.
“If the legislators believe the charade,” Kim continued,
and reiterated in the March 2002 ANIMAL PEOPLE editorial, “it
perpetuates the notion that nobody cares much about animals. If they
don’t buy it, it confirms the view that animal suffering is so
inconsequential a concern that even animal advocates are afraid to
acknow-ledge their true interests.”

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Seeking a safer way for farm animals–safest would be out of the supermarket

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August, 2002:

NORFOLK, Va.; DAVIS, Calif. –McDonald’s, Burger King,
and other fast-food restaurant chains are international symbols of
the meat-heavy American diet, but the 1,750 U.S. Safeway
supermarkets and 17 meat and dairy processing plants generates three
times as much U.S. revenue, reminds PETA vegan outreach coordinator
Bruce Friedrich.
The Kroger chain is even bigger, and Albertson’s is also a
major competitor.

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Donkey heaven by Bonny Shah

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August, 2002:

SIDMOUTH, DEVON, U.K.– Fifteen minutes from Exeter, ten
minutes from Sidmouth, a seaside resort town, The Donkey Sanctuary
is approached along winding roads arched with massive trees, with
lush green fields rolling into the hills beyond. The effect is of
entering an enchanted storybook land.
We had seen and heard much about The Donkey Sanctuary during
our own years of looking after donkeys and other animals at the
Ahimsa of Texas sanctuary we founded in Bartonville, Texas, and the
Dharma Donkey Sanctuary we recently started in India, but our first
visit, actually almost a pilgrimage, came in June 2002.

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