LETTERS [June 2011]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2001:

Letters

Coke reneges on rodeo

Coca-Cola has decided to renege on its promise to abandon rodeos. I have had quiet discussions with them on this issue since their signed promise last November. All along, the idea was that Coke would take some time to persuade resistant bottlers to leave the rodeo arenas, and to keep peace in the corporate family. Now, apparently facing more resistance than anticipated, Coke has gone back on its word. This of course means that SHARK is going right to a campaign. We aim to make what we did to Pepsi support of bullrings look like a walk through the park.

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Cats & dogs in Israel

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2001:

The May 2001 article “Cats & dogs in Israel,” summarized two ongoing Israeli court cases involving feral cat rescue. It drew more response than any other single item ever published in ANIMAL PEOPLE. This is a representative selection. Please note the often directly conflicting claims and perspectives of the letter-writers.

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LETTERS [May 2001]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2001:

Letters

Tirana

I am writing again to publicize the plight of stray dogs in Tirana, Albania. The situation is reverting again to the conditions I described in the letter you published in November 1999. The Albanian public TV station has proudly informed the people of Tirana that “mass shooting of stray dogs has begun,” and has advised people to “please do not be afraid to try eating dog meat instead of beef, swine, or poultry, because the city of Tirana has taken all the necessary measures” to insure that it is safe for human consumption.

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LETTERS [April 2001]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 2001:

Letters

Pit bulls

I’m a supporter of Animal People and have just read the article on the Presa Canario pit bull attacks. Such pit bull crosses are becoming a major problem:
* The number of attacks on people is increasing rapidly.
* Shelters are forced to take in more pit bulls than any other breed, taking up valuable space that could be given to gentle breeds.
* Attacks by pit bulls are causing cities to adopt bylaws restricting free run of all dogs, thus creating a hardship for owners of well-behaved dogs.
Britain, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Germany have already banned the breed and I feel that we need a similar ban in this country– starting here in California!
Thank you for the wonderful work you do in bringing awareness to the public on all fronts of animal issues!

–Karin Hiller
Mill Valley, California
<karinhiller@webtv.net>

The Editor replies:

Among the unique risk factors associated with pit bulls are that most of those who kill or maim are highly reactive, not ill-tempered, and are so powerful that their first-ever bite can be lethal. Thus standard behavioral screening often fails to detect those who may become dangerous. However, within the U.S., attempts to ban pit bulls have had little history of legal success, and not much history of seeming to prevent deadly attacks.

 

Bighorns

Thank you for the very important and interesting information about the care of animals. We receive ANIMAL PEOPLE at the Biosphere Reserve El Pinacate y Gran Desierto de Altar in Sonora state, México. Sometimes we post specific articles on our Visitors Center bulletin board. My personal interest is wildlife, but cats, rodents and birds I love too. I am hoping ANIMAL PEOPLE readers can help us to protect our endangered bighorn sheep (Borrego Cimarrón). Some “important” people, possibly including government officials, want to begin hunting the sheep. The law says hunting the
bighorn sheep “is possible,” but the reality is different, and the bighorn sheep population is very low.
Maybe your help can stop this non-sustainable idea.

–José A. Dávila Paulín
Subdirector
El Pinacate Biosphere Reserve
<pepepaulin@hotmail.com>
Speedy vegan

I am an American pro-elite inline speed skater, a sport poised to make its Olympic debut in 2004 in Athens, Greece, and have raced throughout North America and also in Europe. I will be racing in Europe for the Swiss Salomon team this year from May through August. I will then race the U.S. marathon season, September/November.

As a long-time vegan and conservationist, it is my mission to prove that one can not only survive but thrive on a plant-based diet. However, I believe that this message is best conveyed by example. I have won first place overall in the 2000 Colorado Mountain Marathon Hillclimb, first place finishes in the 1998 and 1999 Colorado In-line Marathons, and first overall in the 1998 Evan’s Front Range Salsa Classic 10-K.

I am committed to representing companies whose devotion to sustainable agriculture, providing non-genetically modified source food products, and general social consciousness is consistent with my own. One of my sponsors,
Clif Bar, makes sports nutrition bars that are vegan and GMO-free. Another, Sine Qua Non, makes an organic sprouted meal complex for use as a highly nutritious supplement.

I am seeking further sponsorship. As roller speed skating is not yet a big enough money sport to afford me a living, I welcome any assistance, financial or product, that might be available.

–Antonio Marxuach
2707 Valmont Street #101-B
Boulder, CO 80304
Phone: 303-448-9215
<antoine2ixtlan@qwest.net>
Indonesia

The Indonesian Vegan Society is badly in need of vegan magazines and other educational materials. We gladly receive used books and magazines. These items are distributed to schools and libraries in Indonesia, and are used
at public events.

Due to strict taxation and import duties in Indonesia, please put this important information on the label of any packet sent: THIS IS A CHARITABLE GIFT TO INDONESIAN NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS AND SCHOOLS. PLEASE DO NOT IMPOSE ANY TAXES.

Please also put this, in Indonesian: HADIAH, MOHON UNTUK TIDAK DIKENAKAN PAJAK.

–Vandayani Dewi Soewondo
(KTP #110577/10350)
Gg. Delima V/21
Tanjung Duren Selatan
Jakarta Barat 11470
<goveganind@yahoo.com>
<http://www.i-v-s.org/>

 

HSI promised $$

Your March article “HSUS/HSI sets up ‘Chinese laundry’ in Hong Kong’ stated that “Jill Robinson of the Animals Asia Foundation told [Kevin] Sinclair [of the South China Morning Post] that their projects in Hong Kong and southern China were mentioned in Australian mailings by the same organization as if it had something to do with them, when it does not.”

In fact, the connection with Animals Asia Foundation is that someone in Hong Kong gave Sinclair an HSI Australia fundraising mailing which went into great detail about the rescue of farmed bears in western China, with no mention
of the people working on the rescue itself: AAF. They have since pledged about $6,500 U.S.

I am writing from Cheng-du, where we cut ex-bile farm bear #52 out of her cage this week. Our elation turned to deep shock when we found that she had actually been welded inside by someone who never anticipated her freedom. She’ll soon be on grass with the rest.

–Jill Robinson
Animals Asia Foundation
P.O. Box 82, Sai Kung Post Office
Kowloon, Hong Kong
Phone: 852-2225
Fax 852-2791-2320
<info@animals-asia.org>
<www.animalsasia.org>
Saved dik-dik

Our latest week-long desnaring operation in Tsavo National Park yielded 142 illegal snares and a live dik-dik, whom we freed, bringing the number of snares we have removed to 2,540, and to three the number of live animals we have
rescued. This project was sponsored by IFAW East Africa.

–Josphat Nyongo
Youth for Conservation
P.O. Box 27689
Nairobi, Kenya
<y4c@alphanet.co.ke>
Manilla

The phone and fax numbers you were given as contact information for the Asia for Animals symposium, to be held May 14-17 in Manila, were obsolete. My correct contact details are:

Phone: 61-29288-4944
Fax: 61-29288-4901
E-Mail: <swilson@ifaw.org>
<www.news.china.com>

The idea of the symposium came from a China Bear team meeting at IFAW some years ago. I have always been in great admiration of people working on animal welfare issues in Asia. They work in such difficult conditions and are often shunned by everyone around them. I feel sure this symposium will be a great opportunity for these wonderful people to share information. I hope it will give them a great morale boost too. I work closely with the Philippine Animal Welfare Society, so that is why the symposium will be held there.

We are trying very hard to get as many paying attendees from Western countries as possible. The more paid registrations we receive, the more Asian groups we can sponsor to attend. All profits will go towards sponsorship,
and we also have some money set aside in the budget to sponsor groups. I am sure you are pleased that big groups’ money is being put to good use in this case!

–Sally Wilson
IFAW Australia
Compassionate Animal Control International

G’day. I mentioned Com-passionate Animal Control Inter-national in a letter published in your January/February 2001 edition, and would like to tell you more about how CACI was formed and what we hope to achieve.

In 1998, I took a leave of absence from the Western Australia Rangers Association to travel with my wife Maureen to expand and develop our appreciation and experience regarding animal control.

After a brief visit to Singapore we arrived in the United Kingdom, where National Dog Wardens Association president Sue Bell put us in contact with other people who could assist us. Through National Canine Defence League chief executive Clarissa Baldwin, I became aware of the animal control problems afflicting Eastern Europe.

What could we do to help? The answer was simply nothing, as individuals. But what could a group of international friends do? Prob-ably quite a lot! A global association of animal control agencies seemed to be a possible solution. I raised the idea first in a presentation to the NDWA Inter-national Conference at Hartpury College in Gloucester that Sept-ember. There I met Pam Burney, animal control director for North Richland, Texas, and Karen Medi-cus,
executive director of the Austin SPCA. They asked me to go to Indianapolis in 1999 to do a presentation to the National Animal Control Association.

NACA responded favorably. Our first organizational meeting was held in Indianapolis at the June 2000 NACA conference.It was agreed that a web site would be the best way to share information with animal care and control officers arond the world.  Betsy Saul of <www.Pet-finder.com> immediately offered a site address and online support.
We began to discuss a name for this new organisation, with many suggestions crossing the table. After a lengthy discussion, Nigel Cardwell of NDWA came up with Compassionate Animal Control International. Perfect!

The founding member organizations include NDWA, NACA, and the Western Australia Rangers Association. As we progress and improve, we hope to provide as much information as possible to people involved in animal care and control around the world.

We recognise the rights of animals to a decent life, to live in peace, and to be protected from cruelty and neglect.

–Steve Elvidge
Vice President
Western Australia
Rangers Assn.
P.O. Box 334
North Beach 6920
Western Australia
Phone: 08-9448-7565
Fax: 08-9203-7565
<stevee@warangers.asn.au>
<www.petfinder.org/~wara>

Correction

The January/February 2001 ANIMAL PEOPLE article “Kenya update: anti-poaching gains and a shocking dispute” misidentified Care For The Wild founder Bill Jordan as a director of the Captive Animals Protection Society; Jordan had
resigned from that post in May 2000. In the same article CAPS executive director Diane Westwood was misidentified as speaking for the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust; she in fact spoke for CAPS.

LETTERS [March 2001]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2001:

HSUS Expo

Ahimsa of Texas tries really hard to table our unique spay/neuter ideas and tools at national humane conventions. We were thrilled to display at both the Spay/USA Waltham conference and the Doing Thing for Animals conference in Tuscon. Because Ahimsa is such a small group, we all work at least one full time job, and we have such a small donation base that we always feel good if we can table at two conferences a year.

Hence, I was excited to see that the Humane Society of the U.S. Animal Expo 2001 was in Dallas. I thought, “I live close enough that we could save on both travel and accommodations.” Imagine my disappointment when I learned that their fee for
non-profit vendor space was almost $500. If HSUS were really working with other nonprofits, wouldn’t it make sense to treat them humanely???

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LETTERS [January-February 2001]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2001:

Letters
Calgary

As of December 6, 2000, I am officially retired, after 25 years as director of Calgary Animal Services. We moved into our new Animal Services facility at the end of September, as you reported in October 2000, and all is well. The Calgary Humane Society had housed cats for Calgary Animal Services for the past decade, but Animal Services took back that job on January 1, 2001.

I am now chair of the newly formed Calgary Zero E Foundation. Our goal is to end the killing of adoptable cats and dogs in Calgary. We have joined with caring corporate citizens in the hope that we can carry out subsidized pet sterilization for needy Calgarians, primarily focusing on cats. It appears that we will have sufficient funding in place to alter at least 1,000 cats in 2001. If this reduces Calgary shelter killing by 2,000 cats during the year, our per capita rate of animal control killing will be nearly the best in North America.
–Jerry Aschenbrenner
Calgary, Alberta
New Zealand

Thank you kindly for forwarding us Animal People. We are an SPCA located in Thames, a small town of about 6,000 people on the Coromandel peninsula in New Zealand. You have opened our eyes to what is happening in other parts of the world regarding animal welfare, and by that widened our viewpoint on our progress here: your efforts do
make a difference.

–Perry Dovell
Thames SPCA
P.O. Box 306
Thames, NZ
Phone: 647-868-6830
Fax: 647-868-6668
<pj_farm@hotmail.com>
Disguise

I have a small costume shop. Recently I was called to do subcontract costume work for the Ringling Brothers Barnum & Bailey Circus. My first instinct was to say no, but the call came the same week that my cat Natasha died, and I
wanted to do something in her memory. I took the job, convinced myself that I was doing it on behalf of the elephants, charged the salary that the elephants should receive, and donated over 20% of the gross to PETA’s anti-Ringling campaign and to ANIMAL PEOPLE.

I know many others also run small businesses, are in a position where finances are tight, and do not have the luxury of always being able to choose “clean” clients. My approach may be a way for others to cope with this dilemma: accept the job only on behalf of an appropriate cause, and donate funds to an organization which actively fights your temporary employer. The job will be taken by someone anyway, so why not use the money to work against what the ethically problematic client does?

–Janet Bloor
New York, N.Y.
Dog-eating

Like all animal lovers, I am appalled at the Korean practice of eating the meat of dogs who die a cruel and tormented death. However, we should recognize that to many Asians, eating dog meat is no different that eating horsemeat is
to the French, or eating beef and pork is to North Americans. Traditionally the Japanese bred Chows and Akitas for food, as well as for work.

Sending letters to Korean officials and holding rallies against eating dog meat is unlikely to effect any meaningful change, I feel, since it does not address the reason why Korean men eat the meat of tortured dogs. In Korea, and maybe other nations too, many men believe that eating the meat of dogs who die a cruel and lingering death will enhance their sexual prowess and pleasure. The more the dog suffers, the more adrenalin will be in the tissue, and the greater the benefit to the men. The men who eat dog meat will not give it up because we find it barbaric: to them, their own pleasure comes first.

I don’t know what can be done to change their perspective. Perhaps educating children and young adults against dog-eating and cruelty is the way to go. Usually it is difficult, if not impossible, to change the views of the middle-aged and elderly, but children’s minds are open. Korean women do not favor dog-eating, in general, but Korea is very much male-dominated, and women have little influence. With the arrival of western influence in clothing, movies, music, etc., things are slowly changing, especially in the cities, so perhaps Korean women could help promote the idea that eating meat from dogs dying in agony is not sexy and does not improve male performance.

–Patricia Salt
Berea, Kentucky
High salaries

I very much appreciate that you publish the salaries that animal protection groups pay to their directors and officiers. It has certainly helped me to make smart-er choices in making my donations.

–Elektra Perkins
Fairfax, California

Animal Control Officer award

The Western Australia Rangers Association is proud to announce the New Millennium International Animal Control Officer Award. We know there are many people in the world working hard for the care and control of animals, and we
would like to honor someone special. The award will be presented as part of our first international conference, to be held on September 27-28 in Mandurah, Western Australia. Nominations are due by April 30. Further details are posted on the Information Page at <www.warangers.asn.au>.

The Western Australia Rangers Association is among the founding members of Compassion-ate Animal Control International, whose web site also just debuted, at <www.petfinder.org/caci>. Through CACI we and the other participating organizations of animal care and control workers hope to strengthen our international ties and share our know-how worldwide.

–Steve Elvidge
Vice President
Western Australia
Rangers Assn.
P.O. Box 334
North Beach 6920
Western Australia
Phone: 08-9448-7565
Fax: 08-9203-7565
<SteveE@subiaco.wa.gov.au>
Update on three caracal kittens
Your December edition has arrived and we have already had response to our guest column, “Apartheid and three caracal kittens,” about our battle to save some of the Kalahari predators from extinction. Action Volunteers for Animals
in Chicago sent a supportive letter with 200 signatures. That we get such support from people on the other side of the world is greatly encouraging.

As we wrote, the North-ern Cape Province Conservation Department laid criminal charges against me for transporting the caracals without a permit, and used this charge to confiscate them. We went straight to the High Court and the department was compelled to return the caracals to us at their own considerable expense. The bullying bureaucrats now find themselves in an impossible situation–and I am not in a forgiving frame of mind. If they withdraw charges, they virtually abandon any defense to my action for damages for malicious prosecution. Any attempt, on the other hand, to press the charges will oblige them to explain in public:

1) Why they protected from prosecution a hunter who tortured to death over an eight-hour period a tame white rhino cow, firing 16 or more shots into her during that time, yet they go to extraordinary lengths to prosecute a man who is
lovingly caring for three helpless orphaned caracals. The answer will then emerge that we publicised their failure to prosecute the rhino killer, and then did their job for them by taking statements from witnesses, handing the evidence over to the National SPCA and getting charges laid against the hunter for cruelty. (The rhino cow’s mate was shot by the Russian prime minister when he last visited South Africa.)

2) Why a racist and hopelessly unconstitutional law such as the Problem Animals Control Ordinance of 1957 is still being enforced when the Conservation Department knows it is obsolete.

–Chris Mercer
Kalahari Raptor Center
P.O. Box 1386
Kathu, Northern Cape
ZA 8446, South Africa
<krc@spg.co.za>

Fiona Macleod of the Johannesburg Mail & Guardian reported on January 5, 2001 that the Northern Cape Province Conservation Department recently broke from precedent to release 30 wild baboons who had been caught for sale to
laboratories but were confiscated in July 1999 from the premises of trapper Eric Venter, of Vaalwater, who had allegedly neglected them.

Baboons, like caracals, vervets, jackals, and bushpigs, are classified as vermin under the Problem Animals Control Ordinance. Northern Cape Prov-ince Conservation director Greg Knill told Macleod that his staff is rewriting the law to
require that specific problem animals must be identified and targeted by any control action, and that nonlethal relocation shall be the preferred response.
Grizzly bear

Our campaign to suspend grizzly bear hunting in British Columbia pending protection of adequate habitat and completion of population studies is almost at critical mass. In recent months:

* Acknowledging that the hunt threatens tourism, the B.C. tourism minister in August 2000 asked that the hunt be suspended. He is now the new B.C. environment minister, but has yet to act.

* The Canadian government has issued recommendations to B.C. regarding our effort to invoke the Convention on Inter-national Trade in Endangered Species to prevent foreign hunters from taking grizzly trophies out of Canada. The B.C. government is considering its response.

* The B.C.-based Raincoast Conservation Society is running a billboard and radio advertising campaign, in expectation of a spring election.

To maximize the chance that the B.C. government will curtail grizzly hunting somewhow before the election, we must show that such action would be popular. Therefore <www.WildCanada.net> has set up a free link to the Premier of B.C.: <www.wildcanada.net/action_centres/stgh/stgh.asp>.

–Martin Powell
Bear Campaigner
Environmental Investigation Agency
69-85 Old Street
London EC1V 9HX
United Kingdom
Phone: 44-20-7490-7040
Fax: 44)-20-7490-0436
<eiauk@pop.gn.apc.org>
<www.eia-international.org>
Rabies in Guatemala

Hi! We are the Guatemalan SPCA. We are writing because we need your help in maintaining our 50-year-old shelter. Our economic resources are very bad, because we don’t have the support of anyone. Not long ago we tried to communicate to the World Society for the Protection of Animals but they didn’t answer.

–Michelle Martinez
Ave. Elena C 14-65
Zone 1, Guatemala City
Guatemala
Phone: 502-230-2118
<agpa@intelnet.net.gt>

A rabies outbreak in October and November 2000 that killed four people in Quetzaltenango, Guatemala, caused Guate-malan health minister Mario Bolanos to order a poisoning campaign against street dogs. After humane societies
pointed out that vaccinating at least 70% of a vulnerable population against rabies consistently halts outbreaks, while trying to kill the potential hosts does not, Guatemalan health ministry press officer Lucia Dubon announced in mid-December that the government suppy of strychnine was exhausted, and that instead, “The ministry will provide animal protection organizations with syringes and rabies vaccine, so that vaccination coverage will be increased, and will not kill the dogs.” ANIMAL PEOPLE has asked Martinez to keep us informed of the progress of the campaign.

 

Dog-shooting
Your November 2000 article “Dog-shooting passé in S.A.” cited the Cape Town Star in describing “the outrage of residents of Sutherland, Northern Cape, at discovering more than 100 dead unlicensed stray dogs in a pit at
the municipal dump,” and stating that “The dogs were apparently shot with captive bolt guns by the staff of the Worcester SPCA, upon request of Sutherland municipality.” The dogs were not killed by SPCA staff.

The SPCA Worcester was only present to ensure that the killing was done properly. The SPCA presence was requested by the municipality. The killing was carried out by a person authorised by the South African Veterinary Council–who was also charged with ensuring that the dead animals were buried properly. No dead animals were left
in a pit, as was alleged, but all were buried in a communal grave.

–Christine Kuch
SPCA of South Africa
P.O. Box 1320
Alberton 1450
Gauteng, South Africa
Phone: 27-11-907-3590
Fax: 27-11-907-4013
<spca@global.co.za>

 

Depo-provera
I am a veterinarian practicing in Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka we faced the same problem of public officials wanting to kill dogs because of the money to be made by doing it. Fortunately the regional director of health gave us permission to give contraceptive injections of depo-provera to dogs, together with antirabies vaccination. This is very economical as one depo-provera vial costing about $l.00 can be used to prevent three female dogs from having litters. A 50 milligram intramuscular injection is enough.

My mother and I donated the injections used in our own city last March. Now Colombo Municipality (our national capital) is using the contraceptive injections too.

Using an injectible contraceptive has lots of advantages. For instance, it can be given with vaccination; it reduces the cost of anti-rabies vaccinations for future generations of dogs, since there will be fewer of them; and it is cheap. After-care is unnecessary. The only disadvantage is that depo-provera is effective for only six to eight months per injection, requiring that dogs much be caught and re-injected at regular intervals.

–Kala Santha, DVM
615 B Nawala Road
Rajagiriya, Sri Lanka
<santhak@sltnet.lk>
Rabies in Skopje

On December 7 a woman here in Skopje was bitten by a feral cat. The cat injured five other people prior to death. The cat was found to have had so-called “silent rabies.” This was the first officially recognized rabies case in Skopje in more than 30 years, so huge panic and hysteria followed. Making matters worse, the medical clinics did not have either pre-exposure or post-exposure innoculations in adequate supply.

The local government and the state veterinary institute formed a so-called Crisis council to deal with the outbreak. They decided to exterminate all homeless dogs and cats in Skopje by hiring professional hunters. More than 200 dogs were shot dead on the streets and taken somewhere. But, two weeks later, the Crisis Council still had not found a proper way to dispose of the corpses.

Meanwhile, many citizens also killed animals. Local animal protection organizations pleaded for a massive vaccination campaign instead, but it became obvious that the city officials just wanted to cleanse the city of homeless animals.

I am frustrated and helpless. So are many other people who love animals. The only thing I can do is vaccinate my pets and hope and pray that all this agony will end, and that a proper and effective way of dealing with this problem will be found.

–Marija Kostovska
Skopje, Macedonia
<mkostovska@yahoo.co.uk>
Corrections, clarifications

Summer

Your December edition obituary for Summer, the pygmy sperm whale who stranded in June and died on November 21 in Key West, Florida, contained five inaccuracies: we do not know what her age was, as every report gave a different guess; other stranded juvenile pygmy sperm whales have survived over 100 days, though none survived longer than 153 days; she suffocated rather than drowned; she was not found near the remains of her mother (there was never a sighting of her mother or any other whales); and to say that her mother suffocated from ingesting plastic is to state a near impossiblity. Another whale was found a few weeks after her, but of a different species and 70 miles away. Where did you get your information?

–Becky Arnold
Wildlife Rescue of the Florida Keys
P.O. Box 5449
Key West, FL 33045
<BeckyArn@aol.com>

The points that Arnold disputes were all mentioned in the November 1 Associated Press report, “Pygmy Sperm Whale, Survivor of Florida Keys Stranding, Dies.” Our obituary summarized that item. Rick Trout of the Marine Mammal Conservancy alleged in a January 16, 2001 complaint to the Florida members of Congress that mishandling by rescuers contributed to the May 2000 death of a female pygmy sperm whale at Fiesta Key, not long before Summer was found.
Trout & dolphins

Thank you for the kind words in your December review of my books To Free A Dolphin and Behind The Dolphin Smile. But you made a mistake in the next-to-last paragraph: Rick Trout no longer has any of the Sugarloaf dolphins. Molly
and Buck went to the Dolphin Research Center. Luther and Jake went back to the Navy. Trout filed a lawsuit seeking to get Molly from DRC, but lost. This is all in the book.

–Ric O’Barry
The Dolphin Project
P.O. Box 224
Coconut Grove, FL 33233
<RicOBarry@cs.com>
<www.dolphinproject.org>

Owens note

“Who gets the money?” compensation note #13 in the December edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE stated that, “Since 1998 Mark and Delia Owens [of the Owens Foundation] have done surveying for the proposed reintroduction of grizzly bears to the Bitterroot region of Idaho.” Owens Foundation executive director Mary Dykes confirms that Mark and Delia Owens are surveying grizzly bear habitat in the Selkirk range, which is the northern end of the Bitterroots and is part of
the proposed reintroduction area, but adds, “We are not associated with the reintroduction project. We do not have the resources to enter that arena, and do not want to be painted as being fully briefed on the Selway-Bitterroot issue.”

LETTERS [Dec 2000]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2000:

JoJo

I have just received a letter from Club Med informing me that they have decided to “assume a leadership role and eliminate waterskiing at Club Med Turkoise at the end of the current season (October 31, 2000). This is a true victory for JoJo, the friendly dolphin in the Turks and Caicos islands, who has been hurt at least 40 times by water skiers since 1992, as I described in my March 1992 letter to A N I M A L PEOPLE seeking help for him.

I want to thank each and every one of you who took an interest in this situation. The volume of letters you sent to Club Med and the Governor regarding JoJo was a great factor in determining the outcome of this campaign.

Our persistence with Club Med brought an assessment of JoJo and his environment by four highly qualified marine scientists. They suggested that the Government of the Turks and Caicos should ban water skiing from all of the coastal areas that JoJo frequents.

Read more

LETTERS [Nov 2000]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 2000:

Rochester
On page 8 of the September
200 edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE,
you erroneously attributed to
me the statement, “When you look
for donations, you look for the most
politically correct way to go. And
it’s not politically correct to kill animals.”
That was actually said by
Tom Shannon of Rochester Animal
Control, when he was asked by
Alan Morrell of the Rochester
Democrat & Chronicle about the
decision of the Humane Society of
Rochester & Monroe County not to
renew our long-term contract with
the city to do animal control.
Shannon was among the few Rochester
Animal Services staff kept by
the city when they began operating
animal control on July 1, 2000.

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LETTERS [Oct 2000]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2000:

Who are we?
I have been a subscriber
for many years, but because of my
own rescue efforts and enormous vet
bills I can only subscribe and not
contribute at this time. Thank you
for your efforts on behalf of creatures
large and small, for your interesting
newspaper, your excellent
editorials, and your Watchdog
exposes.
If I have missed it, I
would love to read a bio on Merritt
Clifton and Kim Bartlett (are they
married?), and, of course, the artist
Wolf Clifton—the heroes with such
extraordinary energy, intelligence,
and compassion behind such a publishing
endeavor. Heartfelt thanks to
each of them.

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