NEW LAB ANIMAL CARE GUIDE

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

The 1996 updated edition of
the Guide for the Care and Use of
Laboratory Animals, published in midsummer
by the National Research
Council’s Institute of Laboratory
Animal Resources, is under fire from
researchers for recommending group
housing for social animals such as dogs
and primates, and flat rather than wirefloored
cages for rodents. Though having
no regulatory force, the Guide i s
often used as the basis for federal regulation
of laboratories. If Guide recommendations
are incorporated into future
amendments to the Animal Welfare Act,
many labs will have to renovate.

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U.S. lab animal use hits record low

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

WASHINGTON D.C.––U.S. laboratory use of five of
the six species whose use has been recorded under the Animal
Welfare Act since it first came into effect in 1973 dropped to new
lows in 1995, according to newly released USDA data:
Species 1995 High
Dogs 89,420 211,104 (1979)
Cats 29,569 74,259 (1974)
Primates 50,206 61,392 (1987)
Guinea pigs 333,379 598,903 (1985)
Hamsters 248,402 503,590 (1976)
Rabbits 354,076 554,385 (1987)

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INTERNATIONAL

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

The British Columbia SPCA,
of Vancouver, has signed an agreement
with Environment Canada and the B.C.
environment ministry to coordinate wildlife
rescue and rehablitation in case of a major
oil spill along the B.C. coast. But the
BC/SPCA might find resources scarce:
with the flagship Vancouver branch $1.2
million in debt, it recently cut five staff
positions, sold six trucks, and dropped a
money-losing merchandising program.

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Live food fight

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

SAN FRANCSICO––The San
Francisco Animal Control and Welfare
Commission on October 17 again
delayed action on a proposal to ban the
sale of live animals as food. The proposal,
bitterly fought by Chinatown vendors,
will come up again November 14.
“St. Francis must be whirling
in his grave,” commented Action for
Animals founder Eric Mills. “In recent
weeks I have visited the live food markets
and have seen turtles gutted while
fully conscious; fish scaled alive; chickens,
ducks, and doves crammed in stifling
crates; and turtles and frogs piled
three and five deep, often with no water
whatever. Most of these markets are illegal
now. The Retail Food Facilities Law
states, ‘No live animal, bird, or fowl
shall be kept or allowed in any food
facility.’ Why is this not enforced?

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NCPPSP publishes first shelter study findings

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

DENVER––A survey of
1,100 U.S. animal shelters undertaken
by the National Council on Pet
Population Study and Policy indicates
that 47% of animal intakes in 1994
came from animal control, 29% from
owner surrenders, and 23% from other
sources. Euthanasia rates were 56% for
dogs, 72% for cats, just as ANIMAL
PEOPLE earlier projected from separate
state shelter surveys; 16% of dogs
were returned to owners, but only 2%
of cats. However, adoption rates were
nearly equal, at 25% for dogs and 23%
for cats. Of the reporting shelters,
53% were public animal control agencies,
22% were nonprofit humane societies,
and 16% were humane societies
holding animal control contracts.

EUTHANASIA RATES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

The following table states animal shelter
euthanasias per thousand human residents, all
shelters combined, for 21 urban jurisdictions
whose complete statistics for at least one of the
past three years are on file here.
Please note: over the whole U.S.,
those animal control jurisdictions with a mandate
to pick up cats tend to have higher euthanasia
rates than those that do not. Since rural and suburban
jurisdictions usually don’t have a mandate
to pick up cats, while urban jurisdictions do, the
overall U.S. norm, stated below, is probably
much lower than the norm for big cities, which
we have not calculated. The cat pickup mandates
of the cities below are essentially similar,
but other cat-related policies vary widely.

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Animal control & rescue

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

Of 1,561 animals surrendered by owners
to the Orlando Humane Society in May and
June, 1,071 were surrendered for the overlapping
reasons “can’t keep,” “landlord won’t allow,” and
“moving/lost job.” Just 734 were surrendered for
the also overlapping reasons “originally stray,”
“too many,” and “unwanted litter.” The only
other reasons for surrender cited significantly
often, among 36 choices, were “can’t care for,”
cited 288 times, and “owner request put to sleep,”
cited 204 times, probably chiefly in connection
with sick or injured animals. In balance, changes
of owner circumstance causing an animal to lose a
home would appear to be far more frequent than
cases of surplus. Since the end of May and beginning
of June are the months in which the most people
relocate, the importance of change of circumstance
in owner surrender may have been magnified
during the survey period––but even if it was,
the numbers indicate that programs aimed at keeping
animals in homes, especially rental homes,
now have as much potential to lower animal shelter
intakes and euthanasias as programs aimed at preventing
surplus births.

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NEAVS cleavage widens

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

BOSTON– –Overturning the New England Anti-Vivisection Society
board majority led by PETA cofounder Alex Pacheco, the Massachusetts Office
of the Attorney General on September 10 accepted the finding of NEAVS corporate
counsel Howard Mayo that longtime activist Theo Capaldo is the legal
NEAVS president-elect and that Irene Cruikshank, fired by the majority, is still
managing director.
Capaldo was picked as successor to retiring president Cleveland
Amory, founder of the Fund for Animals, by a board nominating committee consisting
of Pacheco, treasurer Dick Janisch, Evelyn Kimber, and Laura Simon.
Fracturing the alliance of PETA and the Fund that took control of NEAVS in
1988, after a two-year campaign, Pacheco rejected the choice, backed by fellow
PETA cofounder Ingrid Newkirk, Physicians Committee for Responsible
Medicine president Neal Barnard, and activists Tina Brackenbush, Merry
Caplan, and Scott Van Valkenburg.

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Fewer give––and Congress may scrutinize advocacy

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

WASHINGTON D.C.––Donations to environmental
causes, including animal protection, grew 12.5% from
1993 through 1995, reports a Gallup Organization poll of
2,617 adults with household incomes of under $200,000,
done for the charity umbrella group Independent Sector.
The growth was significant, as a fundraising slump
after Earth Day 1990 and the 1990 March for the Animals
brought an overall decline of 0.6% during the eight years
from 1987 through 1995, as sharp gains before 1990 were
quickly lost. Environmental and animal causes were more
successful at fundraising relative to past performance than
education, religion, international aid, and public and social
benefit charities, but lagged well behind health and youth
causes––and donations to the arts, culture, and humanities,
despite a 29% overall loss of support 1987-1995, enjoyed a
42% rebound during the last three years of the study.

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