Patrol Droppings September 16, 2007
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MADISON, Wis. (AP) –
Badge? Check! Gun? Check! Pooper Scooper? Maybe not. Officials in Madison, Wisconsin, are considering a proposal that would exempt police from the local pooper scooper law. Now, officers who are part of mounted patrols or K-9 units have to pick up after the animals, just like every other pet owner. The measure to be considered by the city council today would drop the droppings requirement for officers while on duty. One alderwoman notes that picking up the poo can be difficult for the mounted officers who do crowd control at the University of Wisconsin football games.
Officer in Arizona accused of leaving police dog in hot patrol car September 16, 2007
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PHOENIX (AP) – A police officer in Arizona has been booked on animal cruelty charges, accused of leaving a police dog in a patrol car for more than 12 hours on a 109-degree day.
Authorities say the suburban Phoenix officer was booked on a misdemeanor charge after a two-week investigation into the death of the Belgian Malinois (mal-in-wah) named Bandit.
The investigation found that Bandit was left in the patrol car last month while the officer ran errands, napped and ate out with his wife. The investigation says the officer later found the dog dead in the car.
The officer says he is scheduled to appear in court September 25th, but he says his lawyer has advised him not to comment further.
(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Horse’s death revives criticism about safety September 16, 2007
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NEW YORK (AP) – A carriage horse’s death in New York’s Central Park is renewing animal-rights activists’ concerns about the animals.
Several protesters gathered near the park after a startled horse bolted, injured itself and died yesterday afternoon. The hubbub spooked another horse that darted into traffic and collided with a car. As one protester put it, “Horses shouldn’t be in traffic.”
A spokeswoman for the Horse & Carriage Association of New York calls the episode “a freak accident.” She says it’s a blow to an industry that cares deeply about its animals.
She says the horse that died, a 13-year-old mare named Smoothie, had been a carriage horse for only a year. Witnesses say the horse may have been startled by a street performer.
(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Bison Face Hunting at Wyoming Refuge September 16, 2007
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Sunday, September 16, 2007
By MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press Writer
JACKSON, Wyo. — In the three decades since 18 bison stumbled onto a federal elk feeding ground outside this mountain town, the herd has ballooned to 1,200 animals _ one of the largest groups of bison in the United States.
But the National Elk Refuge was not created for bison, 6-foot-tall, 1-ton brutes also known as buffalo. Since their arrival, the bison have pushed elk off the refuge’s artificial feed lines, trampled its 25,000 acres of grasslands and introduced diseases that put livestock at risk.
Beginning Saturday, refuge officials and state wildlife officials will hold annual hunts aimed at cutting down the herd by at least 700 animals over the next few years. Hunters are entitled to one bison each.
Meanwhile, the artificial feeding will continue each winter, angering animal rights groups and environmentalists who say the government is baiting bison to unnecessary slaughter.
Refuge managers agreed that feeding the very bison they want hunters to shoot was not ideal. They said the conservative politics of northwest Wyoming _ home to Vice President Dick Cheney and a strong hunting culture that is a driving economic force _ gave them little choice.
“It’s a political compromise,” said Eric Cole, the refuge’s wildlife biologist. “The worst-case scenario is the hunt doesn’t happen and we have 1,200 bison. That’s a lot of mouths for a limited land base.”
Through a separate hunt, federal and state officials want to reduce the refuge’s elk population, from almost 8,000 animals to about 5,000.
Yet it’s the plan to kill bison that has garnered the most objection. That’s because of the animals’ docile nature _ hunting them has been compared to hunting a sofa _ and their iconic status as a last vestige of the once-wild American West.
“It’s senseless and it’s inhumane,” said Jonathan Lovvorn, an attorney with the Fund for Animals.
The group filed a lawsuit in 1998 seeking to stop the hunt, which forced the federal government to delay the killing of bison until an environmental study was completed earlier this year.
Refuge manager Steve Kallin said the bison hunt would have been much smaller if the Fund for Animals had never filed a lawsuit. When a hunt was first proposed in 1998, there were about 500 bison on the refuge _ a number Kallin said could have been sustained by hunting 70 animals a year.
Most states forbid or discourage feed grounds because they allow the easy transmission of wildlife and livestock diseases. Aside from the elk refuge, there are 22 state-run feed grounds in northwest Wyoming, a region of towering mountains and fertile valleys where punishing winters routinely kill off wildlife.
Local hunters and federal wildlife officials say the first were started a century ago, by ranchers hoping to keep elk from eating the hay they had set aside for livestock during winter.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service established the National Elk Refuge in 1912. Feeding of the elk began the same year. As elk hunting gained popularity, bringing streams of wealthy outsiders to Jackson every fall, the feed grounds helped ensure an ample supply of the animals.
The refuge’s feed lines have since expanded into a $250,000 annual program that doles out up to 80 semitrailer loads of alfalfa pellets each winter, according to federal documents and former refuge manager Barry Reiswig.
In recent years, a separate feed line was established for bison to keep them from out-muscling elk. Bison eat up to 20 pounds of alfalfa a day, versus about 8 pounds for elk.
Reiswig, who retired from the Fish and Wildlife Service in June, said he never liked the feeding program but was forced to accept it as a political reality.
“For us to march in and say, ‘We’re going to phase out this feeding program,’ that was not an option,” Reiswig said. “Realistically, in a Western state, given this administration, that’s just not the way this game is played.”
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Pets Killed for Food in Zimbabwe September 16, 2007
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Friday, September 14, 2007
By ANGUS SHAW, Associated Press Writer
HARARE, Zimbabwe — Pets are being slaughtered for meat in shortage-stricken Zimbabwe and record numbers of animals have been surrendered to shelters or abandoned by owners no longer able to feed them, animal welfare activists say.
The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said it could not feed surrendered animals or find them new homes and was being forced to kill them and destroy the corpses.
Animals, like people, are being hard hit by Zimbabwe’s economic meltdown, with official inflation of more than 7,600 percent, the highest in the world. Independent estimates put real inflation closer to 25,000 percent and the International Monetary Fund has forecast it will reach 100,000 percent by the end of the year.
Vets have run out of the drug used to put down the animals and are relying on intermittent donations from neighboring South Africa. One veterinary practice was waiting for supplies to destroy about 20 animals, and on Friday could neither feed them adequately nor fatally inject them.
Pets, mostly dogs, have been butchered and eaten. In its latest bulletin to donors and supporters, the SPCA said it launched an awareness campaign on “the ethical and moral issues regarding the killing and consumption of trusted companion animals.”
“But in the face of starvation and the burgeoning number of stray and abandoned animals, the moral issues become far more complex and we should not be too hasty in our condemnations when animals and people are suffering equally,” it said.
One animal rights activist, who asked not to be named out of fear of arrest, called the situation “too ghastly for words.
“We are accused of giving the country a bad name,” the activist said.
Zimbabwean and international human rights groups accuse the government of intimidating, threatening, harassing and physically attacking critics or those seen as casting the government in a bad light. Sweeping media laws have brought the closure of independent and opposition newspapers, speech and gatherings are tightly controlled, and President Robert Mugabe has applauded police for beating opposition activists.
Animal activists say they have been threatened with arrest for speaking out and SPCA offices were raided by secret police agents of the Central Intelligence Organization on Thursday. SPCA inspectors said they were ordered not to release details of surrendered, abandoned, slain or eaten pets.
No comment was immediately available from the government.
Mugabe’s critics say corruption and his stewardship of the economy have led to the crisis. They point to the often-violent, government seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms that began in 2000 and disrupted the agriculture-based economy in what was once a regional breadbasket.
Meat, cornmeal, bread and other staples vanished from shops and stores. A government order to slash prices of all goods and services in June worsened acute food shortages and has left stores virtually empty of basic foodstuffs.
Food shortages have also emboldened rats to forage for scraps in homes and far beyond their usual hideaways, pest control specialists said.
Leftover food that would have been discarded has become too precious to throw away, said a rat catcher in western Harare.
“We are getting rat problems where we never saw them before,” he said, asking not to be identified in the mounting climate of fear of the authorities. “Please, I don’t want any trouble.”
Illegally slaughtered meat sells for more than 10 times the government’s fixed price on the thriving black market. It comes in plastic bags of 22 pounds and more, containing bone, fat and offal and no indication of types or cuts of meat.
“You’re getting brisket, shin, flank, rump and anything else that’s available, all lumped together. It’s meat, take it or leave it,” the animal protection activist said.
“It is not illegal to eat dog meat in this country, but we have laws on how animals must be humanely slaughtered,” he said.
A court case is pending in the eastern city of Mutare, where a pet dog was butchered and eaten. Police and SPCA inspectors were called to a shopping center in Harare earlier this month, where a man was offering frozen dog meat for sale from the back of a pickup truck, activists said.
The suspect escaped and the vehicle was not traced.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Donkey Freed After Falling in Well September 16, 2007
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UNDERWOOD, Minn. — A donkey is happily eating grass again after falling down a dry, abandoned well and being freed in an intensive rescue effort.
It appeared that the animal wandered away from its farm and onto some boards covering the well, which broke, said Bruce Huseth, fire chief in this western Minnesota town.
Firefighters quickly realized that the animal, which belongs to farmer Warren Gundberg, couldn’t just be pulled from the abandoned well on Bryan Nelson’s land.
So they started pulling away earth with a tractor and dismantling the well block by block Thursday. Once one wall had been taken apart, firefighters put a harness around the donkey and guided it out with a rope.
“Whatever it takes,” Nelson said as he watched his well come down. “I love animals, and I’m just glad it’s OK.”
Gundberg admonished the animal after the rescue: “I bet you’ll think twice about doing that again. If you would have stayed home you wouldn’t be in this trouble.”
Huseth said that he has rescued cows that have fallen through ice, but that the donkey was a first.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
When dogs go to war, they get care worthy of soldiers August 17, 2007
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Military dogs go to basic training, too.
Instructors at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio teach dogs to tolerate the crack of gunfire and sputter of helicopters.
The animals are trained to sniff for explosives on command, plus freeze and stare at suspicious objects.
About 2,000 of these working dogs confront danger beside American soldiers, largely in the Middle East.
With noses that detect scents up to a third of a mile away, many sniff for explosives in Iraq.
Their numbers have been growing about 20 percent a year since the terrorist attacks of 2001.
In doing their jobs, dozens of these dogs have also become war wounded — and their services are so valued that injured dogs are treated much like hurt troops.
Some dogs evacuated to military veterinary centers hundreds of miles away — even to Germany and the United States for rehabilitation.
Many recover and return to duty.
– People interested in adopting a military dog at the end of its service career may contact Lackland Air Force Base at 1-800-531-1066.
(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
San Antonio Animal Shelter Goes “No Kill” August 17, 2007
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In the old lobby of San Antonio’s Animal Care Services, a cheerful-looking sign delivers a somber message in neon pink, blue and yellow:In a week’s time, the city-run shelter took in a thousand dogs and cats, adopted out or rescued 76, and killed 925.
The shelter wants to turn those numbers around.
By 2012, San Antonio plans to become a “no-kill” facility — meaning it won’t kill any animal deemed healthy or treatable.
It plans to reduce the homeless pet population through spay-neuter programs and work with other shelters to find permanent homes for animals. By doing so, the San Antonio shelter believes it’s learned from those that have tried to become no-kill, but failed.
Animal welfare advocates say the pitfalls are many.
Many no-kill shelters have no backup plan and hang onto animals for months, sometimes years, until they’re adopted. That causes overcrowding and health problems for the animals.
On the Net:
American Humane Association:
http://www.americanhumane.org/ASPCA:
http://www.aspca.org/Humane Society of the United States:
http://www.hsus.org/PETA:
http://www.peta.orgCity of San Antonio
Animal Care Services: http://www.sanantonio.gov/ animalcare
Texas Mayor Blames City Manager for Mistreatment of Dogs August 17, 2007
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A South Texas mayor is accusing the city manager of allowing stray dogs to die and dumping their carcasses in ditches — rather than taking them to shelters.
Edcouch Mayor Jose Guzman says City Manager Ernesto Ayala Junior should resign over an animal control policy that Guzman said led to the deaths of about one dozen dogs.
The mayor says the dogs were tied up with little food or water outside the city public works department until they were taken outside city limits and released.
He said some were tied up for days and didn’t survive.
Ayala denied allegations that the animals were mistreated and said workers were escorting the dogs out of town because there were no funds for animal control.
Ayala says the city buried dogs that were already found dead.
Guzman did not immediately return a call to The Associated Press.
Information From:
The Monitor: www.themonitor.com
San Antonio Express-News: www.mysanantonio.com
(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All
Rights Reserved.)
Feline Takes a Plunge August 17, 2007
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A cat fell 19 stories from a Chicago high rise and lived.

Maxim, the black and white tabby fell out of his owner’s apartment after clawing through a window screen.
Daria who was watching the owner’s cat states: “It’s really high. The doctor said this is the first time they’ve seen a cat who survived fall at that height.”
The cat had several broken bones after the fall, resulting in the vet placing pins and plates to hold them together. Maxim will have several staples for weeks, and has to wear a special patch for pain, however he is expected to be back on his paws in no time.
Maxim’s owner, a Sargent in Iraq right now would have never thought his cat at home would be the one with the battle scars. This soldier who has given so much is now worried how he will pay for the nearly three thousand dollar vet bill.
(C) Chicago AP 2007