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- --forwarded message--
-
- HOG FACTORIES TARGET WISCONSIN
-
- Giant "hog factories" are targeting Wisconsin. They are an immediate threat
- to our environment, air quality, public health, groundwater, streams,
- property values - the very survival of rural communities.
-
- Concentrated hog feeding operations consist of thousands of confined swine
- with lagoon and tank storage for millions of gallons of urine and feces.
- Hog waste is spread upon thousands of contracted acres. The stench is
- unbearable and the pollution inevitable. Factory hogs are bred for quick
- slaughter, pumped up on drugs and feed additives, and are contrary to
- sustainable farming.
-
- Seghers Hybrid, a Belgium multinational, intends to build a 7,500 swine
- breeding facility in Marshall Township near Richland Center despite
- overwhelming local opposition. Farmland, a giant 'co-op' from Missouri, is
- aggressively seeking Wisconsin hog factory sites.
-
- Who is protecting Wisconsin? Not DATCP or DNR. The Department of
- Agriculture and the Department of Natural Resources are spending our tax
- money working with Seghers and Farmland to overcome citizen opposition.
- They met together in Madison April 11 to strategize.
-
- Just like stopping the Exxon/Crandon mine, this is a critical statewide
- fight. Unless YOU help stop hog factories they will spread like a cancer
- across our state as they have in North Carolina and elsewhere.
-
- WHAT TO DO
- Tell the DNR you want an Environmental Impact Statement required for Seghers
- Hybrid and all large hog factories. Request that public hearings be held on
- each new hog factory and ask to be notified. Write to:
- Secretary George Meyer
- Department of Natural Resources
- Box 7921
- Madison, WI 53707
-
- Please send a copy of your DNR letter to:
- Neighbors Against Hog Factories
- PO Box 671
- Richland Center, WI 53581
- phone: 608-647-4499
-
- --end
-
-
- Date: Sun, 04 May 1997 00:34:03 +0000
- >From: Liz <lgrayson@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Feeding an industry-where did all the puppies/kittens come from ?
- Message-ID: <336BD956.7D00@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
-
- (CNN) -- It's a marathon with
- a twist -- and several
- tails.
-
- Animal adoption agencies have
- launched the third
- annual "Pet Adoptathon," aimed
- at finding homes for
- abandoned dogs and cats.
-
- (768K/19 sec. QuickTime
- movie)
-
- More than 1,000 pet adoption
- centers, most of them in
- the United States, are taking
- part in this weekend's
- event. They hope to place at
- least 25,000 animals.
-
- The Adoptathon got its start
- three years ago at an
- animal shelter on Long Island,
- New York. Marge Stein
- said her North Shore Animal
- League office would stay
- open for 36 straight hours
- this weekend.
-
- Although it encourages people
- to adopt furry friends,
- the event is also aimed at
- focusing attention on the
- need to spay and neuter pets
- to control the animal
- population.
-
- The Associated Press
- contributed to this report. รก
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 15:25:37 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: jwed@hkstar.com, ifkaps@msn.com
- Subject: (KP) Tiger slaughter
- Message-ID: <199705040725.PAA27344@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- > Korea Herald
- 2 May 97 : In My View (Readers' Forum); Tiger in Tales
-
- By Alain Burrese
-
- Korea has a rich heritage, full of folk tales, proverbs and maxims.
- Many of these tales and sayings focus on one of the most majestic
- animals to live on our planet: the tiger. The oldest and most often
- cited legend of the origin of the Korean people is about Tan-gun, and
- although the tiger in this tale lacks the perseverance to remain in
- the cave with the bear for 100 days, he is still a major character in
- the story.
-
- Sadly, this distinguished feline could soon very well only remain in
- the legends and lore of yesterday. If you watch the STAR channel for
- English television shows here in Korea, you are probably familiar with
- the disturbing commercial that shows the various ways tigers are being
- killed and used around the world, especially here in Asia. The
- commercial ends with the statement that, if we do not do something,
- the tiger could be extinct in the wild in five years.
-
- Currently the worldwide tiger population has slumped to an all-time
- low. Only 5,000 tigers exist in the wild. According to the Zoological
- Society of London, there has been a drop of 10,000 tigers in the past
- 30 years. The decline has accelerated during the past decade, despite
- concerted efforts from conservationists to save the species. Part of
- this decline is due to habitat destruction, but more significantly, it
- can be blamed on the recent growth in demand for tiger body parts for
- use in traditional Chinese medicine.
-
- Even though it is illegal under the Convention on International Trade
- in Endangered Species, the trade of tiger body parts constitutes a
- large part of the global wildlife trade. Tiger bones and parts are
- used in a variety of ways; from herbal medicines to the so called
- delicacy _ tiger penis soup. It not only saddens me, but infuriates me
- that people will exterminate a species of animal over nothing more
- than magical potions to increase their libido.
-
- According to Sarah Christie, the Zoological Society of London's tiger
- co-ordinator, some tiger parts have anti-inflammatory and other
- properties, but they are still not as good as an aspirin. The increase
- in the Far East per capita incomes has meant that more people can
- afford traditional herbal medicines, treated as luxuries, and they are
- buying them to show off their wealth. Again, anger and anguish arise
- as I think of these beautiful denizens of the jungle being slaughtered
- for nothing other than people's vanity.
-
- At least 1,900 kilos of tiger bone were exported to Japan from Taiwan
- in 1990, according to Richard Burge, the society's director general.
- ``That's the equivalent of 400-500 tigers. The increase in the use of
- tiger parts in herbal medicine is outweighing any increases in the
- number of tigers we might hope for,'' he said. Tiger bones and parts
- are also some of the most commonly found animal products smuggled in
- to Britain.
-
- My particular favorite sub-species is the white tiger, which hasn't
- existed in the wild for years. Because of the drastically low numbers
- of these tigers, in-breeding has heightened the rate of cub mortality
- and genetic defects. Now as populations of their orange cousins
- decline, the risks associated with in-breeding are appearing
- elsewhere. Some sub-species are more at risk than others. The South
- China tiger is currently closest to extinction, with just 20 specimens
- recorded in the wild.
-
- The society predicts a continuation of the decline, so they are
- coordinating existing tiger sperm and egg banks around the world as
- part of the fight to save the tiger. We all need to join this fight to
- help eliminate the illegal use and trade of tiger bones and parts. If
- there were no demand, those killing the tigers wouldn't make a profit,
- and the tiger might have a fighting chance to continue living in the
- jungles and forests of our shrinking planet.
-
- There's an old Korean saying, ``Horangi tambae makul chok,'' which is
- ``When tigers smoked long pipes.'' This is equivalent to the English,
- ``Once-upon-a-time.'' Wouldn't it be terribly sad if our future
- generations were to say, ``When tigers smoked long pipes, there were
- tigers.''
-
- The writer is a resident of Kangnung City, Kangwon Province.
-
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 15:25:44 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: jwed@hkstar.com, ifkaps@msn.com
- Subject: (KP) Bardot not a racist
- Message-ID: <199705040725.PAA22534@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Korea Herald
-
- 23 Apr 97 : Letters to the Editor; Animal Rights Activist
-
- To the Editor
-
- I have a few comments regarding an article about the French star,
- Brigitte Bardot which appeared in The Korea Herald on Friday, April
- 18, 1997, on page eleven. The article was entitled, ``Defiant Bardot
- attacks sheep slaughter ritual.''
-
- As a brown woman, and as a lifelong vegetarian and supporter of animal
- rights, I certainly do not consider Ms. Bardot to be a racist. She is
- merely speaking the truth. After all, how can a person who defends
- non-human animals be racist towards other humans? The anti-racist
- organizations harrassing Ms. Bardot should reflect upon the violence
- they are supporting. They should stop attacking her and spend their
- time more productively, fighting racism where it really exists.
-
- Ms. Bardot is a beautiful woman of great ethics and compassion. She
- realizes that oppression of animals permeates virtually every facet of
- society. Examples include the meat industry, trapping of fur bearing
- animals, whaling. hunting/fishing, zoos, torture in labs in the name
- of science, and in religious rituals. Ms. Bardot has been active in
- the struggle against the Canadian seal hunt, and the fur trade.
-
- Currently, she is protesting the killing of sheep in the name of
- religion. This is common practice amongst certain religions such as
- Orthodox Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. It is ironic that in the
- name of God, or Allah, the All-merciful, His innocent creatures are
- violently killed by having their throats slit, while priests recite a
- prayer. Common sense would seem to indicate that God be worshipped by
- protecting his creatures. But of course, almost all religions are
- known for their lack of common sense. They rigidly adhere to dogma.
-
- Violence towards non-human animals is linked to violence towards
- humans. For example Algerian Muslims try to advance their political
- cause by murdering women and children in the same way they kill sheep
- _ by slitting their throats. French nationals have been murdered in
- this way. It is only natural for Ms. Bardot to be concerned about the
- Islamization of her beloved France. Violent diets and violent rituals
- beget violence towards people.
-
- The converse is also true. One of the most successful leaders of the
- twentieth century, Mahatma Gandhi, was a peaceloving, animal loving
- vegetarian. In fact, the problems that plague France also exist in
- India, which has one of the world's largest concentrations of Muslims.
- Sikhs, Jains, and Hindus are vegetarian whereas Muslims ritually kill
- and eat animals. This issue creates a great deal of tension in India,
- just as in France as your article pointed out.
-
- In fairness, Ms. Bardot should remember that it is not just Muslims
- who violate animal rights. The French are known for foie gras which is
- the result of extreme cruelty to ducks. As well, as reported in The
- Korea Herald recently, some Paris restaurants serve monkey meat. This
- is stepping dangerously close to cannibalism. In Korea, the practice
- of eating man's best friend, the dog, is deeply disturbing to many
- people. Pity the poor animals, Nowhere are they safe or free.
-
- To reiterate, as a lifelong vegetarian, supporter of animal rights,
- and as a brown woman, I fully agree with Brigitte Bardot. She is not a
- racist; she is speaking the truth, no matter how bitter it may be to
- some people. In the words of the great master Leonardo da Vinci, may
- the day soon come when human beings ``look upon the murder of animals,
- as they now look upon the murder of men.'' Prabhnoor Kaur Rangi
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 15:25:51 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (KP) Regulations to Be Enacted on Genetic Experiments
- Message-ID: <199705040725.PAA00307@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Korea Herald
-
- 22 Apr 97 : Regulations to Be Enacted on Genetic Experiments
-
- A set of regulations to prevent potential mishaps which can arise in
- the process of genetic manipulation and other genetics- related
- experiments will be implemented beginning in July, the Ministry of
- Health and Welfare said yesterday.
-
- The occasion marks the first time that the government has taken charge
- in regulating genetics-related research and development. Under the
- regulations, which have been formulated in accordance with standards
- used in advanced countries, research institutions will be required to
- follow strict rules regarding sealing methods and guidelines for
- mutational organisms that are produced during experiments.
-
- Institutions will also be required to adhere to experimental
- guidelines to ensure human and laboratory security while establishing
- a safety committee. Further, institutions will be banned from
- conducting experiments that tamper in any way with the sacredness of
- human beings.
-
- According to ministry officials, the regulations have been set amidst
- the nation's increasingly brisk experimental activities employing
- bioengineering in such diverse areas as medicine, agriculture,
- manufacturing and environment. The enforcement of such regulations
- also became a pressing matter as Korea joined the Organization of
- Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the officials said.
-
- As of yet, there has been no known mishap done to humans or the rest
- of the ecosystem as a result of genetic experiments in the nation.
- Worldwide, 106 biosafety regulations or guidelines have been in effect
- since 1994, most of which have been formulated in the late '80s.
-
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 15:25:59 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (SG) Of Ubin tiger tales and higher boat fares
- Message-ID: <199705040725.PAA29918@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- MAY 4 1997
-
- Of Ubin tiger tales and higher boat fares
- By David Miller and Melissa Heng
-
-
- IT all began about two weeks ago when an elderly woman claimed
- that she had come face to face with a tiger while picking sea
- shells near a swamp.
-
- The story soon spread and within days, villagers were claiming
- that there were at least two such creatures roaming the island.
-
- The latest rumour on Friday had it that one of the tigers had
- sunk its teeth into a dog and hauled it away.
-
- Like stories of the other so-called sightings, this one was
- spread by word of mouth. No police reports were made and no
- traces of the supposed predator was found.
-
- So it would appear that all the talk about tigers is just that --
- talk.
-
- Police and zoo officials who combed the 1,019-ha island over
- several days failed to find any solid evidence of tigers roaming
- the island.
-
- Yet villagers were eager to point out "tiger" paw prints, 11 cm
- long, to picnickers and the press. But these prints are actually
- those of dogs and wild pigs native to Pulau Ubin.
-
- The prints of a real tiger would measure at least 14 cm long.
-
- Said one zoo official: "If there was a tiger here, we would have
- found something by now -- either paw prints, fur or droppings.
- But there is nothing." All the same, the authorities took no
- chances. The National Parks Board put up signs warning campers
- not to stay overnight. And police warned islanders to stay
- indoors after dark.
-
- Even Outward Bound Singapore is keeping its training programmes
- within its fenced compound on the island or at sea. Was there
- some hidden motive behind the reported sightings?
-
- Mr K. P. Tan, a member of the Nature Society of Singapore,
- believes so.
-
- His theory is that there is a "tiger conspiracy" hatched by a few
- villagers, as revenge on the island's ferry operators for jacking
- their fares up from $1 to $1.50 per trip recently.
-
- He said: "Some people are angry about the fare increase and
- started the tiger rumour to scare away visitors to the island, so
- that the boatmen will have no business".
-
- However, interviews with more than 30 people living on the island
- showed that few of them saw any link between the tiger tales and
- the fare hike.
-
- Many accepted the fare increase with a typically laid-back
- attitude.
-
- Farmer Seh Koh, 74, who spoke in Hokkien, said of the ferry
- operators: "Even if their business is poor, they still have to
- make a living."
-
- And boatman Chua Lee Seng, 50, said: "We still have to make the
- same trip even if there are only three or four passengers. So of
- course, we have to increase our fares."
-
- Ferry fares were last raised five years ago, from 80 cents to $1.
- There were no rumours of tigers then.
-
- Operators like Mr Chua said the tiger scare has not affected
- business.
-
- "People will still come here over the weekend, and the villagers
- will still need transport," he said dryly.
-
- The 400-odd islanders are divided over the tiger tales. Some
- believe them, some scoff.
-
- Village headman Lim Chye Joo, 94, is prepared to give the benefit
- of the doubt to those who claimed to have seen a tiger. "If an
- elephant can come over here, why not a tiger?" he said.
-
- In 1991, a young bull elephant was caught on the island after it
- swam across from the Malaysian state of Johor.
-
- Other residents, like Madam Neo Hong Eng, are sceptical. "What
- tiger? It's all rubbish. There is nothing here to worry about. We
- don't even lock our doors at night," said the 80-year-old woman
- who lives with her three sisters in a wooden hut.
-
- But the believers pointed out that it was easy enough for a tiger
- to swim across the narrow waterway separating the island from
- Johor.
-
- The director of the Johor State Wildlife and National Parks
- Department, Mr Zainuddin Abdul Shukor, is unconvinced.
-
- On Friday, he told the Malaysian newspaper, New Straits Times,
- that no tigers had been sighted in Pengerang in south-east Johor,
- across the water from Pulau Ubin.
-
- Police, who issued the "tiger alert" on Monday, said they will be
- monitoring the situation. Meanwhile, some people are still
- gripped by the image of a tiger burning bright in the forest of
- an Ubin night.
-
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 15:26:07 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Investigation into tobacco industry
- Message-ID: <199705040726.PAA15469@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- MAY 4 1997
-
- US govt steps up two-prong investigation into tobacco industry
-
-
- WASHINGTON -- Newly available tobacco-industry documents have led
- the Justice Department to step up a criminal investigation to
- determine whether cigarette makers lied systematically to
- Congress and government agencies about their business practices
- and about whether nicotine was addictive, officials said.
-
- The Justice Department has assigned a task force of FBI agents
- and a supervisor from the bureau's white-collar crime unit to
- review pages of internal industry documents.
-
- Some of the documents have been provided as a result of recent
- progress made in civil litigation against tobacco-industry
- giants, the officials said on Friday.
-
- The documents relate to the health effects of smoking and the
- addictive nature of nicotine and are considered critical to a
- widening grand-jury investigation of the tobacco industry,
- sources familiar with the inquiry said.
-
- FBI agents and prosecutors from the criminal division plan to
- compare the company research documents and other records with
- information provided previously to the federal government,
- including the Food and Drug Administration. The Justice
- Department is seeking to determine whether there are significant
- inconsistencies between the information provided previously by
- the firms and the newly available documents.
-
- A federal law prohibits making false statements to government
- agencies. The law, which also includes penalties for withholding
- information, provides for a maximum penalty of five years in
- prison and a US$10,000 (S$14,000) fine for each false statement.
-
- The decision to assign FBI agents to the inquiry full-time was
- made because of the massive number of documents that have to be
- reviewed, officials said. Despite the expansion of the Justice
- Department inquiry, anti-tobacco activists have complained that
- the investigation has been too slow and that turnover among the
- Justice Department investigators assigned to the probe has
- impeded its progress.
-
- Justice Department spokesman Bert Brandenburg disagreed on
- Friday, saying: "Investigations are not horse races ... This is a
- major investigation involving hundreds of thousands of pages of
- documents. It is proceeding, deliberately, thoroughly and
- expeditiously." Another law-enforcement official described FBI
- agents as "drowning in documents".
-
- To deal with the workload, the investigators have been broken up
- into three main teams, one for each of the major cigarette
- companies, Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds and Brown & Williamson.
-
- Each team includes a federal prosecutor and several FBI agents.
-
- Justice Department officials have also acquired thousands of
- documents from the 30 million-document depository compiled by the
- state of Minnesota as part of its effort to sue the tobacco
- industry. Those documents come from each of the major tobacco
- firms. It has also begun steps to review a set of internal
- documents from the Liggett Group cigarette manufacturer. Liggett,
- the smallest of the nation's major tobacco firms, agreed recently
- to settle 22 state lawsuits and admitted that smoking causes
- cancer, that nicotine is addictive and that the industry targets
- underaged smokers.
-
- Liggett has already released some documents. Some of the
- documents turned over to courts concern the co-operative
- activities of the entire industry, and other firms are fighting
- to block their release on the grounds that they are privileged.
- -- Washington Post.
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 00:51:27 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Drought devastates vulnerable birds
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970504005154.34477148@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, May 4th, 1997
-
- Drought devastates vulnerable birds
- By Greg Neale, Environment Correspondent
-
- THE drought across southern and eastern Britain is devastating vulnerable
- birds, says a report to be released this week.
-
- A survey by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, says the numbers
- of some species have dropped by as much as 80 per cent because they are
- either not breeding, or are unable to feed their young. Many valuable
- marshes and wetlands are drying up, leaving birds short of food and habitat.
-
- In some of the most important nature reserves in southern England, birds
- such as the lapwing - used by naturalists as an indicator of environmental
- stress - are either not nesting, or have not hatched eggs. Other species,
- such as the redshank, are unlikely to be able to
- feed their young on ground that is almost solid. There will be fewer such
- birds next year.
-
- Sarah Fowler, the RSPB's water policy officer, said that the drought was
- affecting many other species than those dependent on wetlands. "Wading
- birds are our immediate concern," she said, "but others are also dependent
- on water levels remaining high, or soil staying moist." Among the other
- species are those such as the reed warbler and water rail, which usually
- nest in reeds, just above the water level. "As water levels fall, and
- streams and marshes dry up, these birds are more vulnerable to predators,"
- said Ms Fowler.
-
- "The drought is mainly hitting sites in south and east England, with water
- levels on many at the level we would expect at the height of the summer.
- With evaporation increasing from now on, it will be a battle to keep them
- wet. Sites in the north and west of England are generally faring better, but
- if the drought continues, there will be concerns over some of them as well."
-
- At the Northward Hill Nature Reserve in the north Kent marshes, numbers of
- many wetland birds have fallen sharply. Alan Parker, senior RSPB warden for
- north west Kent, said: "I've never seen anything like this in 20 years here.
- We have managed to keep one section of land quite moist, using a reservoir
- that was filled during the winter. That is helping birds such as avocets,
- which have concentrated there. Other than that, there is nothing we can do.
- We could pump water on to the fields, but it is so dry that it would be a
- waste of time. From an average of 50 pairs of lapwings in a normal year, we
- have only about seven. Any rain now will just soak through the cracks in the
- clay. In some fields the cracks are already an inch wide."
-
- Many adult lapwings and redshanks might fly to coastal estuaries, but that
- could mean inland wetlands losing their bird populations in future, Mr
- Parker said. "Eventually, if conditions do not improve, they won't come
- back." Those wetlands where water levels are higher are facing overcrowding
- by birds which usually nest elsewhere.
-
- Ms Fowler said: "Waders are flocking to sites such the Berney Marshes in
- Essex but this increases competition for space, and the stress on the
- birds." Among those nature reserves surveyed, Elmey, in north Kent has water
- levels usually seen in high summer. Pulborough Brooks, in Sussex, has levels
- below normal.
-
- The RSPB will urge the public to do more to save water, and for the water
- companies to step up efforts to stem mains leakages, and reduce consumer
- demand. The Water Services Association said that the larger water companies
- had saved 100 million gallons a day
- because of maintenance work since 1995. But Ms Fowler said: "The water
- companies and their customers must do better."
-
- โ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 16:10:57 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: jandeb@mbox2.singnet.com.sg, Esther_NG@nac.gov.sg
- Subject: Asia magazine letters column
- Message-ID: <199705040810.QAA31671@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Asia Magazine May 2 - 4 1997, Volume 35 M15
- RIGHT ANIMAL WRONGS
-
- Norma Moss' excellent Sting (Apr 4-6) article is a clear indication that
- despite its promising success in economic development, Asia still has a long
- way to go when it comes to animal protection and compassion.
-
- How can we eat the penises of seals clubbed to death and the fins which are
- hacked off from baby sharks before the sharks are thrown alive into the sea?
- Asia is in urgent need for laws, more pro-active policy-makers and more
- animal protection organisations with the clout to effect change to safeguard
- animals from wealthy Asian perverts with penis/fin/paw envy with regards to
- animals.
-
- - Brian Ong, Singapore
-
- Your magazine's piece on animal cruelty in Asia highlighted the situation
- very well. We really need to raise awareness of animal issues around the
- region. I shudder to think about the millions of animals suffering in Asia
- with so few voices speaking up for them.
-
- - Vadivu Govindar Rasu, Singapore
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 11:01:44 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Paul Shapiro <shapiro5@CapAccess.org>
- To: AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: COK Activists Need Your Help NOW!!!
- Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91-FP.970504110112.3687F-100000@cap1.capaccess.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Dozens of Compassion Over Killing (COK) activists converged on Miller's
- Furs in D.C. on May 2nd for a peaceful demonstration. Approximately one
- hour into the protest, an anonymous activist hurled "blood" on the
- storefront, screaming: "The blood is on your hands, Miller's!" The
- activist ran off, escaping arrest, leaving behind a bloodied window.
-
- Moments later, police arrived on the scene, randomly arresting five
- activists--activists who are "coincidentally" COK leaders. The charge:
- simple assault! However, the entire demonstration was caught on
- videotape, clearly showing that the ONLY assault was when a Miller's
- employee pushed two COK activists.
-
- The five are Sean Day, Elliot Gang, Peter Petersan, Paul Shapiro, and
- Franklin Wade. As Paul is a minor, he was released after only eight hours
- in custody. Franklin is being held at Central Cell Block while Sean,
- Elliot, and Peter are at the 5th District until their arraignment on
- Monday morning.
-
- Please call the facilities and inquire as to their well-being. These
- falsely accused and unjustly arrested activists desperately need your
- support.
-
- Central Cell Block: 202-727-4222 (for Franklin Wade)
- 5th District: 202-727-4490 (for Sean Day, Elliot Gang, Peter Petersan)
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 13:38:01 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: LMANHEIM@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: Environmentalists Decry State Deals
- Message-ID: <970504133800_-1064748945@emout11.mail.aol.com>
-
- In a message dated 97-05-04 12:47:12 EDT, AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net writes:
-
- << Subj:Environmentalists Decry State Deals
- Date:97-05-04 12:47:12 EDT
- From:AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By SCOTT SONNER
- WASHINGTON (AP) - The Clinton administration increasingly is
- striking deals with states and private companies to protect fish
- and wildlife, ditching the Endangered Species Act as a regulatory
- club except in the most dire circumstances.
- The tactic landed the administration in hot water this spring
- with three federal judges who felt the law should have been used to
- protect jaguars in the Southwest, lynx in the Northwest and the
- Barton Springs salamander in Texas.
- It also has drawn heavy fire from environmentalists, who have
- grown increasingly critical of President Clinton's willingness to
- bargain away the law's stringent protections.
- ``We are seeing a very disturbing pattern here,'' said Mark
- Hubbard of the Oregon Natural Resources Council, a nonprofit
- conservation group based in Portland, Ore., that has sued the
- government for what it considers lax enforcement.
- ``We have gone from surprised to disappointed to just plain
- angry with the Clinton administration over their refusal to protect
- endangered species,'' he said.
- Architects of the administration's policy say negotiating with
- state and private land owners to save species makes sense in a
- political climate where property rights carry much weight.
- The carrot works better than the stick, they argue.
- ``It is not a win to see a species driven to the verge of
- extinction and then be able to save the last of that species by
- hammering someone with the Endangered Species Act,'' said Katie
- McGinty, director of the White House Council on Environmental
- Quality.
- The administration is using the law ``to its fullest and most
- creative extent and reaching out to save those rare ecosystems by
- working in partnership with people who own the land,'' McGinty
- said.
- By year's end, the administration will have negotiated habitat
- conservation plans covering more than 18 million acres of state and
- privately owned land.
- Such pragmatism is no virtue in the eyes of Clinton's
- environmental critics.
- ``Essentially it is a new way to get around enforcing the
- Endangered Species Act,'' Sierra Club lobbyist Melinda Pierce said
- of the habitat conservation plans.
- ``It's just feel-good politics. They have junked the law,'' said
- Mike Bader of the Missoula, Mont.-based Alliance for the Wild
- Rockies, which wants federal protection for the bull trout in the
- northern Rocky Mountains.
- Environmentalists' biggest beef is with a ``no surprises''
- clause in the habitat conservation plans, which promises land
- owners that if they fulfill protection criteria, they'll be
- insulated from any future federal conservation requirements.
- ``It's the only way companies would ever enter into such
- agreements,'' said Chris West, vice president of the Northwest
- Forestry Association in Portland, Ore.
- In March, federal judges in Arizona, Texas and Washington state
- chided the administration for refusing to order protection for the
- jaguar, Barton Springs salamander and lynx.
- In the case of the jaguar, the Fish and Wildlife Service was
- ordered to declare the rare cat endangered and set aside land to
- protect it.
- In Washington, the agency was told to reconsider its decision to
- keep the lynx off the list; only a few hundred of the cats remain
- in a handful of states.
- ``The Fish and Wildlife Service has consistently ignored the
- analysis of its expert biologists,'' wrote U.S. District Judge
- Gladys Kessler in Seattle.
- In Austin, U.S. District Judge Lucius Bunton ruled that Interior
- Secretary Bruce Babbitt had violated the Endangered Species Act
- after ``strong political pressure was applied to the secretary to
- withdraw the proposed listing of the salamander.''
- Babbitt subsequently declared the salamander threatened. But
- environmentalists were up in arms again when the National Marine
- Fisheries Service decided April 25 against federal protection for
- Oregon's coastal coho salmon, opting instead to give the state a
- chance to try its own $30 million recovery plan with support from
- the timber industry.
- Environmentalists say an industry pledge to log more responsibly
- and to help restore damaged stream beds was little consolation for
- the Oregon coastal coho, whose stock has dropped from as many as
- 1.4 million in the early 1900s to about 80,000 today.
- ``Many of these coho runs are dangerously close to extinction
- and need protection right now,'' said Ken Rait, conservation
- director for the Oregon Natural Resources Council.
- ``The Clinton administration has surpassed the Bush
- administration in both their zeal to change the Endangered Species
- Act and their reluctance to implement it,'' said Bader, a former
- park ranger at Yellowstone National Park.
- But George Frampton Jr., a former president of The Wilderness
- Society who was an assistant interior secretary in Clinton's first
- term, calls the environmental community ``totally out to lunch on
- the Endangered Species Act.''
- ``A listing alone, that and a quarter is going to get you a cup
- of coffee,'' said Frampton.
- Frampton said the fewest complaints about the habitat
- conservation plans are heard among conservationists in California,
- where wildlife habitat is threatened most by development.
- ``Environmentalists in Southern California know that anything we
- don't get protected today will be paved over in 20 years. So if we
- can save 300,000 or 400,000 acres of habitat for species, they look
- at that as a tremendous victory,'' he said.
- ``More than 70 percent of all critical habitat is on private
- land,'' McGinty said. She said that without habitat conservation
- plans, ``none of these species would receive protection until they
- are on the brink of extinction.''
- Currently, 1,081 plant and animal species are protected as
- threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act.
- The Clinton administration has added 305 species to the list,
- compared with 228 during the four-year Bush administration and 257
- during the eight-year Reagan administration, said Interior
- Department spokeswoman Lisa Guide.
- Nearly 400 habitat conservation plans have been approved or
- developed in the past four years. They affect tracts ranging from
- one-half acre to 2 million acres, last as long as a century and
- cover up to 100 species. >>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- >From:AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net
- Date: 97-05-04 12:47:12 EDT
-
- <HTML><PRE><I>.c The Associated Press</I></PRE></HTML>
-
- By SCOTT SONNER
- WASHINGTON (AP) - The Clinton administration increasingly is
- striking deals with states and private companies to protect fish
- and wildlife, ditching the Endangered Species Act as a regulatory
- club except in the most dire circumstances.
- The tactic landed the administration in hot water this spring
- with three federal judges who felt the law should have been used to
- protect jaguars in the Southwest, lynx in the Northwest and the
- Barton Springs salamander in Texas.
- It also has drawn heavy fire from environmentalists, who have
- grown increasingly critical of President Clinton's willingness to
- bargain away the law's stringent protections.
- ``We are seeing a very disturbing pattern here,'' said Mark
- Hubbard of the Oregon Natural Resources Council, a nonprofit
- conservation group based in Portland, Ore., that has sued the
- government for what it considers lax enforcement.
- ``We have gone from surprised to disappointed to just plain
- angry with the Clinton administration over their refusal to protect
- endangered species,'' he said.
- Architects of the administration's policy say negotiating with
- state and private land owners to save species makes sense in a
- political climate where property rights carry much weight.
- The carrot works better than the stick, they argue.
- ``It is not a win to see a species driven to the verge of
- extinction and then be able to save the last of that species by
- hammering someone with the Endangered Species Act,'' said Katie
- McGinty, director of the White House Council on Environmental
- Quality.
- The administration is using the law ``to its fullest and most
- creative extent and reaching out to save those rare ecosystems by
- working in partnership with people who own the land,'' McGinty
- said.
- By year's end, the administration will have negotiated habitat
- conservation plans covering more than 18 million acres of state and
- privately owned land.
- Such pragmatism is no virtue in the eyes of Clinton's
- environmental critics.
- ``Essentially it is a new way to get around enforcing the
- Endangered Species Act,'' Sierra Club lobbyist Melinda Pierce said
- of the habitat conservation plans.
- ``It's just feel-good politics. They have junked the law,'' said
- Mike Bader of the Missoula, Mont.-based Alliance for the Wild
- Rockies, which wants federal protection for the bull trout in the
- northern Rocky Mountains.
- Environmentalists' biggest beef is with a ``no surprises''
- clause in the habitat conservation plans, which promises land
- owners that if they fulfill protection criteria, they'll be
- insulated from any future federal conservation requirements.
- ``It's the only way companies would ever enter into such
- agreements,'' said Chris West, vice president of the Northwest
- Forestry Association in Portland, Ore.
- In March, federal judges in Arizona, Texas and Washington state
- chided the administration for refusing to order protection for the
- jaguar, Barton Springs salamander and lynx.
- In the case of the jaguar, the Fish and Wildlife Service was
- ordered to declare the rare cat endangered and set aside land to
- protect it.
- In Washington, the agency was told to reconsider its decision to
- keep the lynx off the list; only a few hundred of the cats remain
- in a handful of states.
- ``The Fish and Wildlife Service has consistently ignored the
- analysis of its expert biologists,'' wrote U.S. District Judge
- Gladys Kessler in Seattle.
- In Austin, U.S. District Judge Lucius Bunton ruled that Interior
- Secretary Bruce Babbitt had violated the Endangered Species Act
- after ``strong political pressure was applied to the secretary to
- withdraw the proposed listing of the salamander.''
- Babbitt subsequently declared the salamander threatened. But
- environmentalists were up in arms again when the National Marine
- Fisheries Service decided April 25 against federal protection for
- Oregon's coastal coho salmon, opting instead to give the state a
- chance to try its own $30 million recovery plan with support from
- the timber industry.
- Environmentalists say an industry pledge to log more responsibly
- and to help restore damaged stream beds was little consolation for
- the Oregon coastal coho, whose stock has dropped from as many as
- 1.4 million in the early 1900s to about 80,000 today.
- ``Many of these coho runs are dangerously close to extinction
- and need protection right now,'' said Ken Rait, conservation
- director for the Oregon Natural Resources Council.
- ``The Clinton administration has surpassed the Bush
- administration in both their zeal to change the Endangered Species
- Act and their reluctance to implement it,'' said Bader, a former
- park ranger at Yellowstone National Park.
- But George Frampton Jr., a former president of The Wilderness
- Society who was an assistant interior secretary in Clinton's first
- term, calls the environmental community ``totally out to lunch on
- the Endangered Species Act.''
- ``A listing alone, that and a quarter is going to get you a cup
- of coffee,'' said Frampton.
- Frampton said the fewest complaints about the habitat
- conservation plans are heard among conservationists in California,
- where wildlife habitat is threatened most by development.
- ``Environmentalists in Southern California know that anything we
- don't get protected today will be paved over in 20 years. So if we
- can save 300,000 or 400,000 acres of habitat for species, they look
- at that as a tremendous victory,'' he said.
- ``More than 70 percent of all critical habitat is on private
- land,'' McGinty said. She said that without habitat conservation
- plans, ``none of these species would receive protection until they
- are on the brink of extinction.''
- Currently, 1,081 plant and animal species are protected as
- threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act.
- The Clinton administration has added 305 species to the list,
- compared with 228 during the four-year Bush administration and 257
- during the eight-year Reagan administration, said Interior
- Department spokeswoman Lisa Guide.
- Nearly 400 habitat conservation plans have been approved or
- developed in the past four years. They affect tracts ranging from
- one-half acre to 2 million acres, last as long as a century and
- cover up to 100 species.
- AP-NY-05-04-97 1238EDT
- <HTML><PRE><I><FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE=2> Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.<FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE=3>
- </I></PRE></HTML>
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
-
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 10:45:47 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: ARAishere@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Utah prisoner denied vegan food!
- Message-ID: <970504104546_550037385@emout05.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- CALLS NEEDED FOR HUNGRY, SICK, AND NEGLECTED ANIMAL RIGHTS PRISONER
-
- SALT LAKE CITY -- The Salt Lake City Jail is denying vegan inmate, Jacob
- Kenison, nutritionally adequate meals, despite attempts by the prisoner,
- a civil liberties group, and a physicians group to assist them with meal
- planing.
-
- Kenison, who has been incarcerated since April 23 has gone without
- proper vegan meals for over a week, eating only the odd apple or orange
- provided at the meals.
-
- Members of the Civil Liberties Defense Fund have faxed information from
- the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine on a vegan diet and
- food preperation to Jail Captain Paul Cunningham, Head Nurse Christie
- Fields, and the Head of Food Service Bob Foringer.
-
- Follow-up calls from the civil ciberties group have requested the prison
- recognize Kenison's deeply held religious and moral beliefs by providing
- him a vegan diet. The jail is STILL refused to take action.
-
- Kenison's lack of food has made him sick and despite sending over 20
- forms requesting either proper food or medical attention, the jail
- continues to ignore his dilemma.
-
- CALL THE JAIL AND DEMAND THEY FEED HIM!
-
- It's time the Utah authorities recognize the strength and unity of our
- movement. So let's show it to them! Let them know their violations and
- abuse is being exposed and that people will NOT tolerate it. Demand they
- feed Jacob vegan food! Demand they give him medical attention! Here are
- the numbers to call:
-
- Seargeant: 801-535-5075
- Administration: 801-535-5885
-
- SEND JACOB LETTERS OF SUPPORT!!
-
- Letters to Jacob would also be appreciated to keep his morale high and
- let him know that we aren't forgetting about him. Address them to:
-
- Jacob Kenison
- Political Prisoner
- 450 South 300 East
- Salt Lake City, UT 84111
-
- NOTE: The police not only read his mail, but censor it as well by
- cutting out "offensive" statments -- such as "fuck cops!" etc.
-
- ROCK ON!
-
- Date: Sun, 04 May 1997 16:31:04 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Subscription Options (admin note)
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970504163101.0068c07c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- just another routine posting..........
-
- Here are some items of general information (found in the "welcome letter"
- sent when people subscribe--but often lose!)...included: how to post and
- how to change your subscription status (useful if you are going on
- vacation--either by "unsubscribe" or "postpone").
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- To post messages to the list, send mail to ar-news@envirolink.org
- POSTING
-
- To post a *news-related item* (no discussions), send your message to:
-
- ar-news@envirolink.org
-
- Appropriate postings to AR-News include: posting a news item, requesting
- information on some event, or responding to a request for information.
- Discussions on AR-News will NOT be allowed and we ask that any
- commentary either be taken to AR-Views or to private E-mail.
- ------------------------------------------
-
- ***General Subscription Information***
- ALL THE FOLLOWING SHOULD NOT be sent to ar-news !!!
- (send them to listproc@envirolink.org)
- For all commands, use a blank Subject line.
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- To request a digest version, send mail to listproc@envirolink.org
- with the following single line:
-
- set ar-news mail digest
-
- To switch back to immediate mail, and to get copies of *your* postings
- also, send the following command:
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- set ar-news mail ack
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- or the following to not get your own postings:
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- To see how you are set up ***(and to see if you are still subscribed!)***, use
-
- set ar-news
-
- To temporarily stop mailings, use:
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- set ar-news mail postpone
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- To re-enable it, use ack, noack, or digest as above.
-
- To unsubscribe, use:
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- or:
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- If you have to subscribe again, use:
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- subscribe ar-news first_name last_name (use false name if you want!)
-
- If you have problems, please contact:
-
- Allen Schubert
- alathome@clark.net
-
-
- allen
- ********
- "We are either part of the problem or part of the solution. Walk your talk
- and no one will be in doubt of where you stand."
- -- Howard F. Lyman
- Date: Sun, 04 May 1997 18:28:44 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Debbie Leahy <DLEAHY@delphi.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Wal-Mart Drops Animal Exhibit
- Message-ID: <01IIHCCY3WMA9EJHD5@delphi.com>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
-
- NEWS RELEASE
-
-
- WAL-MART DROPS ANIMAL EXHIBIT
-
- ORLAND HILLS, IL - Wal-Mart management responded immediately
- to complaints brought by Illinois Animal Action (IAA) members
- and told an animal exhibiter to leave its store located at
- 9265 W. 159th Street. Over the weekend, Wildlife Inc.
- Presents had brought a cougar, Siberian tiger, hedgehog, and
- python for photo opportunities with the public. According to
- witnesses, the cougar was displayed in a cage so small the
- animal was unable to turn around. A tiger, led around on a
- leash, appeared frightened by the crowds.
-
- "Wal-Mart reacted very responsibly. These photo opportunities
- with wild animals in crowded stores are stressful for the
- animals and endangers the public," says IAA president Debbie
- Leahy. "Many children have been bitten and mauled while
- posing for pictures. No reputable wildlife facility would
- ever drag its animals around to busy malls."
-
- IAA is an all-volunteer, non-profit, animal rights
- organization dedicated to promoting the humane and ethical
- treatment of animals.
-
- ###
-
- Illinois Animal Action
- P.O. Box 507
- Warrenville, IL 60555
- 630/393-2935
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 15:29:53 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: "Christine M. Wolf" <chrisw@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: URGENT: Dolphin Death Bill Vote This Week!
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19800307155224.27e70686@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- URGENT ACTION ALERT !
-
- CONGRESS LIKELY TO VOTE ON DOLPHIN DEATH BILL
- THIS WEEK (May 5-9, 1997)
-
-
- Efforts by the Mexican government, the Clinton administration, and five
- so-called environmental groups have resulted in legislation that COULD BE
- VOTED ON THIS WEEK in the U.S. House of Representatives. H.R. 408,
- sponsored by Representative Wayne Gilchrest (R-MD), would re-define "Dolphin
- Safe" to allow these sensitive creatures to be chased and encircled in nets.
- Cans of tuna would deceptively wear the "Dolphin Safe" label, even though
- dolphins may have been severely injured and harassed in the process of
- catching the tuna.
-
- CALL YOUR CONGRESSPERSON AT 202-225-3121 (HOUSE SWITCHBOARD)
- TELL HIM OR HER TO OPPOSE H.R. 408 !
-
- For further information or to find out who your elected officials are, call
- Christine Wolf at The Fund for Animals (301-585-2591). Thank you for your help!
- ******************************************************************
- Christine Wolf, Director of Government Affairs
- The Fund for Animalsphone: 301-585-2591
- 850 Sligo Ave., #300fax: 301-585-2595
- Silver Spring, MD 20910e-mail: ChrisW@fund.org
-
- "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change
- the world; indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." (Margaret Mead)
-
- Date: Sun, 04 May 1997 20:01:29 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) List of Protected Wildlife Habitats
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970504200126.006b5b0c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------
- 05/04/1997 13:54 EST
-
- List of Protected Wildlife Habitats
-
- By The Associated Press
-
- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service expects 18 million acres of fish and
- wildlife habitat
- to be protected on private lands by the end of the year under habitat
- conservation
- plans. A look at the 20 largest plans, their location and species affected:
-
- 1. State of Washington, 1.6 million acres specified in management plan for
- state's
- 2.1 million acres of forestry lands; northern spotted owl, marbled
- murrelet, salmon,
- steelhead trout.
-
- 2. Balcones Canyonlands, Travis County, Texas, 633,000 acres; golden-cheeked
- warbler, black-capped vireo, borianthos plant, cave bugs.
-
- 3. Riverside County, Calif., 540,000 acres; Stephens' kangaroo rat.
-
- 4. Clark County, Nev., and Southern California, 525,000 acres; desert
- tortoise.
-
- 5. Simpson Timber Co., Northern California, 300,000 acres; northern
- spotted owl.
-
- 6. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, North Carolina, working with U.S. Army
- Fort Bragg,
- six neighboring counties and private land owners, 300,000 acres; red-cockaded
- woodpecker.
-
- 7. Metropolitan Bakersfield, Calif., 262,000 acres; San Joaquin kit fox,
- blunt-nosed
- leopard lizard, Tipton kangaroo rat, Bakersfield cactus, San Joaquin
- woolly-threads.
-
- 8. Potlach Corp., Arkansas, 233,000 acres; red-cockaded woodpecker.
-
- 9. Weyerhaeuser Co., Coos Bay, Ore., 210,000 acres; northern spotted owl.
-
- 10. Orange County, Calif., 200,000 acres; California gnatcatcher, Southern
- arroyo
- toad, American peregrine falcon.
-
- 11. State of Massachusetts, coastal counties, 200 coastal miles; piping
- plover.
-
- 12. Plum Creek Timber Co., Kittitas County, Wash., 170,000 acres; northern
- spotted
- owl, marbled murrelet, grizzly bear, gray wolf.
-
- 13. Oregon Department of Forestry, Elliott State Forest, 94,000 acres;
- American bald
- eagle, northern spotted owl, marbled murrelet.
-
- 14. Coachella Valley, Riverside County, Calif., 70,000 acres, Coachella
- Valley
- fringe-toed lizard.
-
- 15. Gulf Coast Prairies Safe Harbor, Southern Texas, 64,000 acres; brown
- pelican,
- prairie chicken.
-
- 16. Alpomado Falcon Safe Harbor, Texas Gulf Coast, 64,000 acres; alpomado
- falcon.
-
- 17. Murray Pacific Corp., Lewis County, Wash., 55,000 acres; northern
- spotted owl.
-
- 18. Volusia County, Fla., 50,000 acres; nesting sea turtles.
-
- 19. Weyerhaeuser Co., Arkansas, Oklahoma, 40,000 acres; American burying
- beetle.
-
- 20. ARCO Western Energy, Kern County, Calif., 31,360 acres; San Joaquin
- kit fox,
- blunt-nosed leopard lizard, Tipton kangaroo rat, Glant kangaroo rat.
- Date: Sun, 04 May 1997 20:06:31 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Mainers Aim To Preserve Migration
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970504200628.00684a20@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------
- 05/04/1997 12:02 EST
-
- Mainers Aim To Preserve Migration
-
- By GLENN ADAMS
- Associated Press Writer
-
- DAMARISCOTTA MILLS, Maine (AP) -- Russ Williams points to an eagle's nest
- bulging from the branch of a towering tree, then mentions he's counted as
- many as
- two dozen ospreys at once circling in the sky above.
-
- It's no wonder the great birds of prey find the local pools along Maine's
- jagged coast
- so inviting. About this time each spring, thousands of alewives migrate up
- the
- Damariscotta River to their freshwater spawning grounds.
-
- The name Damariscotta is taken from the American Indian word for ``place of
- abundance for alewives.'' The herring-like fish were long a staple of food
- and
- industry among coastal inhabitants.
-
- But the runs have dwindled here and elsewhere along the East Coast. Malcolm
- Smith of the state Marine Resources Department attributes that in part to the
- appetites of seals, eagles and ospreys, not to mention humans.
-
- ``Everybody gets their belly full from the alewives,'' said Smith, a
- marine scientist.
-
- Still, alewives remain the soul of this tiny village of neat cedar-shingle
- homes,
- restored clapboard farmhouses, a bed-and-breakfast and a shop called
- ``Alewives
- Fabrics.''
-
- The reduced migration has spawned an aggressive conservation effort led by
- Williams and others who live in town. The effort, which has seen some
- success, is
- centered at the site of a unique combination of natural features and a
- fish-catching
- work of engineering that only a Yankee mind could dream up.
-
- After reaching maturity in the Atlantic, the alewives follow the
- Damariscotta River as it
- etches its way up the coast toward a stream that leads to the Damariscotta
- Lake
- spawning area. Just past a natural pool along the way, the alewives for
- years had to
- make a choice.
-
- A hard right takes them up a primitive ladder, a serpentine conduit of
- football-sized
- stones and mortar that leads to a dam above. Once at the dam, the fish
- flip-flip
- one-by-one over wooden gates and into a stream leading to Damariscotta Lake.
-
- Fish taking the left side of the fork faced a rushing, frothy torrent at
- the base of a falls
- that is almost impossible for them to maneuver. Turning back, the hapless
- alewives
- were scooped up by huge, black, iron ``dippers'' that transferred them to
- an elevated
- sluice.
-
- That, in turn, carried them back to a shed where they were beheaded, cleaned,
- pickled or smoked, and shipped worldwide or cut up for lobster bait.
-
- Today, the dippers are idle and the processing house is closed down. The
- fish are
- all corralled away from the falls to the 1807-vintage fishway with hopes
- that they will
- spawn.
-
- In the early 1800s, prodigious volumes of alewives were swept up each
- spring by
- fishermen with hand nets. That practice continued until the 1940s when the
- mechanical dippers, powered by electrical hoists, were installed.
-
- It was a grand industry for a time. Some years, as many as 28,000 bushels
- were
- pulled from the stream. But the haul slipped to about 18,000 bushels in
- 1950, and
- the 1990 total was just over 1,000 bushels. As a conservation measure, the
- two
- towns along the stream imposed an eight-year moratorium on commercial alewife
- fishing.
-
- Even though the harvests decreased dramatically, the old fishway is still
- so thick with
- alewives during the migration that you can stick in a hand and yank out a
- wiggling
- fish. And an old smokehouse along the stream is still in operation each
- spring.
-
- While the commercial fishing is on hold, some of the alewives are still
- taken from
- the stream each spring to satisfy an 1807 law requiring that each widow in
- Newcastle and Nobleboro -- the two towns separated by the stream -- get
- two free
- bushels of alewives each year.
-
- ``Last year, 10 widows got them,'' said Frank Waltz Sr., who is said to
- know more
- about the towns's alewife fishery than anyone. The widows give most of the
- alewives
- to the smokehouse owner, who in turn sells them.
-
- Waltz said he thinks conservation efforts will bring back the alewives to
- a point where
- the dippers may hum and clank again.
-
- However, he said, ``I doubt I'll ever see as many (alewives) as I did
- years back.''
-
- The Damariscotta River Association is working to restore the alewife runs by
- repairing the fishway and its network of pools a little at a time, as
- donations allow.
- Leaks that have sprung over the years drop the water to dangerously low
- levels, and
- fallen rocks change the flow and disorient the fish.
-
- The local hydroelectric power plant shuts off its turbines when the young
- alewives
- head to sea to keep them from getting chopped up.
-
- An annual Alewives Festival, a big potluck feed in town that usually
- coincides with the
- spring run, raises money for the restoration efforts.
-
- One of the biggest contributors to the cause has been John Hay, a
- naturalist and
- writer from Cape Cod, Mass., who has a summer home in Bremen.
-
- The restoration effort seems to be having an effect, according to Pete
- Noyes of the
- river association, who says the number of alewives entering Damariscotta
- Lake was
- three times higher in 1996 than the year before.
- Date: Sun, 04 May 1997 20:12:05 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) List of Animal, Plant Invaders
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970504201203.006f5f90@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------
- 05/03/1997 11:23 EST
-
- List of Animal, Plant Invaders
-
- By The Associated Press
-
- Every day, ecologists estimate, a new animal or plant species enters the
- United
- States. Many don't survive in their new homes, and most go unnoticed. But
- a few
- dozen have become notorious pests, causing billions of dollars in damage and
- permanently altering natural ecosystems. Among the most troublesome
- culprits:
-
- GYPSY MOTH:
-
- Type of Pest: Insect
-
- Place of Origin: Eurasia
-
- Damage Caused: Caterpillars eat leaves of oak trees
-
- Range: Northeastern United States.
-
- Control Efforts: Insecticides used to retard spread
-
- MELALEUCA:
-
- Type of Pest: Plant
-
- Place of Origin: Australia
-
- Damage Caused: Crowds out native plants
-
- Range: South Florida
-
- Control Efforts: Deeper water in Everglades may prevent its growth
-
- ZEBRA MUSSEL:
-
- Type of Pest: Shellfish
-
- Place of Origin: Caspian and Black Seas
-
- Damage Caused: Crowds out natives, blocks pipes and fouls underwater
- structures
-
- Range: Great Lakes, Mississippi and tributaries
-
- Control Efforts: Prevention of spread to other water bodies
-
- TAMARISK:
-
- Type of Pest: Plant
-
- Place of Origin: Eurasia
-
- Damage Caused: Consumes large amounts of water in arid regions
-
- Range: Western and Southern United States
-
- Control Efforts: Removal, cessation of grazing
-
- ROSY WOLF SNAIL:
-
- Type of Pest: Snail
-
- Place of Origin: Latin America and Southeastern United States
-
- Damage Caused: Preys on native snails
-
- Range: Hawaii
-
- Control Efforts: Prevention of spread, toxic baits
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 21:44:11 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: SMatthes@aol.com
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Cc: alf@dcfreenet.seflin.lib.fl.us, OneCheetah@aol.com, nnetwork@cwnet.com
- Subject: Elk to be Killed in Wyoming
- Message-ID: <970504214403_-964049980@emout08.mail.aol.com>
-
- OK all you animal rights activists who out there looking for something to
- really get involved in, try this:
-
- According to USA Today, May 2, 1997, "the Wyoming state Game and Fish
- Department will sell 725 cow and calf elk licenses in six hunt areas this
- year in an effort to reduce the animals' population, estimated at 105,000.
- Officials hope hunters will kill at least 23,000 elk this fall."
-
- Wyoming has approximately 17% of its population licensed as hunters. This
- percentage is second highest in the United States exceeded only by Montana.
- Even so, this means that 83% of the population of Wyoming do not possess a
- hunting license and are assumed not to be hunters. Are these people in favor
- of this killing? Also, who made the estimate of the elk population and how
- was it made? (Bet it was the Game and Fish Department, but how did they
- count the elk?)
-
- Is there no other place in the U. S. where these elk could be relocated?
- Does everyone have a surplus of elk? If too many calves are being born, why
- can't immunosterilization be used?
-
- Come on gang -- I've just scratched the surface -- Let's ask the hard
- questions and get this killing stopped. We've got a little time (unlike with
- the bison in Yellowstone) -- so let's get some national attention on this one
- right now.
-
- Sumner Matthes, Wildlife Coordinator, Sarasota In Defense of Animals
- P.O. Box 15653, Sarasota, FL 34277-1653; Phone (941) 924-2505; Fax (941)
- 925-8388
- Date: Sun, 4 May 1997 21:53:06 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Marisul@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: LA Times: Coyote Trapping (US)
- Message-ID: <970504215256_840932535@emout08.mail.aol.com>
-
- Copyright 1997 Times Mirror Company
- Los Angeles Times; May 4, 1997, Sunday, Valley Edition SECTION: Metro;
- Part B; Page 4; Zones Desk
-
- PET PEEVES; PUG'S DEATH PITS ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS AGAINST CITY
- AGENCY IN
- ONGOING CONTROVERSY OVER COYOTE TRAPPING
-
- BYLINE: MARTHA L. WILLMAN, TIMES STAFF WRITER
-
- The brouhaha over how an Encino pug dog was skinned and left to die,
- whether by man or coyote, reflects the continuing controversy over coyote
- trapping, a fight that pits an obscure city agency against passionate, often
- vehement animal rights activists.
- The animal lovers, backed by several independent veterinarians, insist
- that human hands removed the dog's pelt--and to the untrained eye, graphic
- photos of the slain creature's neatly sliced skin seem to support their
- claims.
- But other experts say the clean cuts are typical of a carnivore attack,
- whether it be a coyote, another dog or a predatory bird, such as an owl or
- eagle.
- "I'm surprised they're not saying it was aliens from outer space," said
- Dr. Charles Leathers, a leading research veterinarian. Indeed, one animal
- rights advocate claims with certainty that the killing was the work of a
- satanic cult.
- The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Los Angeles--which
- has enforcement powers under state law--is continuing its investigation to
- track down a human attacker.
- Meanwhile, animal rights activists are accusing the city's embattled
- Animal Services Department of inventing coyote attacks to justify a renewal
- of coyote trapping, abandoned four years ago to mollify the activists.
- Department officials vehemently deny the charge.
- The case of the unfortunate pug, left to fend for itself overnight in the
- suburban jungle, has taken on a whole array of meanings in the minds of all
- who hear about it and is unlikely to be resolved to anyone's satisfaction.
- What the case has revealed are the contentious battles among the varied
- schools of animal advocates.
- "There is more bickering and infighting in the humane community than in
- any group of people I have seen in my entire life," said Gini Barrett, a city
- animal regulation commissioner and western regional director of the American
- Humane Assn. "If we would all spend as much time working for animal welfare
- as some of us do bickering, a lot more animals would be better off and more
- people would join us in our work."
- But the controversy over Pal the pug has triggered a new barrage of
- name-calling and accusations. City Council members are pointing fingers at
- one another and at Animal Services officials. Animal Services alleged
- "obstruction of justice" in its investigation and obtained a warrant to
- search the office of the private veterinarian who first treated the dog.
- Department officials proposed unsuccessfully to the city attorney's office
- that the perished pug's elderly owner, who is deaf and nearly blind, be
- charged with negligence for failing to get her pet's wounds treated
- immediately.
- The SPCA lashed out at Animal Services, accusing General Manager Gary
- Olsen of "political bickering" and "public whining." The Southern California
- Veterinary Medical Assn. stepped in to quiet the fighting among its members.
- And in the end, wildlife supporters were once again accusing the city of a
- subterfuge to overturn the Animal Services commission's ban on coyote
- trapping while those on the other side of the fence say the real danger is to
- ignore the presence of coyotes in the city--and the need to protect pets from
- them.
- *
- Following dozens of cities and counties throughout the state, the Los
- Angeles City Council in 1993 banned trapping coyotes and other wild animals,
- except in extraordinary cases requiring a special permit.
- The ban brought complaints from many residents, particularly those in the
- west San Fernando Valley who complained of attacks on pets and other small
- animals and threats to small children. But animal rights advocates fought
- back even harder.
- Initially, the Animal Services Department supplied traps to homeowners in
- special circumstances, but halted even that practice in May 1995, said Peter
- Persic, the department's spokesman.
- No permits have been sought to trap coyotes in the last two years, he
- said.
- But "this case has absolutely nothing to do with coyotes and coyote
- trapping," he emphasized.
- "With this dog attack, we investigated the case, we reached a conclusion
- and that is the only issue that should be involved in this."
- He added, however, that he is not surprised by the outbreak of new
- accusations. Whether or not coyotes should be trapped "is a perennial issue
- and there is absolutely no way that everyone is going to be satisfied with
- any policy," he said.
- The fear that the department is moving to renew trapping "is absolutely
- not true," he said. "Trapping is simply not an effective way of coexisting
- with wildlife."
- Barrett said the arguments repeatedly put animal control officials
- "between the devil and the deep blue sea. The way you know you have picked
- the right option is when everybody is mad at you."
- Despite the infighting, all the animal advocates agree on one point: The
- best way to reduce the number of mutilated and missing pets is to keep them
- inside at night, remove pet food from outside and cover garbage cans--all
- steps to avoid attracting coyotes.
- "If Pal's death is to go to good, what needs to happen is not for all of
- us to scream and holler at each other about right and wrong, but to use this
- as an opportunity to learn how to protect our pets," Barrett said. "If we
- know how to protect our pets from coyotes, then they will also be protected
- from people."
-
-
-
-
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