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- > From: Wild Animal Orphanage <wao@wildanimalorphanage.org>
- > To: PRIMATE-TALK@primate.wisc.edu
- > Subject: [PT] VILAS MONKEYS
- > Date: Thursday, March 12, 1998 8:12 PM
- >
- > (from wao@wildanimalorphanage.org [ Wild Animal Orphanage ])
- >
- > I am curious to know the facts which led up to the monkeys being sent to
- > Tulane, After sifting through several articles posted on the net about
- > this ordeal, I notice a little misinformation, so I would like to
- > clarify a few things.
- > Firstly I read that The Wild Animal Orphanage had made the offer to take
- > these animals at a cost of $20,000.00 to the County, just to make it
- > clear the WAO sent numerous agreements to UW and Dane County that it
- > would not hold either responsible for any finances what-so-ever, the
- > only request we had was could they possibly vasectomize the males,
- > We didnt think this was too much of a request, we were sure that UW
- > would have a Veterinarian that could do this, The reply was: Who will
- > cover the cost, so we said OK dont worry about it.
- > The reason finally given as to why these animals were not sent to
- > us was that UW officials did not think WAO could keep up its end of the
- > bargain in constructing enclosures on time! With all due respect, we
- > would not take on something we could not finish, We built a 3/4 acre
- > natural enclosure welding each panel to pipe in less than three months.
- > This was verified by Sarasota In Defense of Animals who paid for this
- > enclosure over a period of a year,
- > I want all to know that as I was talking with UW's attorney and still
- > faxing everything they requested to them I was told the animals were
- > actually being loaded. Just wanted to present a few facts from my end.
- > The offer continues to stand on our side. Alliance for Animals has done
- > a wonderful job for these animals, UW should not have looked on this as
- > a challenge by animal activists but should have seen it for what it was
- > and still is a valliant attempt to retire animals that more than deserve
- > the right to a peaceful life.
- >
- > Thanks
- > Carol
- Date: Thu, 12 Mar 1998 17:43:15 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Factory Farm Foes Go Hog Wild! (web link)
- Message-ID: <35087313.1D9A33CB@uwosh.edu>
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- A link to information on citizen opposition to factory hog farms:
-
- www.salamander.com/~manyhogs/index.html
-
-
- Date: Thu, 12 Mar 1998 17:43:45 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] "Thai, UW monkey plan causing fuss" (TCT-031198)
- Message-ID: <35087331.8D5C489D@uwosh.edu>
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- "Thai, UW monkey plan causing fuss
- Wildlife group: Keep them in U.S."
- The Capital Times
- Madison, Wisconsin
- United States
- Wednesday, March 11, 1998
- Page 5A
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- THAI, UW MONKEY PLAN CAUSING FUSS
-
- WILDLIFE GROUP: KEEP THEM IN U.S.
-
- BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -A Thai conservation group, breaking with other
- local wildlife organizations, has expressed opposition to a plan to take
- in 51 monkeys facing eviction from the Henry Vilas Zoo in Madison.
-
- The monkeys - stump-tailed macaques - are owned by the University of
- Wisconsin's Regional Primate Research Center.
-
- The Thai Society for the Conservation of Wild Animals expressed its
- opposition at a meeting hosted Wednesday by the national forestry
- department to solicit opinions on the idea of bring the monkeys to
- Thailand, the land of their ancestors.
-
- The society said the existing captive population of stump-tailed
- macaques is already high - it estimates greater than 200 - and the wild
- population is also sufficient. It said that macaques are difficult to
- keep under any circumstances, and no suitable facilities currently exist
- in Thailand to hold them.
-
- It also noted potential mechanical problems because, it said, the
- monkeys' medical records indicate that at least some have the herpes B
- virus, which is endemic in virtually all macaque colonies.
-
- At the meeting it was decided to set up a committee, with members from
- both the public and private sectors, to investigate further.
-
- Pisit na Patalung of the Wildlife Fund Thailand said it was good to have
- the meeting, but he felt the discussion of health issues strayed from
- its purpose.
-
- "If they are happy in America, that's fine," he told the Associated
- Press. "If they are being taken care of, we don't want them here, we
- don't need them here. The whole point is, if the monkeys are going to
- die, if they are going to suffer, we want then home."
-
- Recently a flamboyant Thai hotel entrepreneur who arranges an annual
- feast for wild monkeys offered to provide land for a sanctuary, but a
- large number of hurdles remain before the stump-tailed macaques could
- come to Thailand.
-
- U.S. Sen. Max Baucus of Montana has agreed to help arrange
- transportation for the monkeys.
-
- But few concrete plans have been made, said Jordana Lenon, a spokeswoman
- for the UW's primate center.
-
- "We will not send the stump-tail colony to any facility that does not
- have appropriate housing and the ability to properly care for this
- threatened species," Lenon said in an e-mail message to the Associated
- Press.
-
- -- End --
-
- More information about the UW-Madison monkey scandal is available at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/Issues.html
-
-
- Date: Thu, 12 Mar 1998 17:44:10 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] "Regulating factory farms" (TCT-031198)
- Message-ID: <3508734A.EB663578@uwosh.edu>
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-
- "Regulating factory farms"
- Editorial
- The Capital Times
- Madison, Wisconsin
- United States
- Wednesday, March 11, 1998
- http://www.thecapitaltimes.com/factfarm.htm
- Reply to: tctvoice@madison.com
- [Image]
-
- Editorial
-
- Regulating factory farms
-
- March 11, 1998
-
- >From the snow-covered farm fields of Wisconsin to the lobbyist-clogged
- hallways of Capitol Hill, no agricultural issue has sparked more debate in
- recent months than factory farming.
-
- Mounting concern about the threats posed by huge corporate hog, poultry and
- dairy farms to public health, environmental safety and consumer choice has
- led to bold proposals at virtually every level of government.
-
- Yet few of the proposals have shown an adequate level of concern for
- protecting the small family farms that remain the backbone of Wisconsin
- agriculture. That's because too many politicians are resorting to
- simplistic calculations that fail to address the rapid restructuring of
- America's farm economy to favor huge corporations and penalize working
- farmers.
-
- The trouble begins with the Clinton administration's recent proposal to
- regulate factory farms.
-
- Responding to the outcry against factory farming in states such as
- Wisconsin and Iowa, the Clinton administration is seeking to apply stricter
- environmental regulation to agribusiness.
-
- Proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency to cut down on pollution
- harmful to waterways, the regulations would apply federal Clean Water Act
- standards to dairy, hog, beef and poultry farms.
-
- To the extent that environmental regulations are used to restrict the
- expansion of factory farms -- which pose a genuine threat not only to
- waterways but also to the rural economy of states such as Wisconsin -- the
- Clinton administration's approach is worthy. But if those regulations end
- up forcing more small family farms out of business, then there's got to be
- a better way.
-
- In a letter to the president, State Sen. DaleSchultz Schultz, R-Richland
- Center, argues that the regulations do indeed threaten small family farms.
-
- The main target of the rules would be large farms, which would have to
- undergo regular inspections, get pollution permits and develop plans to
- limit the release of chemicals, manure and wastes into waterways.
-
- But, as Schultz points out, under the proposed rules, even farms with as
- few as 20 dairy cows, 50 beef cattle and 100 hogs would face new
- regulations. Without federal aid or tax credits, those regulations could
- additionally burden already hard-pressed farmers -- particularly those in
- the dairy industry. In a state that has lost 9,000 dairy farms since 1990,
- that's a very serious threat.
-
- So why not just scrap the rules altogether?
-
- Two reasons.
-
- First, factory farms do pose a pollution threat, and must be regulated.
- Second, Wisconsin's already strict rules on farm runoff mean that farmers
- in this state are far better prepared than most to deal with new rules.
-
- What to do?
-
- The Clinton administration should apply tough new rules to factory farms.
- But those farms ought to be more clearly defined, so that the rules do not
- harm traditional family farms.
-
- Small farms should be subject to regulations, as well. But the federal
- government needs to recognize the inherent value of family-owned farms to
- rural communities, and the feds should thus provide small farmers with
- assistance that will make it possible to at once reduce pollution and keep
- farmers on the land.
-
- That's the alternative that is necessary. AndClausing if Dale Schultz is
- serious about helping the majority of farmers in Wisconsin, he will make it
- clear that the way to preserve Wisconsin's farm communities is not with an
- absence of regulation but with an approach that recognizes the need to
- limit factory farms.
-
- This is what state Sen. Alice Clausing, D-Menomonie, is proposing in a bill
- she was expected to present today. Clausing's bill represents a more
- reasoned approach than the Clinton administration's line, since it targets
- the problem directly, and since it takes a clear stand in favor of family
- farms.
-
- If Schultz really wants to stand up for Wisconsin farmers, he should
- continue to critique the flaws in the Clinton administration's approach.
- But he should also sign on as a co-sponsor to Clausing's bill.
-
- Let us know what you think
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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