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Public Hearing! Horse slaughter can be prevented close to home

horses

A message from Equine Aid Rescue:

There will be a public hearing in Snohomish County Washington (location of Florence Packing) on a proposed ordinance to ban the slaughter of horses and other equines. This is a pre-emptive move to prevent a horse slaughter plant from opening (or re-opening) in Snohomish County.

The Details:
December 19, 2012; 10:30 a.m. Public Hearing
Public Hearing of the Snohomish County Council
Ordinance No. 12-106, prohibiting the slaughter of horses and other equine for human consumption and adding a new chapter to SCC Title10.

Location
Council Public Meetings and Public Hearings are generally held in the Henry M. Jackson Board Room, 8th Floor, Robert J. Drewel Building (Administration Building East), 3000 Rockefeller, Everett.

Contact information:
Council office: 425-388
e-mail: contact.council@co.snohomish.wa.us

This is a huge opportunity to make your voice heard on this issue. Presence at a public meeting has an enormous impact on the passage of these types of ordinances. We must show that people care about this issue. Anyone may attend, and packing the chambers with people is very important. Even if you don’t live in Snohomish County, just being in the audience makes a difference.

Those who are residents of Snohomish County are even more important. For those folks, signing up to speak on the issue is highly encouraged. You get two minutes. Making clear points while also providing personal aspects is most powerful. We can brainstorm talking points in this thread.

If you are unable to attend, please consider writing a letter to the County Council expressing your views. It may be sent to the email above, or mailed.

I would expect that the livestock lobby will be present, and the one thing I would hate to see happen is for them to organize and be there in numbers opposing the ordinance and the horse community be absent or poorly represented. Please consider attending this event.

Note:  More information about this issue can be found in an article The Herald.

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Friends of Woodland Park Zoo Elephants make even more news!

Elephants as they should be...

Elephants as they should be…

And of course they should!  Co-founders of the Friends of the Woodland Park Zoo Elephants, Alyne Fortgang and Nancy Pennington, have committed many long years to helping the elephants out of the cruel life they live at the Woodland Park Zoo (see ref: Seattle Times Glamour Beasts).

But a Seattle Times columnist, Danny Westneat, reported on one more aspect of this story — the animal activists were right!  Elephants at Woodland Park Zoo, and zoos nationwide, should be retired to Sanctuaries where they can live in relative freedom, out of the rains of Seattle and the pressure of the zoo industry that has exploited them.  While it’s not hard to believe that Fortgang and Pennington and their fellow advocates where right about the elephants, it is interesting to note the change in perspective about animal rights and welfare advocates. We are coming to realize that in most cases advocates are, indeed, right about the evidence of harm to animals that they are trying to communicate to the world.

Please write to Seattle City Council, King County Council and the Seattle Times Today to voice your opposition to elephant captivity in zoos and circuses.  Here’s how from the Friends of Woodland Park Zoo Elephants.

Furthermore, Alyne Fortgang will appear on Living Humanethis Sunday at 2:00 pm on KKNW Alternative Talk 1150 AM Seattle.

 

 

 

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Woodland Park Zoo Elephants finally get the attention they deserve

Elephants as they should be...

Elephants as they should be…

The Seattle Times is publishing a two-part piece on Woodland Park Zoo elephants (Dec. 2nd and 3rd) and the  “dark side of elephant captivity in zoos.”   See the announcement from the Friends of Woodland Park Zoo Elephants below:

To all our Loyal Supporters,

Pulitzer Prize winning investigative reporter is doing a story titled: Glamour Beasts about the dark side of elephant captivity in zoos.  It will be the cover story of this Sunday’s Seattle Times!!!  Part two will be on Monday.  Here’s the teaser:   

http://video.seattletimes.com/1998917892001/

 Riding on the momentum of this story, we will be asking you to help the elephants.  More to come!

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Feral Cat Spay/Neuter Project volunteers highlighted in Northwest Prime Time

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Ralph Hurvitz (center) at the Feral Cat Spay / Neuter Project in Lynnwood, WA

Northwest Prime Time has web published my article on Ralph Hurvitz and JJ Farrar, volunteers at the Feral Cat Spay Neuter Project.  Check out the details of their commitment to help feral cats in Northwest Prime Time.

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AMONG THE ANIMALS: The Animal Bloggers

O’Malley, a resident of Ducks and Clucks

Nov. 19th, 2012

Originally published in City Living Seattle and the Queen Anne News and City Living Seattle

By Christie Lagally

Blogging in Seattle seems like a natural outcrop of rainy days and a tech-savvy population, but I’m convinced blogging about animals is truly an art. According to Seattle Post-Intelligencer blogger Monica Bretherton, Seattle boasts a broad spectrum of people who like to read and write about animals.

“Horse people love to talk about horses,” Bretherton said. Her blog, “Horsebytes,” focuses on horse riding, especially endurance, trail and adventure riding, as well as horse care and rescue.

View from horseback (M. Bretherton)

In 2008, the Seattle P-I put out a call for bloggers and offered to host their sites. The P-I got advertising revenues, and bloggers, like Bretherton, got readers. She said she uses writing as a way to reflect on her adventures as a horseback rider.

Her horse, Willie, has been the focus of some blog posts but many posts skillfully paint a picture of Bretherton’s experiences attending riding events, meeting homeless horses at SAFE (a horse rescue group) and watching for a new foal born at Willie’s barn.

Horsebytes” is full of stunning pictures of rides through fields of wildflowers, rocky cliffs and steep forest trails. Some pictures are clearly from the perspective of the rider, with horse ears sticking up from the bottom in the frame.

Horsebytes” literally takes you along for the ride, and the opportunity to enjoy the unique moments in the life of a horse lover is why blogging about animals is so unique. Few of us get to interact with a foaling mare or climb through the mountains on horseback, but we can read about it at blog. seattlepi.com/horsebytes.
Just duckies

In the same way, few of us get to experience the joys of being a domestic duck and chicken rescuer. Seattle blogger Tiffany Young writes about her experiences caring for Seattle’s homeless ducks and chickens. Her blog, “Ducks and Clucks,” documents the major events of her impromptu flock.

Young doesn’t answer interview questions like a writer. Instead, she is an advocate — another great reason to be a blogger in Seattle.

“The blog is there to tell their stories,” Young said, as she cuddles with a Muscovy duck that had been keeping an eye out for a warm lap and a moment to jump into Young’s open arms.

Danny Girl at Ducks and Clucks

Young said she updates the blog with every major event, such as a death in the flock, a newcomer or a major recovery, such as was the case for Danny Girl, a domestic duck that was suffering from metal toxicity and arrived at Young’s home from PAWS. Danny Girl now lives with some physical impairment but hops along like a trooper and swims in the kitty pool like a champ.

Members of Young’s flock come from local agencies like PAWS and the Seattle Animal Shelter. She gets the ducks and chickens that need some extra TLC or permanent or long-term care.

Young explained that birds have deep emotional lives, but they can look stoic from outside “the flock.” Young’s “Ducks and Clucks” blog gives you a peephole inside the flock, where all the precious moments, the drama and sometimes the sorrows reside.

The intimate moments of releasing a healed pigeon back to the park or videos of Young’s flock responding to her calls share with readers a world so few would ever get to experience. “Ducks and Clucks” can be found at ducksandclucks.com/blog.
See-attle Dog blog

If you need another reason to check your favorite blog, here is one. Has your Seattle dog been spotted? You can check on “Seattle Dog Spot,” a local, canine-dedicated news site and service directory for dog owners.

Owned and operated by Seattle resident Robert Pregulman, “Seattle Dog Spot” is a full-time job. Pregulman writes local dog-related stories covering such topics as vacationing spots for you and your dog, special rescue stories, all the local dog news and the wonderful reunions of soldiers with their dogs after tours of duty.

As a Seattle Animal Shelter volunteer himself, Pregulman said his favorite part of running the site is seeing all the people who do so much for dogs that would otherwise be homeless.

The “Seattle Dog Spot” weekly newsletter reminds you about the comings and goings in the vast community of Seattle dog lovers and often features a dog for adoption at one of several rescue groups.

Seattle Dog Spot” also serves dog-obsessed Seattle with a business and organization directory that allows you to find services and read reviews — all dog-related.

Pregulman is launching a new version of the site in October that will add, among other things, the capability to start meet-up groups and list dog groups to join. “Seattle Dog Spot” can be found at www.seattledogspot.com.

With carefully crafted posts that follow the adventures of the horse and rider, the inside scoop on a particularly special flock of birds in North Seattle or navigating Seattle’s boundless love of dogs, these Seattle bloggers keep us connected to our love of animals in a digital age.

CHRISTIE LAGALLY writes a blog called “Sniffing Out Home: A Search for Animal Welfare Solutions” at http://www.sniffingouthome.org.

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“Sniffing Out Home” heads to the radio on “Living Humane”

I have BIG NEWS!.  On November 25th, I will be hosting a new radio program on KKNW 1150 Alternative Talk Seattle!   The program is called Living Humane and will focus on … you guessed it… living humanely by adopting your pets, buying cruelty free products and advocating for animals.

The program will air every Sunday afternoon at 2:00 pm, and you can also stream it from the KKNW site.  The program will also be available via podcast from the Living Humane site at livinghumane.com.

Living Humane is all about making connections!   Do you have a favorite rescue group or  animal-friendly business?  Let us know if you’d like to hear about it on the program.  Check out the Living Humane site for more information.

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A Pig’s Tail form Aardman Animations

“Aardman Animations, creators of “Chicken Run,” “Wallace and Gromit” and other beloved animated feature films, produced the short film under a grant from the Steven C. Leuthold Family Foundation”

A Pig’s Tail

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It finally happend in LA: Dog, cat and rabbit sales banned at pet stores

Great! Fantastic! That’s amazing! Imagine all the animals saved! Those were the responses I’ve heard as I spread the word that LA  banned the sale of dogs, cats and rabbits in retail outlets today (ref: Los Angeles Times).

And, naturally, I agree.

You don’t have to wait for election day to make progress, and that’s what they did in LA.  Now, only animals for adoption can be provided through retail outlets.  This is a move to start solving the pet homelessness problem at the source!

Overflow of kittens at a Pacific NW shelterLA is a huge market for pets stores who frequently sell dogs that are trending as popular, such as Chihuahuas after the release of Legally Blonde.   There are so many animals homeless in LA that rescue groups all over the country actually export dogs out of LA to find them homes elsewhere.

And the relief that shelter workers will get is just one more reason that banning the retail sale of animals is so important.  Imagine each day you are faced with hundreds and even thousands of homeless animals, many who will be euthanized. This is a quote from one LA newspaper article earlier this month:

“In the 2011-12 fiscal year, city animal shelters took in more than 57,000 animals — 35,405 dogs and 21,883 cats — and euthanized 25 percent of the dogs and 57 percent of cats.” — ref: Daily News LA

Congratulations to Councilman Paul Koretz, Los Angeles Department of Animal Services and all the animal advocates and organizations who pressed for this ban.

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Message from the League of Humane Voters

Got this in my inbox this week for the League of Humane Voters,  and it’s a good reminder that a) not everyone is running for POTUS, and b) the voting makes a difference for animals.  

Dear League of Humane Voters Membership;

We have the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of animals in this election.  The people we put into office determine whether Washington State has laws that support and protect animals or laws that are harmful to animals.  The mission of the League of Humane Voters is to support those candidates who have strong animal welfare positions.  To that end, we provide information for LOHV members and the general public by publishing current voting records of incumbent legislators, a candidate questionnaire on humane legislation and our endorsement list.  I urge you to check out all of these sources of information on our website www.lohvwastate.org, before voting.

ANIMAL ADVOCATES THAT NEED OUR SUPPORT

There are three incumbent candidates, who have very strong records in support of animal welfare that need our support in this election.  They are all running tight races and their loss would be a huge loss to the animals of Washington State.  These candidates really need your support and you can help them in several ways:

Make a donation to their campaign.   A donation does not have to be large to help and you do not have to live in the district of the candidate to support their campaign.

Volunteer for their campaign.  Candidates need help with their campaigns in many ways, such as doorbelling, calling voters or helping with other tasks such as mailings.  A small amount of your time can be really helpful.

Spread the word.  Let people know about these candidates. Pass this e-mail on to all that you know.   The League of Humane Voters is new and many animal advocates in the state do not know about the information we offer.

Roger Goodman — District 45 (Woodinville, Duvall, Carnation, and parts of Kirkland, Redmond, and Sammamish)

Representative Goodman has a stellar record on animal welfare legislation. He served as the prime sponsor for the Limit Tethering Bill in the last legislative term.  Under his sponsorship, the Limit Tethering Bill went farther than it ever has before.  He is a major champion for this bill.  WE NEED HIM BACK to continue our fight to stop continuous chaining of dogs.

Please donate to his campaign—by supporting Representative Goodman you are directly supporting the effort to get dogs off chains!! For more information on Representative Goodman and to make a contribution to his campaign, please see his website http://rogergoodman.org/

Hans Dunshee — District 44 (parts of southwest Snohomish County)

Representative Dunshee has also had a superb voting record on animal welfare bills. He served as prime sponsor to the Spay/Neuter Assistance Bill in the 2011/2012 legislative session.  His campaign needs help with doorbelling, but campaign contributions would help as well. There are doorbelling opportunities on the following dates: Oct. 13th; Oct. 14th; Oct. 21st; Oct. 27th; Oct. 28th.  To help out Representative Dunshee’s campaign, you can call his campaign manager, Lacey Harper at 206-306-6451 or go to his campaign website at

http://hansdunshee.com.

Mary Margaret Haugen — District 10 (Island County and parts of Snohomish and Skagit counties, including La Conner, Oak Harbor, and Stanwood)

Senator Haugen is being challenged by Barbara Bailey. Barbara Bailey is currently a Representative in District 10, but is now running for the senate seat that Senator Haugen presently occupies.  In a comparison of their voting records on animal welfare legislation, hands down, Senator Haugen wins. She is truly an advocate for animals.  Please support her campaign!! http://marymargarethaugen.com/

If we pull together as a political community, we can change laws and help thousands of animals who are hurting now and protect all those that come after.

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AMONG THE ANIMALS | Waste in Seattle

Nicki and Bill Walters from The Pooper Troopers

By Christie Lagally

Oct. 9, 2012

Originally published in City Living Seattle

(c) Pacific Publishing Company

People, pavement and streams. This is a toxic combination, according to Dave Ward, regional stewardship program manager for the Puget Sound Partnership.

“We work on programs that address the impact of our day-to-day actions on the environment,” Ward said. And one action that benefits the environment is picking up your dog’s waste.

Most cities require you to “stoop and scoop,” but many cities do not tell you what to do with it. Does it go in the trash, the toilet, a composter?

In Seattle, the directions are clear: Pick it up, bag it, tie it off and throw it in the trash. Any questions? Ask Ward.

How to get rid of it?

“The volume of dog waste in Puget Sound is roughly equivalent to 300,000 people using outhouses,” Ward said.

Ward explained that pet waste left on the ground contaminates rainwater with bacteria. The bacteria is concentrated as rainwater runs off onto pavement and finally into Puget Sound, where it can harm orcas, salmon and even children and pets.

Unlike animal waste deposited by a bear or a deer in the forest, where the bacteria in rainwater is filtered by soil in an undisturbed ecosystem, most of Seattle’s pet waste occurs in neighborhoods where pavement prevents rainwater from being filtered.

What about flushing the waste? This is a question Ward has heard before, and Puget Sound Partnership looked into all the waste-disposal options.

“Dog waste is basically no different than human waste,” Ward said.

As long as you live in areas where you are connected to a waste-treatment plant, you can flush dog waste. But Ward found that septic systems, such as those found in rural areas, did not have the capacity to handle both human and dog wastes.

What about composting? Ward’s team looked at this issue, as well. Some folks they interviewed maintained composting units that were either commercially sold or built in their yards. A small number of citizens used a commercial enzyme to break down the bacteria at a cost of $7 per month.

But the risks are high for a compost system like this, and especially for a municipal agency to recommend such a system. Failure by residents to maintain the composter or, worse, if residents simply bury the waste, would be the equivalent of thousands of broken septic systems, according to Ward.

Haven’t I been taught to avoid adding to the landfill? In Ward’s search for the right way to deal with dog waste, his team contacted landfill operators and waste haulers to get their reaction to taking approximately 20 tons of dog waste per day per city.

Ward reported that both the operators and the haulers said, “We won’t even notice.” It turns out that the major source of volume in landfills is actually paper and construction waste; pet waste plays a minor role at most. Furthermore, landfills manage their liquid runoff, thereby, containing the bacteria.

A little extra help

So now I’m convinced that we must bag it and trash it, but what if you don’t have time or can’t do it yourself? In Seattle, you can get help.

Nicki and Bill Walters own The Pooper Trooper, a company that offers waste removal for dog owners, as well as commercial pet-waste services. Their staff visits your home regularly, pick up the waste in your yard and dispose of it properly. The company also installs and maintains dog-waste stations for public areas and special events, such as hotels hosting a dog show.

Being where the dog poo is also gives the Pooper Troopers a chance to keep an eye out for dogs in need. According to Walters, while their clients are responsible dog owners, her staff may see lost dogs in the neighborhood or neglected dogs in adjacent yards. Troopers work in conjunction with several local animal groups to help animals in tough situations and also donate their time and funds to help dogs in need.

Alongside Pooper Trooper, there are several other such businesses in our region. The Happy Pooper Scooper, run by Tom Arena in Seattle, provides both cat litter-box cleaning and dog-waste collection. Arena, a former truck driver-turned-entrepreneur, donates 10 percent of his profits to King County Animal Care and Control to help care for animals in our regional animal shelter.

So what’s the lesson to learn for today about animal waste? Bag it, trash it and do it right away, before it rains. If you can’t do it yourself, find someone who can.

According to Ward, with 40 percent of the nearly 4.5 million people in the Puget Sound region owning dogs, disposing of your dog’s waste properly is an easy, day-to-day action that benefits everyone in and out of Puget Sound.

For more information about the Puget Sound Partnership, visit www.psp.wa.gov.

The Pooper Trooper and The Happy Pooper Scooper websites are at www.poopertrooper.com and www.happypooperscooper.com, respectively.

To learn about King County Animal Care and Control, visit www.kingcounty.gov/safety/AnimalServices/about.aspx.

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