Thursday, March 13, 2014

Animal Welfare at the CA State Fair: a Petition to All State Legislators

The following is the petition which will be delivered to the State Fair Board, hopefully signed by most of our state legislators:

TO:  ALL STATE LEGISLATORS
FROM:  ERIC MILLS, COORDINATOR, ACTION FOR ANIMALS                  
RE:  SIGNATURE REQUEST

See below. I hope you'll be willing to sign this petition (to be delivered to the State Fair Board). Please sign and return to me at your earliest convenience (ACTION FOR ANIMALS, P.O. Box 20184, Oakland, CA  94620). Thank you for your consideration.

ANIMAL WELFARE AT THE STATE FAIR

IN THE INTERESTS OF ANIMAL WELFARE, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND PUBLIC EDUCATION, WE, THE UNDERSIGNED MEMBERS OF THE CALIFORNIA STATE LEGISLATURE, DO HEREBY IMPLORE CAL EXPO AND THE CALIFORNIA STATE FAIR TO CEASE IMMEDIATELY THE FOLLOWING INHUMANE PRACTICES:

1.  BAN FARROWING CRATES - Currently, pregnant sows are routinely kept on display in the Fair's animal nursery for three straight weeks, unable to turn around, barely able to move at all, and forced to give birth on a barren plastic grid. Normally, a parturient sow would seek out a quiet, secluded place to build a nest for herself and her piglets. All these natural behaviors are impossible at the State Fair. Reportedly, none of California's many county fairs feature these inhumane displays. Our State Fair should follow suit, and display the sows and their piglets (born off-site) in open pens, in deep wood chips. THAT's what the public wants to see.

2.  BAN THE GIVING AWAY OF GOLDFISH AS PRIZES - Fair vendors annually give away as many as fifteen thousand goldfish on the midway. Most will die an early death, be dumped in local waters (where they cause problems for our native wildlife), or simply be flushed down the toilet, treated as mere "expendables," of little or no value.

3.  BAN THE SALE OF HERMIT CRABS AS PETS - The crabs are all taken from the wild, depleting local populations. Like the goldfish above, most will meet an early demise. They do not make good pets. At last year's Fair, the crabs' shells were all hand-painted in various motifs. What a terrible message to send to children about the proper regard for wildlife!

By adopting these simple changes, our State Fair could become one of the most humane in the nation. Better for the animals and public alike, and likely increase Fair attendance. (This year's Fair runs July 11-27.)

                                                  SIGNATURE____________________________________  

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Please contact your own senator and assembly member (find your California Representative) and urge them to sign the petition -- good for the animals, good for business.

All legislators may be written c/o The State Capitol, Sacramento, CA 95814. The Fair Board may be emailed at calexpoboard@calexpo.com.

Thanks for caring.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

State Fair Board Must Outlaw Cruelty

This LETTER TO THE EDITOR, published March 11, 2014, was sent to 50 newspapers statewide:

State Fair board must outlaw cruelty

I recently hand-delivered a petition to all 120 state legislators, requesting support for three animal welfare issues at our California State Fair (July 11-27):

1. A ban on the brutal farrowing crates. Pregnant sows are caged and kept nearly immobile for three straight weeks, and forced to give birth on a bare metal grid -- a true crime against nature (and a violation of Penal Code 597t). No county fairs feature these cruel exhibits.

Photo: ALDF (Animal Legal Defense Fund)

2. A ban on giving away goldfish as prizes. About 15,000 goldfish were doled out at the 2013 fair. Many will meet an early demise, be dumped in the wild or flushed down the toilet.


3. A ban on the sale of hermit crabs as pets. All are taken from the wild, depleting local populations. Like the goldfish, these animals are treated as expendables -- what a terrible message to send impressionable young children.


The State Fair board has received more than 3,000 letters in support of these modest proposals. Please contact your own senator and assembly member (find your California Representative) and urge them to sign the petition -- good for the animals, good for business.

All legislators may be written c/o The State Capitol, Sacramento, CA 95814. The Fair Board may be emailed at calexpoboard@calexpo.com.

Eric Mills
Coordinator
ACTION FOR ANIMALS
P.O. Box 20184
Oakland, CA  94620

*****

Thanks for caring.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Jungle George - unfair fare: Raccoon on a Stick, anyone?

The Alameda County Fair in Pleasanton closed July 8. I attended opening day on June 20, and had a grand old time (accent on the "old"). And that's part of the fair's appeal: you pretty much know what to expect from one year to the next: farmed animals, 4-H clubs, horse racing, fruit and vegetable displays, handcrafts, painting and photography, etc. And, of course, unhealthful foods of unimaginable variety, most of them deep-fried. In addition, the fair hosts music concerts and the slightly seedy attractions of the midway and its neon-lit rides with screaming kids (and adults, too), especially magical at night.

But for me, the best news was the fact that, unlike last year, exotic foods vendor "Jungle George" (based in Livermore) was not present to purvey his repugnant (and cruel) wares: "Raccoon on a Stick," "Beaver on a Stick," "Python on a Stick," bear, yak, fried crickets and scorpions, "Chocolate-covered Cockroaches," and my personal favorite, "Grilled Cheese Maggot Sandwiches." Chez Panisse's Alice Waters would have had a heart attack. Reportedly, "Jungle George" used to feature African lion meat, until PETA got on his case.

It's hard to believe that local public health authorities would approve these items for human consumption. Raccoons are notorious carriers of rabies, distemper and roundworms. Bon appetit.

But from an animal welfare point of view, I was more disturbed by the fact that wildlife was being turned into novelty items for a bunch of would-be macho types to impress their girlfriends. I called the FDA (who approved this fare) to find out the source of the raccoon and beaver meat, hoping against hope that it came from road kill. No such luck. "Nope, it's from out-of-state fur farms," I was told.

Fur farms are illegal in California, and for good reason. They are horrendously cruel, not unlike battery cages for egg-laying hens. The raccoons and beavers are confined in tiny wire cages their entire short lives, generally at the mercy of the elements, and driven either neurotic or insane by their living conditions, until their untimely demise, either by gassing, electrocution, or having their necks broken. And for what? A completely unnecessary luxury item: fur coats.

So if fur farms are illegal in California, it seems highly inappropriate that we should then be offering the by-products at our state and county fairs, no? Plus the risks to public health. (NOTE: "Jungle George" was also a vendor at last year's California State Fair in Sacramento. He is not being invited back to this year's fair for various reasons. The State Fair opened July 12 and runs through July 29)

Here's hoping that "Jungle George" will NOT be allowed to sell or give away any such products at future Alameda County Fairs or anywhere else in the state or country. The public is urged to contact the Alameda County Fairgrounds to express their concerns (see contact info below).


Animal Nursery Update - But the best news to report from the Pleasanton fair was their commendable Animal Nursery, in stark contrast to the brutal display at our State Fair in Sacramento. When I saw the exhibit on opening day, it featured a single pregnant sow in a spacious 10' x 20' pen, in deep sawdust. There was a slotted partition which fit across one corner of the pen, allowing the piglets to come and go at will, attracted by a heat lamp, and safe from being lain on by the sow... a truly humane display. I complimented the young woman in charge of the area, a former 4-H member, upon the humaneness of the exhibit. She told me that the sow was due to give birth the very next day.

When I described the farrowing crates at the State Fair, she told me she believed the crates to be inhumane. Indeed, someone had suggested that the Alameda County Fair exhibit have farrowing crates on display, too. She refused, out of concern for the animals' welfare. It should also be noted that the Pleasanton fair featured a display with a cow and young calf, again in a pen in deep sawdust. Kudos for that! At the State Fair, cows and their newborn calves are separated at birth, stressing all concerned. We can/must do better by these animals.

The State Fair folks should follow Alameda County's lead. In the nursery exhibit in Sacramento, pregnant sows are imprisoned in metal-barred "farrowing" crates, barely able to move, for three straight weeks, and forced to give birth on a metal grid. Do this to a dog and go to jail. What's the difference, pray?

WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP - Please contact the Alameda County and California State Fairs to express your concerns about these humane issues. Thank Mr. Pickering for Alameda County's humane Animal Nursery display. Ask that the "farrowing" crates be banned, and that exotic food vendors such as "Jungle George" not be allowed to sell such unsavory products at our State and County fairs in the future.

Write/call: Rick Pickering, CEO & General Manager, CalEXPO, 2600 Exposition Blvd., Sacramento, CA 95815; tel. 916/263-3010; email - calexpoboard@calexpo.com. As noted, the State Fair runs July 12-29. There'll be a "Mexican Extravaganza" on the 29th featuring six bull rides, yet another concern.

Alameda County Fairgrounds, 4501 Pleasanton Avenue, Pleasanton, CA 94566; tel. 925/426-7600; email - april@alamedacountyfair.com

Thanks for caring.

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Tri-City Voice article by Eric Mills, Action for Animals - Oakland, CA

Monday, January 21, 2013

It's not easy being green...live animal food markets

"This is about a cultural practice, and the Dept of Fish & Game doesn't like getting in the middle of those things."  – Sonke Mastrup, Executive Director of the California Fish & Game Commission (LA Times, 11/21/11)

In early 2009, culminating a 15-year effort by a small band of dedicated activists, the California Fish & Game Commission unanimously instructed the Department of Fish & Game (DFG) to cease issuing import permits for frogs and turtles for human consumption. The Commission received more than 3,500 letters and emails in support of the proposed ban, from environmental and sportsmen's groups, from animal welfarists and the general public. State Senators Sheila Kuehl and Byron Sher wrote in support of the ban, as did former Resources Secretary Huey Johnson (twice). The Department's response? "The Director acts at the pleasure of the Governor," and the Department continues to issue the permits on a month-to-month basis. So much for the democratic process and public opinion. Not to mention a thumbing of the nose at environmental protection, all in the name of "political correctness."

Conflicts of interest: The Director of the Department and the five Fish & Game Commissioners are all appointed by the Governor. There are no specific requirements or qualifications for the job-it's a political plum. The Commission gets its meager funding from the Department, as well as all its scientific data. Yet the Commission is merely an advisory body, with no real authority over the Department unlike Nevada and other states where the Commission has the power to hire and fire the DFG Director. The general public is unaware of these facts.

In truth, the Commission is in large part a Good Ol' Boys' hunting club - all members are either hunters or fishermen, or both. The bulk of their efforts is focused on increasing hunting and fishing opportunities, though they're mandated to protect and enhance ALL of the state's wildlife and natural resources for ALL Californians, not just the hook 'n' bullet crowd.

Not surprisingly, in the Commission's 130 years, there have been only two women members. One of them, Cindy Gustafson was forced to resign for political reasons only two years ago, as was another good Commissioner, Judd Hanna, at about the same time. Mr. Hanna's crime? He had the temerity to speak out publicly about the dangers of lead shot in the environment. Ironically, both these people were supportive of the market frog/turtle ban.

And here's the rub: The Department's Mission Statement says, "The Mission of the Department of Fish and Game is to manage California's diverse fish, wildlife, and plant resources, and the habitats upon which they depend, for their ecological values and for their use and enjoyment by the public." Its been made abundantly clear that the Department has no intention of following its mandate to protect the State's natural resources, insofar as the market frogs and turtles are concerned. And the reasons are political, not scientific, as the Commission's Executive Director noted above.

Not acceptable!

California annually imports two million American bullfrogs and 300,000-400,000 freshwater turtles for live food markets, found mostly in various "Chinatowns" throughout the state in Oakland, San Francisco, San Jose, Sacramento, Los Angeles, etc. Frogs are commercially-raised, mostly in Taiwan. The turtles (mostly red-eared sliders and spiny softshells) are all taken from the wild in states east of the Rockies, depleting local populations. None of these animals are native to California.

When released into local waters, they prey upon and displace our native species, including the endangered red-legged frog and western pond turtle. These releases, though illegal, are commonplace, and often done by well-meaning but misguided "do-gooders," or by certain religious sects in "animal liberation" ceremonies. Cultural diversity is to be encouraged, of course, but resource protection should always be given priority.

All market frogs and turtles are diseased and parasitized, posing serious threats to human health. Recent necropsies have disclosed rampant cases of E. coli, salmonella, pasturella (all potentially fatal in humans), blood parasites, giardia, and even one case of malaria. Worse still, a 2009 study in Biological Conservation documented that 62% of the market frogs tested positive for the dreaded chytrid fungus, cause of the extinctions of some 100 amphibian species worldwide in recent years.

Many of the market animals are butchered while fully conscious.

But there's cause for hope. Dr. Kerry Kriger's Santa Cruz-based organization, SAVE THE FROGS!, is making great strides. Dr. Kriger has convinced the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors of the dangers to our environment and native wildlife posed by the non-native bullfrogs, and the Board has agendized the issue for their February 28, 2012 meeting, a proposal to ban the importation and/or possession of American bullfrogs. The proposal also has the support of the county's advisory fish & game commission.

If the ban is adopted, it should inspire other counties to adopt similar ordinances, and ultimately a statewide ban. Any such bans should also include the market turtles.

Adding to the optimism is the fact that our Secretary of Resources, John Laird, has a strong environmental record. Secretary Laird is a former Santa Cruz Assemblyman, who earned a consistent "A" vote on the annual Paw PAC voting chart. And Governor Jerry Brown has a far greener record than did his predecessor. We also have a new Director of Fish & Game, Charlton "Chuck" Bonham, with good environmental credentials. Here's hoping these three will fix the problem.

WHAT YOU CAN DO: Write to Resources Secretary John Laird, and DFG Director Chuck Bonham, asking them to stop the import permits for non-native turtles and frogs for the live food markets. Both may be written c/o 1416 Ninth Street, Sacramento, CA 95814.

EMAIL ADDRESSES: secretary@resources.ca.gov; director@dfg.ca.gov

Thanks for caring.