Showing posts with label Cherokee Bear Zoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cherokee Bear Zoo. Show all posts

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Feds shut down Cherokee North Carolina bear park, from Public view



Feds shut down Cherokee bear park ( for public view and entertainment that is)
Jan 29, 2013   |  Written by John Boyle

Bob Barker and the Cherokee bears: Animal activist Bob Barker and PETA complain about treatment of bears in zoos on the Cherokee Indian reservation.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals called zoos in Cherokee "bear prisons," in billboards for a time in the Asheville area. / Citizen-Times file photo

CHEROKEE — Federal regulators shut down a bear park and fined it $20,000 after it was cited for failing to provide adequate shelter, food and veterinary care for the animals.

The Chief Saunooke Bear Park generated multiple protests by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, including a visit by former game show host Bob Barker, a PETA activist. PETA has lobbied heavily for the closure of the park, which they say is long overdue because of the inhumane conditions the bears are kept in.

(Watch the video at the top of this story from PETA and Barker's visit in 2009.)

“We’re very pleased this step is being taken and they’re being held accountable for the long-standing abuse and neglect of bears,” said Delcianna Winders, foundation director of captive animal law enforcement at PETA. “Ultimately, the bears need to come out of those pits.”

The park previously was cited for failing to maintain adequate barriers between visitors and the bears. Last year, PETA posted billboards calling the bear zoos “prisons” and noted in news releases that in two cases visitors had been bitten, including a 9-year-old girl who was feeding a bear cub Lucky Charms cereal and cat food.

A phone call Tuesday afternoon to Chief Saunooke Bear Park went unanswered. The zoo’s owner, Kole Clapsaddle, could not be reached.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture issued the fine and order suspending the park’s exhibitor license. The park had 11 bears in its latest inventory in the spring of 2012 — two Asiatic black bears, three grizzly bears and six North American black bears.

In a Jan. 15 order, the USDA stated that Clapsaddle agreed to the entry of the order and acknowledged the USDA’s jurisdiction over the matter. But he “neither admits nor denies the remaining allegations,” and “consents and agrees, for the purpose of settling this proceeding and for such purpose only, to the entry of this decision.”

The order calls for Clapsaddle, the park and its employees to “cease and desist from violating (the Animal Welfare Act)” and states the license is “suspended until (his) facility achieves full compliance.”

Of the $20,000 civil penalty, $5,000 is due immediately, and the remaining $15,000 will be held “in abeyance,” provided Clapsaddle does not “have any serious violations” of the Animal Welfare Act for two years.

USDA spokesman Dave Sacks said his department will not take custody of the bears. Clapsaddle will have an opportunity to come into full compliance with the regulations.

“He would still need to provide humane care and treatment for those bears,” Sacks said. “In order to get his license reinstated, he would have to prove that to the USDA. It’s not like we’re taking over the care of the bears. They are still his property, legally, so that’s still up to the individual to care for them.”

The USDA can confiscate animals if it can prove they are in “a state of unrelieved suffering,” Sacks said.

“That’s the only time we can take an animal, not because they’ve been written up for 20 different things or an animal advocacy group tells us to,” Sacks said.

The USDA will not conduct inspections on the park now that it is not licensed, but Sacks said “there are ways we would find out” if the bears are being mistreated, most likely through visitors, employees or the media.

The USDA previously found that the park’s operators failed to:

• Maintain a sufficient distance or barrier between animals and the viewing public to assure safety.

• Maintain dangerous animals such as bears under the direct control and supervision of a knowledgeable and experienced animal handler.

• Provide food for public feeding that was appropriate to the type of animal and its nutritional needs and diet.

• Maintain housing for animals that is structurally sound and in good repair to protect animals from injury and contain them securely.

• Keep food receptacles clean and sanitized.

• Provide adequate veterinary care.

PETA had lodged formal complaints with USDA and met with federal officials, as well as with members of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.

The animal rights group also issued a 62-page report from bear experts who visited the bear park and noted many apparent violations of the Animal Welfare Act.

Winders said PETA’s hope is that Chief Saunooke’s will never reopen and the bears will be relocated “to a reputable sanctuary where they’ll have the veterinary care, food and other essentials that they have been denied for years.”

PETA is “researching our options” on future action, Winders said.
 

Thursday, January 17, 2013

NC Tribe facing attack over bear zoos

Tribe facing attack over bear zoos

The sign along Interstate 26 near Asheville, N.C., offers this warning: "Children Bitten at Bear Pits."
The billboard is the latest in a two-year battle that People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has waged against the zoos on the Cherokee reservation about an hour and a half west of Asheville.
It follows an incident last summer in which a 9-year-old girl was bitten at Chief Saunooke Bear Park while feeding a baby bear a mixture of Lucky Charms cereal and cat food.
 
The group's efforts are starting to hurt, one zoo owner said.
"It's affected my business earnings," said Barry Coggins, owner of the Cherokee Bear Zoo. "PETA is doing a lot of harm to my family."
 
The tribe's chief has threatened the group with a ban for its protests. It has flown in game show icon Bob Barker for a meeting with tribe leaders and is suing the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington over records related to the bear zoos.
 
The Barker visit ended in 2009 with the former "Price Is Right" host calling the Cherokee uncivilized and the tribe's chief urging him to stay in California.
 
Past billboards have called the zoos tourist traps and urged visitors to boycott.
In some cases, the zoos are concrete block pens that let tourists see and feed bears from above. PETA says they are inhumane. Zoo owners say they are important to the area economy.
 
"We'll keep fighting until they close down these archaic pits, which are a throwback to decades ago when no one knew much about bears' behavior and needs," said Delcianna Winders, PETA's director of captive animal rescue and enforcement. "Let bears be bears."
 
Coggins has native black bears, grizzly bears and European brown bears at his zoo along with an assortment of other animals. Customers may have a photo made with a baby black bear.
Maggie Harper of West Virginia spent a recent morning there with her 12-year-old son and 7-year-old daughter
 
"It seems like they are taken care of," she said. "They've got good water. It looks like they get plenty to eat."
 
Some of the bears perform tricks such as standing and turning in a circle or clapping their paws as customers toss a mix of apples, bread and lettuce over the side. Admission is $5.
 
The three roadside zoos on the reservation — Cherokee Bear Zoo, Chief Saunooke Bear Park and Santa's Land — are inspected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which makes sure they comply with the federal Animal Welfare Act.
 
An inspector happened to be on hand in July 2010 to witness the girl being bitten.
The inspector's report described the girl's wounds as "scratches on the palm and back of the hand and tooth marks on the wrist bone."
 
Bear zoos were established on the reservation before tribal casinos, said Coggins, whose family has been in the business 20 years. Visitors bought leather moccasins, had their photos made with roadside "chiefs" and visited shops that used caged bears out front to draw customers in.
 
Today, Harrah's Cherokee Casino & Hotel is one of North Carolina's top tourism draws and among the largest private employers in the western part of the state. The casino opened in 1997.
National hotel chains moved in, replacing some of the old mom-and-pop operations. The tribal government built Sequoyah National Golf Club and renovated part of downtown for a more upscale look.
 
But the bear zoos remain, and Coggins said he's proud of his zoo and they way his animals are treated.
 
"We love them like pets," he said. "We are lucky to have it so you can get up close and even hold one."
 
Some Cherokee leaders say it's time to close the zoos.
Patrick Lambert, executive director of the Cherokee Tribal Gaming Commission who is running for principal chief this year, said he would like to see a zoo built on the reservation that offers a more natural habitat.
 
"I think we need to work toward the closure of the concrete bear zoos and show the humane, Native American way of dealing with our animals," he said.
A larger zoo on the reservation would help the economy by attracting families, he said.
Others don't want to hurt small businesses.
 
Principal Chief Michell Hicks, who is running for re-election, said he doesn't agree with PETA's tactics. He said many tribe members feel the same.
Hicks said he supports the bear zoos and free enterprise, though he would like to see changes.
"I hope that in the future we can see some expansion in the parks and the habitats," he said.
Ostendorff also reports for the Asheville (N.C.) Citizen Times.


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