SitNews - Stories in the News - Ketchikan, Alaska

 

Pressure mounts to ticket Maggie out of Alaska
By MEGAN HOLLAND
Anchorage Daily News

 

May 26, 2007
Saturday


ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- The Alaska Zoo's board of directors, under intense pressure from critics, likely will vote next week to move Maggie the elephant out of Alaska, the board's president predicted.

Dick Thwaites, who has been on the board 20 years and is currently president, said criticism has reached new volumes in recent days and has included personal threats against board members. "I'm not sure the board is inclined to keep her," he said. "The board is bowing to the pressure regardless of what the experts say."

The Alaska Zoo board members have long maintained that they have the backing of elephant experts in their decision to keep Maggie at the zoo.

Sammye Seawell, founder of the zoo and an influential board member, said her vote remains the same regardless of the concentrated pressure. "I would never, ever vote to ship Maggie out."

Calls for the zoo to dispatch Maggie, one of the zoo's most popular draws, to a warmer climate or to a location with other elephants have persisted for years. But they climbed dramatically after the 8,000-pound animal twice this month went down on her side and couldn't get up. Anchorage firefighters and a wrecker company had to lift her.

The zoo now believes she first went down because of a stomachache caused by a change in her hay. The second time was probably from the stress on her muscles of the first incident, zoo officials said. For a few days, Maggie was held up by a sling rigged in her enclosure; she still wears a brace that would make it easier to lift her if she goes down again.

Pressure on the zoo has come from local groups and national animal rights organizations, including the well-organized PETA that is offering zoo director Pat Lampi a free trip to an elephant sanctuary in Tennessee to see where Maggie could be placed.

Local groups in favor of moving her, which organized a protest Sunday, plan another on Friday.

Even the Anchorage Assembly, which has no authority over the issue, unanimously approved a resolution earlier this week calling for the zoo to consider moving Maggie and said it needs to decide her fate soon.

The dozen or so volunteer board members are feeling the pressure, Thwaites said. "I'm probably in a situation of losing more board members than one can afford to lose in a small group because they are getting called at home, they are getting e-mails, they are getting all kinds of stuff."

Even as a hardened board member who has been through years of the elephant controversy, Thwaites said he just wants to do what is best for Maggie. Deciding that, though, is not so easy.

So the zoo is, once again, consulting elephant experts in advance of the Tuesday meeting, Thwaites said.

"I know what they said the first time and my inclination would be to let her stay and work through the whole program they wanted us to go through and see how she comes out," he said. "But that doesn't look like an option right now."

 

Contact Megan Holland at mrholland(at)adn.com
Distributed to subscribers for publication by
Scripps-McClatchy Western Service, http://www.scrippsnews.com



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