The Hamilton Spectator

‘I’ve been pushed to my absolute breaking point’

Zoos struggle to survive with closed doors, vastly reduced revenue in pandemic

- LIAM CASEY

Last week, Paul Goulet’s 10-year-old daughter quietly went to his wife with worry about her father.

“It’s like he’s here, but he’s not really here,” she said.

That nearly broke Goulet, the owner of Little Ray’s Nature Centre, a zoo and animal rescue organizati­on with locations in Hamilton and Ottawa.

Usually an eternal optimist, Goulet said the pandemic is killing his business and wearing him down.

He’s cut costs where he can, but the vast majority of his costs are fixed — the snakes, sloths and tortoises still have to eat.

Gross revenue is down 94 per cent, he said, due to the forced closures and capacity limits during the pandemic, and he’s taken out loans totalling more than $900,000 to help pay the bills.

“I’ve been pushed to my absolute breaking point,” Goulet said.

Other zoos and aquariums across the country say they’ve also reached their breaking points.

Jim Facette, the executive director of Canada’s Accredited Zoos and Aquariums, said institutio­ns across the country are having a hard time.

“They’re hanging on, but it’s a struggle,” Facette said.

He said some of the facilities qualify for the federal wage subsidy program and have received support, but others are not eligible, including those that are owned by another level of government, like the Toronto Zoo, which is owned by the City of Toronto.

“Our institutio­ns are unique, you can’t just shut the lights, lock the door and leave,” Facette said.

“The No. 1 thing they want though, I hear this all the time, is they want to open.”

Cherry Brook Zoo in Saint John, N.B., shuttered its doors last year largely due to the pandemic and the uncertaint­y going forward, Facette said.

Zoos have an entire revenue-generating ecosystem that includes hosting corporate events, weddings and the like, he said. The Zoo de Granby in Quebec had to cancel more than 30 weddings last year.

Facette has spent a lot of his time lobbying various government­s during the pandemic to figure out how to keep zoos and aquariums afloat.

“We need to increase capacity when they are open, so we’ve asked if they’d consider rapid testing as part of reopening strategies,” he said.

“We haven’t heard back.”

For Dolf DeJong, the CEO of the Toronto Zoo, the past year has been a trying one.

Last year, when China imposed a lockdown in Wuhan, where the novel coronaviru­s originated, DeJong said the zoo began stockpilin­g food for the animals.

They were shut down for two months in the spring during the first lockdown, then were able to do drive-thru visits for about a month before members were allowed back in at a significan­tly reduced capacity.

Then they moved to a pre-booked model from July until they reverted to drive-thrus in November. They closed their doors again Dec. 26 when the province issued a stay-at-home order.

The zoo had about 600,000 guests last year, DeJong said, about one-third of those coming from the drive-thru. Daily guests last summer peaked at 5,000 — half of what they used to see the previous summer.

For Goulet, he said he has used every possible government program for help, including the wage and rent subsidy programs, which have kicked in at about $240,000.

But he needs about $840,000 for Little Ray’s to survive to the end of this year. The company’s biggest money maker, he said, is animal festivals that run from January to April.

“None of those are happening,” he said. Provincial restrictio­ns have eased somewhat in Ottawa and Hamilton, so Little Ray’s is now allowed to have small groups inside. It is also doing live Zoom shows now, but they only bring in about five per cent of the money live shows used to.

 ?? PATRICK DOYLE THE CANADIAN PRESS PHOTOS ?? An American alligator is photograph­ed at Little Ray's Nature Centre.
PATRICK DOYLE THE CANADIAN PRESS PHOTOS An American alligator is photograph­ed at Little Ray's Nature Centre.
 ??  ?? Little Ray’s Nature Centre, with spots in Hamilton and Ottawa, features lemurs.
Little Ray’s Nature Centre, with spots in Hamilton and Ottawa, features lemurs.
 ??  ?? A red-footed tortoise lives at Little Ray's Nature Centre in Sarsfield, Ont.
A red-footed tortoise lives at Little Ray's Nature Centre in Sarsfield, Ont.
 ??  ?? Barry, a two-toed sloth, still needs to be fed during the pandemic.
Barry, a two-toed sloth, still needs to be fed during the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada