Los Angeles Times

Troubled Wildlife Waystation is closing its gates

- By Louis Sahagun

State officials on Tuesday said the long-struggling Wildlife Waystation in the Angeles National Forest is shutting down for good, and the center is collaborat­ing with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to relocate more than 470 exotic animals, including lions, tigers, alligators, wolves, owls and 42 chimpanzee­s.

On Aug. 11, the board of directors of the 43-year-old animal sanctuary voted to close the facility, surrender its Fish and Wildlife permits and assist in finding new homes for its creatures with local and national animal welfare organizati­ons across the nation, said Jordan Traverso, a spokeswoma­n for the agency.

“Some animals will be moving out as early as tomorrow,” Traverso said Tuesday, “but it’s going to be a long process because there are so many, and some of them are old and in primary care.”

Deanna Armbruster, a spokeswoma­n for the 160acre Wildlife Waystation, was unavailabl­e for comment. But Traverso said the facility, just outside Los Angeles city limits, suffered extensive damage in the 2017 Creek fire near Tujunga, followed by severe f looding this year.

“Wildlife Waystation leadership is unable to repair the facility to current standards,” she said.

For two decades, federal, state and Los Angeles County animal welfare authoritie­s have been scrutinizi­ng the waystation, one of the largest of its kind, for alleged environmen­tal and animal-safety violations.

At the center of the crisis is Martine Colette, the waystation’s founder, who resigned in May as president and chief operating officer.

The executive shakeup was followed by a terse state

ment by the waystation, suggesting that the facility’s troubles extended beyond the care and housing of injured and abandoned exotic animals.

“The board is conducting a comprehens­ive review of the fiscal and other impacts of non-approved and nonauthori­zed activities and transactio­ns by staff,” the board of directors said in a statement. It added that staff were “planning and executing activities unbeknowns­t and unauthoriz­ed” to the board, a claim that could not be immediatel­y verified.

Over the years, Colette, a dedicated animal welfare advocate, charmed Hollywood celebritie­s such as Bruce Willis, Will Smith and Drew Barrymore into opening their wallets for her cause. For years, the waystation filled a need by taking in animals abandoned from private collection­s and roadside attraction­s, such as lions and tigers, as well as many other injured and orphaned animals, and housing them until they found a home.

Yet even some of Colette’s supporters described her as occasional­ly abrasive, with a fierce love of animals and a disdain for any rules but her own.

Colette, 76, the Frenchborn daughter of a Belgian diplomat, lived most of her childhood in Nairobi, Kenya. As a teenager, she worked in trapping camps, where lions and other animals were taken before being shipped to zoos abroad.

Colette moved to Los Angeles with her then-husband, whom she described as a “famous American writer,” and plugged in to the Hollywood scene.

A mountain lion in a 5by-5 cage drew her pity at a 1965 show at the Pan-Pacific Auditorium and became her first refugee. Within 10 years, she had accumulate­d a house full of beasts and a yard full of wild cats, spurring her move to Little Tujunga Canyon and the opening of the Wildlife Waystation.

Authoritie­s closed the facility to the public in 2001 and barred it from taking in additional sick, injured or abandoned animals. A year later, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e suspended operations after inspection­s revealed that the waystation had not fixed long-standing crowded, unsanitary and unsafe conditions.

The waystation’s license was reinstated after it spent $2 million to bring habitation for animals into compliance.

Repairs included improved cages, a new perimeter fence, upgraded kitchen and hospital facilities, and diversion of animal waste from waterways into a sanitary drain system.

At that time, the annual food, medical and cleaning bill for the waystation was roughly $3 million annually. Several times that amount would be needed to bring the facility into full compliance with county, state and federal regulation­s, state officials said.

Now, “the CDFW’s primary concern is for the health and welfare of the animals at the waystation,” Traverso said. “The property is closed until further notice and access will not be granted.

“We plan to stay at the facility until new homes are found elsewhere for all the animals. We’re not sure at this point if that will include refuges in other countries.”

 ?? Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times ?? MARTINE COLETTE, who establishe­d the Wildlife Waystation four decades ago, is pictured in 2011 with African lions Leo Zaire, left, and Katunga.
Gary Friedman Los Angeles Times MARTINE COLETTE, who establishe­d the Wildlife Waystation four decades ago, is pictured in 2011 with African lions Leo Zaire, left, and Katunga.

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