Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Animal rights groups object to choice of monitors

- By Sean D. Hamill Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Animal rights groups are objecting to two people a judge recently approved to keep watch over the elephants, tigers and lions at the Shrine Circus when it comes to Pittsburgh in September.

Humane Action Pittsburgh, the local animal rights group that successful­ly pushed for a new city ordinance last year banning the use of any painful instrument­s in controllin­g wild or exotic animals, and the national animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals object to the appointmen­t of the monitors. Brad Gordon, an equine veterinari­an from Iowa and a former Columbus Zoo employee, and Paul Reed, a Westmorela­nd County humane officer, were appointed earlier this month.

“We would have much preferred that the monitor be the person we suggested who the circus objected to, Cindy

Machado,” said Natalie Ahwesh, vice president for Humane Action. “For Cindy and her team, [monitoring animals] is what they do. And they appeared to us to be impartial. They work with law enforcemen­t regularly.”

Ms. Machado is the director of animal services for Marin Humane Society in Novato, Calif.

“But we’d have to fly her in fromCalifo­rnia and pay for all of that,” said Paul Leavy, circus organizer for the Shriners since 1993. “And she had all this anti-circus stuff on her website. We showed the judge thatand he rejected her.”

The appointmen­t of monitors came up as part of a lawsuit the Syria Shriners filed last year objecting to the new Pittsburgh ordinance that bans the use of bullhooks, whips or other instrument­s deemed abusive in the control of wild or exotic animals.

The Shriners argue that their insurance policy dictates they use bullhooks — a pointed hook atop a long handle — to control elephants. And imposing the ban, they say, could lead to the shutdown of the circus, since the animals are the main attraction.

Mr. Leavy said the battle over the monitors that played out quietly over the summer in court “has nothing to do with monitoring the animals; it’s just part of the continuing effort to stop the Shriners’ circus.”

After the lawsuit was filed in May, Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Joseph James stayed enforcemen­t of the ordinance in connection with the Shriners, allowing this year’s 69th Shrine Circus to operate without adhering tothe ban.

But Judge James also ordered that both sides reach agreement on some monitors to keep tabs on the wild animals — elephants, lions and tigers at this year’s circus — during the five shows scheduled for Sept. 14-16 at PPG Paints Arena.

After the city proposed a list made up of city police officers and humane officers in July, the circus objected, Mr. Leavy said, because “unfortunat­ely they had no one who was trained to monitor animals or was licensed or had a zoological affiliatio­n, as was agreed.”

So on Aug. 1, the circus proposed Dr. Gordon and Mr. Reed, and the city did not object, Mr. Leavy said.

Even though the city didn’t object, Ms. Ahwesh said Humane Action is upset with the selection of Dr. Gordon because “we would consider himto be circus-affiliated.”

That’s because he was part of a case involving an abused elephant named Nosey that stayed for a time at Dr. Gordon’sequine center in Iowa.

Mr. Leavy said Dr. Gordon was selected because he is a veterinari­an, has a zoological background through his prior work at the Columbus Zoo, and knows how federal laws are enforced.

Mr. Reed was appointed specifical­lyfor his knowledge of state animal rights laws, which were overhauled last year,Mr. Leavy said.

Mr. Leavy said there is no set time for the monitors to visit the animals while they’re in Pittsburgh.

“That wouldn’t be fair” to set times, he said. “That’s not the right way to play. I’d rather have it be random as possible.”

“Listen,” he added, “we want it to be a clean bill of health in the end, too.”

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