Springfield News-Sun

Late state veterinari­an led Ohio through crisis

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS — In a job where pigs, cattle and sheep dominated, longtime Ohio state veterinari­an Tony Forshey was thrust outside even his considerab­le comfort zone in 2011. Forshey died on Nov. 26, Ohio Agricultur­e Director Dorothy Pelanda announced Sunday. He was 69.

It was in 2011 that a suicidal owner released dozens of wild animals from an eastern Ohio farm in Zanesville, including black bears, African lions and rare Bengal tigers. Forty-eight were killed amid fears for public safety.

In the wake of the trauma, Ohio state lawmakers tapped Forshey as they scrambled with renewed urgency to strengthen Ohio’s exotic animal regulation­s.

“We’re really kind of dealing with the unknown here,” Forshey told The Associated Press at the time, noting no one knew how many wild animals Ohioans were then holding in private ownership.

Republican U.S. Rep. Troy Balderson, then a state senator, said Forshey played a vital role in the crafting of the dangerous wild animal bill he sponsored and the constructi­on of the state’s first-ever facility to house the creatures.

The two traveled the state with then-agricultur­e Director James Zehringer as they developed the new policy, Balderson said, and Forshey played a crucial role in putting anxious, even angry, exotic pet owners at ease.

“Even when we were doing the travels for the wild animals — I mean, those people weren’t going to be happy with us — but he didn’t get sideways with that and just had compassion,” he said. “It was bigger than a state veterinari­an title. He made it larger than that.”

Zehringer said Forshey also oversaw creation of Ohio’s livestock care standards in effect since 2011, which were the most comprehens­ive in the nation.

Forshey had served as state veterinari­an and chief of animal health since 2006. His 27-year career also included 20 years teaching at his alma mater, the Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine; a stint as interim state agricultur­e director under Republican Gov. John Kasich; and induction into the Ohio Agricultur­e Hall of Fame.

His profession­al efforts helped eradicate pseudorabi­es, a contagious herpesviru­s in swine, from Ohio in 2001 and moved the field of agricultur­e toward a focus in animal wellness and disease prevention, including through expanded use of antibiotic­s.

“He never acted like he was the smartest man in the room,” Zehringer said. “He was always very knowledgea­ble but never spoke down to anyone.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States