Rocky Mountain Animal Defense Web Log

Please join us at www.RMAD.org for more information and to help us help the animals. Thank you!

Monday, June 26, 2006

6.23.06

Hey!

Hot enough for you? Please be extra vigilant for our furry, car-traveling friends – if you absolutely have to take your dog with you, don’t leave him or her in a vehicle for more than a few minutes, leave a window partly open, park in the shade, and leave plenty of water. Be on the lookout for animals whose guardians don’t demonstrate the best of care for their companions and don’t be afraid to speak up! The temperature in cars can reach a fatal level in a very short amount of time. For more information and for a flier that can be printed and distributed, visit
http://www.peta.org/feat/dogdays/index.html.

Keep Boulder Wild (
www.KeepBoulderWild.org) is gaining momentum. The facts – and compassion – are on our side. This amazing coalition continues their fight to save Boulder’s prairie dogs. The campaign is currently in need of volunteers to help do outreach during the Farmer's Market and possibly other events. Wear our new prairie dog outfit! The crowd loves her and it's a great way to educate people about KBW. Any questions, or if you're interested, contact Paula Lewis at paulal@rmad.org or see KeepBoulderWild.org for more information.

The Humane Society of the United States, a member of Keep Boulder Wild, is helping out in amazing ways. Check out this hot-off-the-press web page:
https://wadmin3.getactive.com/preview!www.hsus.org/wildlife/wildlife_news/boulder_prairie_dog.html?authToken=34085493f778470f1e5352fb3151262dfa67615b.

RMAD is hiring an operations development director! Please see
http://www.rmad.org/rmadjobs.html for more information and/or to apply.

RMAD’s phones have been leaping off the hook with pleas for help. This week we assisted dogs locked in houses, poorly-run dog boarding facilities, numerous prairie dog situations, and a variety of others.

A Toast to the Prairie! Our friends at Southern Plains Land Trust, are hosting a fundraising evening of fine wine, food, music and more, benefiting Colorado’s wildlands and wildlife. Details: Thursday June 9th, 2006, 6pm-8:30pm at the Dairy Center for the Arts, 2590 Walnut Street, Boulder, Colorado. Tickets are $25, which includes drink tickets, appetizers and desserts. Featuring the exquisite wines of Burrell School Winery and Vineyards. Tickets for the Toast to the Prairie are available at the door, but we recommend that you purchase tickets in advance, as space is limited. To purchase tickets, call 303-526-5276 or visit
www.southernplains.org/winefest.

RMAD friend and supporter Stephanie Janard has request for help: “I have met an amazing person who is single-handedly trying to spay, neuter, and protect from abuse entire colonies of cats in the Lakewood area. Her name is Judith Meadows, and right now, she desperately needs donations of cat food. She also needs help with trapping so she can these cats spayed/neutered, so if you can volunteer in that area, please let me know and I'll send on her contact info. Please contact me (Stephanie) if you can provide help. For people that can donate cat-food, if it's in very large amounts, I'm happy to pick it up, or you can choose to drop off whatever you can at my home address.” Stephanie Janard: 303.708.1159 and
sjanard@msn.com.

Thanks, Stephanie, Judith, and everyone else who is doing something for the animals. As always, if you’re doing something, let us know so we can share it. Have a safe and cool weekend.


- Chris -

Thursday, June 15, 2006

6.15.06

Good Day!

There is a lot going on in Colorado, so please take the time to read this announcement. If you have any questions about how you can get involved and help the animals, please contact me!

The battle to save Boulder’s prairie dogs continues to heat up and is receiving national attention. The Humane Society of the United States issued a press release yesterday, condemning the Boulder City Council for approving the plan to kill thousands of prairie dogs. Thanks to efforts by members of Keep Boulder Wild, a large ad was secured in the Boulder Weekly, shortly following a decent article on the prairie dog situation. Today’s edition of the Daily Camera covered the press release issued by the HSUS though, as usual, gave the final word to Boulder’s eager-to-kill council. The full article is included below the RMAD Calendar as is the HSUS press release.

A group of activists once again braved the intense heat last weekend to march through the Boulder’s Farmers Market. Activists took turns in RMAD’s beautiful new prairie dog costume and greeted fans, friends, fence-sitters and detractors alike. Activists handed out hundreds of fliers both residents of Boulder County, the Rockies, and beyond. Tourists return to Boulder every year just to see prairie dogs – yesterday RMAD received a call from a travelers coming from Boston who “absolutely cannot pass through Colorado without seeing black-tailed prairie dogs.”

ACTION: Keep Boulder Wild members have been actively studying the locations at which prairie dogs are most at risk – Tom Watson Park and Valmont City Park. Solutions are available! Please help us help the prairie dogs by writing to Boulder City Council members and by writing to your local media in favor of ONLY non-lethal solutions. For more information on how to get involved, please see
http://www.keepboulderwild.org/.

On July 13, 2006 the Colorado Wildlife Commission will consider the reinstatement of a trapping season for mink, marten, long-tailed weasel, short-tailed weasel, swift fox, gray fox, opossum, ringtail, and western spotted skunk. This proposal was set forth in a petition submitted by the Colorado Trapper’s Association, and its approval would allow for the box trapping and subsequent killing of the species listed.

ACTION: Protect Colorado’s wildlife from trappers! To prevent this ill-conceived plan from becoming a reality:

· SUBMIT your comments to Colorado Division of Wildlife by noon on June 28. By mail to 6060 Broadway, Denver, CO 80216; by e-mail to wildlife.comm@state.co.us; or by fax to 303-291-7110.
· ATTEND the Commission meeting on July 13-14 at the Hilton Fort Collins, 425 West Prospect, Fort Collins, CO 80526 starting at 9:00 am. More information:
http://wildlife.state.co.us/WildlifeCommission/Archives/2006/July2006.htm.

Talking points:
· The population statuses of the targeted species are not well-known for Colorado.
· Cheap, non-lethal alternatives exist for the collection of genetic data including fecal and hair sampling.
· Population density cannot be accurately assessed through small scale trapping programs.

Learn more:
· The Commission’s Rule-Making Notice:
http://wildlife.state.co.us/NR/rdonlyres/BED4A78E-5733-4B1E-BB6A-2178C5E9EB23/0/NoticeJuly2006.pdf
· A recent Denver Post article on this matter:
http://www.denverpost.com/search/ci_3818085
· About the fur trade:
http://www.furfree.hsus.org/

Area activists are hosting Colorado Springs demonstrations against Ringling’s Cruelty to Animals. Give them an ice-cold welcome! The next demo is Saturday, June 17 from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. at The World Arena, 3185 Venetucci Blvd., Colorado Springs. Directions and a map can be found here:
http://www.worldarena.com/page.asp?id=About_Us-Location . Activists will be meeting in front of Gate B, on the North side of the Arena. This is the main gate. Don’t worry, you won’t miss the banner, signs, and elephant on crutches! A carpool will be available from Lone Tree (Highlands Ranch) area: If you want to carpool, you must RSVP with Sisley at sisley@milroy.com. They will be leaving at 4:15 p.m. sharp!

Our friends and Cruelty-Free World are hosting a fundraiser for the SHAC 7 tomorrow night in Denver! Please attend if you can. More information below.

- Chris -

___________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Boulder Plan to Kill Prairie Dogs Inhumane and Ineffective, says The Humane Society of the United States
WASHINGTON (June 14, 2006) – The Humane Society of the United States condemned the City Council of Boulder, Colo. today for accepting a proposal by city staff to kill prairie dogs at Valmont Park and Tom Watson Park starting around July 1. In the past, when conflicts arose between humans and prairie dogs, the city would attempt to relocate the prairie dogs to safety. Now, the city is choosing not to relocate, but to kill some 1,900 prairie dogs.
“The council’s approval of this proposal signifies a complete reversal of progressive and protective wildlife policy in Boulder,” said Lauren Nolfo-Clements, Ph.D., wildlife scientist for The HSUS. “We encourage them to reexamine their decision and come to a humane solution.”

The city of Boulder is home to thousands of acres of black-tailed prairie dog colonies, a keystone species whose burrows create habitat for many other species and who plays a critical role in the structure of grassland ecosystems. This species occupies about 1 percent to 2 percent of its historical habitat and qualifies for a threatened listing under the Federal Endangered Species Act.

The city cites a lack of relocation sites, budget issues, and the insignificance of urban prairie dog populations to the species as a whole as justifications for this move. The city, however, has not done a recent assessment of its open space lands to determine whether any vacant lands are suitable for prairie dogs and associated wildlife. Although the city continues to acquire open space lands at costs in the millions of dollars, the city has not demonstrated that it is acquiring any land suitable for prairie dogs and associated wildlife.

“The idea that urban prairie dogs are of no ecological value is not only false but also ethically reprehensible,” said Nolfo-Clements. “Considering decimation of this species through habitat loss, human exploitation, and introduced plague, every prairie dog is a vital component of both the genetic and social structure of a given colony.”
The proposed method of euthanasia for these animals is CO2 inhalation, a method that can be both painful and inhumane. Research has shown that death by CO2 results in the swelling and hemorrhaging of the lungs. Prairie dogs are adapted to living in burrows, where CO2 concentrations are higher and oxygen levels lower than they are in the open. As such, elevated levels of CO2 probably do not cause unconsciousness in this species as rapidly as they would in non-burrowing species. In fact, a study on wild burrowing rabbits compared with open-air domesticated rabbits showed that the wild rabbits survived almost 3 times as long as the domesticated rabbits at CO2 concentrations of 50 percent.
“There is no guarantee that killing the prairie dogs will be successful in the long term,” said Nolfo-Clements. “Research has shown that prairie dogs quickly recolonize abandoned areas, even when the burrows have been plugged. The cycle of killing will have to continue if Boulder adopts this inhumane policy.”
CONTACT: Tracey McIntire, 301-548-7793,
tmcintire@hsus.org
____________________

Humane Society faults planBoulder: Group's prairie dog facts are wrong
By Ryan Morgan, Camera Staff Writer
June 15, 2006The national office of the Humane Society of the United States weighed into Boulder's prairie dog fray Wednesday with a news release that calls the city's policies "inhumane and ineffective."But city officials said the animal-rights group doesn't have its facts straight.Lauren Nolfo-Clements, a wildlife scientist for the Humane Society's office in Washington, D.C., said she was disappointed that Boulder plans to use "lethal control" to remove prairie dogs from some parts of the city."Generally, (Boulder is) known as a very wildlife-friendly sort of town," said Nolfo-Clements, who said Boulder animal-rights activists told her about the policy. "It's something that's enviable in the East."Boulder's wildlife officials have identified 10 prairie dog "complexes" within the city where the animals and humans clearly conflict. They've noted that most of the complexes are small, fragmented and far from ideal habitat for the animals, and they clearly should be removed.But Nolfo-Clements said research shows that for the species as a whole to thrive, its members need both large and small colonies."Even small colonies can play a small role as to whether the species survives in a given area," she said.The city said it's forced to use lethal control at Tom Watson and Valmont City parks because there aren't relocation sites available. The society places some of the blame for that on the city's Open Space and Mountain Parks Department, which Nolfo-Clements said hasn't opened up enough of its properties for the animals.City officials said they found the statement surprising and took issue with some of its claims."It is important to keep in mind that the city of Boulder has been a national leader in protecting open space and natural habitat through its progressive planning actions and open space acquisitions over the past 100 years," city spokeswoman Jodie Carroll responded in a letter to the Humane Society.

"The city owns and manages over 40,000 acres of land outside the city dedicated to open space and 'greenbelt' protection," the letter stated. "Approximately 5,000 of those acres (supporting between 65,000 and 250,000 prairie dogs) are specifically set aside as prairie dog habitat conservation areas and are not under consideration for removal of prairie dogs."The Humane Society said 1,900 prairie dogs are slated to be killed. But the city only has immediate plans to kill prairie dogs at Tom Watson and Valmont City parks - a maximum of 300 animals, said Jeanne Scholl, a conservation manager for the Parks and Recreation Department.Although wildlife planners have identified another 96 acres within city limits where prairie dogs pose a clear conflict and should be removed, the city is going to do everything possible to avoid killing those animals, Scholl said.
"We've done lots of relocations to open space in the past, and I think there may be a time in the future when we can do relocations to open space again," she said.Scholl said the open space department uses "sound criteria" to decide which properties qualify as prairie dog relocation sites."The bottom line is, open space is there to manage multiple species and multiple ecosystems, and it can't just be a place to relocate every prairie dog," she said.

Contact Camera Staff Writer Ryan Morgan at (303) 473-1333 or morganr@dailycamera.com.

Friday, June 09, 2006

The battle to save Boulder’s prairie dogs has been wicked. Members from Keep Boulder Wild (www.keepboulderwild.org) attended a city council meeting well into the wee hours of the morning on Tuesday. The prairie dog agenda item didn’t even come up until 12:45 a.m. Keep Boulder Wild took out an ad in the Boulder Weekly and is anticipating coverage of the Boulder prairie dog issue in today’s edition. Dave Crawford was also interviewed by Channel 2 news prior to the City Council Meeting. RMAD and Keep Boulder Wild also represented the animals last week on KGNU’s Over-Dub.

From Dave:

“Progressive” Boulder’s Regressive Wildlife Policies
City Moving from Bad to Worse

On Tuesday evening (June 6) at the Boulder City Council meeting, our fears for Boulder’s urban/suburban prairie wildlife were confirmed. City staff and city council presented a fully unified front in their determination to kill prairie dogs at Tom Watson Park and Valmont Park. The killing is scheduled to begin in early July. The plan is to flush the animals from the ground, then kill them with CO2. So the prairie dogs born this spring will never feel the fall air or experience the comfort of snuggling with family on a winter evening. They’ll just die what is likely a terrifying death at the hands of paid exterminators before they reach 6 months of age, right here in the friendly little hamlet of Boulder, Colorado.

If this plan is carried out, the face of Boulder will forever change. Still, not everyone’s upset. The many developers who contributed to the campaign coffers of these council members are no doubt pleased by this … development.

Despite the fact that the prairie dog component of the city council meeting started at 12:45 AM (on June 7, that’d be), at least a dozen advocates were still present to hear city staff audaciously offer advocates the opportunity to move the animals if advocates can find a release site – before the end of June.

What’s more, the UWMP, in particular, categorically dismisses the substantial public input gathered by city staff during the plan’s initial development. That input was overwhelmingly in favor of a humane approach.

Watson and Valmont are just the beginning. Without a substantial change in direction, the UWMP will devour one colony after another. All told, some 6000 prairie dogs – and countless animals who live with them – will lose their lives over the course of the next several years. For now, we expect between 200 and 560 deaths (of prairie dogs alone) in July.

A coalition of advocates is working diligently to secure a humane outcome. We are pulling out all the stops.

Stay current on this campaign at
www.KeepBoulderWild.org, and feel free of course to contact us here at the office.

Monday, June 05, 2006

6.1.06

Happy June, Everyone.

Thank you to everyone who volunteered at The Boulder Creek Festival this past weekend and to everyone who stopped by to say hello, take some information, or to hang out. Extra special thanks to Ann Swissdorf and Donna Marino for organizing the HEALTH and RMAD booths, respectively. The task always requires a lot of time, energy and patience as you navigate the Boulder Creek Festival traffic. Thanks to Kit, MaryAnne, Jennifer, Audra, Lorissa, Steve and Monae, Steve C, Bob, Barbara, Dave H, Renee, Ashley, Matt, Lisa, Sandy, Kellie, Deb, Peter and Jessie.

Ann Swissdorf is still seeking volunteers for this weekend’s Capitol Hill People’s Fair in Denver. From Ann: There will be no selling, setting up or tearing down. You only need to know a bit about the health benefits of a vegan diet, and the effects of a meat centered diet on the environment and the animals. The Fair hours are 10 AM - 8 PM on Saturday and 10 AM - 7 PM on Sunday. The times I need covered the most are 11 AM to 2:30 PM on Saturday (so I can attend the fur demo), and 10 AM to 1 PM on Sunday. Please let Ann (
anns@rmad.org) know if you can commit to any part of those hours.

RMAD continues to be heavily involved with Keep Boulder Wild, a coalition of advocates taking on The Boulder City Council’s draft plan to kill the majority of prairie dogs within city limits. Activists braved the heat this past weekend to inform festival-goers of the truth behind Boulder’s Urban Wildlife Management Plan, under which approximately 5,900 prairie dogs will be killed. This slaughter is unprecedented for Boulder and we encourage you to join us in taking a stand! See
www.KeepBoulderWild.org for more information. And contact us if you wish to volunteer!
Keep Boulder Wild is also looking for a scientist with credentials to help prepare an alternate plan. This would be a temporary, paid position and would entail some time in Boulder. Please let Lindsey Sterling Krank (Prairie Dog Coalition Director) know right away if you have any ideas, suggestions or contact information at
director@prairiedogcoalition.org.

Dave Crawford will be on a call-in show tonight (Thurs, June 1) discussing wildlife and Boulder’s perilous Urban Wildlife Management Plan. He will be joined by Rob Edward of Sinapu. Details: Thurs, June 1, 6pm-7pm, KGNU (
www.kgnu.org, 88.5 FM Boulder, 1390 AM Denver)

RMAD has been serving the public heavily the past few weeks. We’ve had calls from all over the Rocky Mountains and beyond with requests for help with sick horses, distressed dogs, adoptions, animal hoarders, and, of course, imperiled prairie dogs. We try to assist these callers whenever possible, providing at the very least the support they often do not find from governmental agencies.

Thank you to Jeri McGinnis for raising funds for an anti-circus ad in Colorado Springs and for hosting a "Be Kind to Animals" essay/drawing contest for elementary school students. For more information about Jeri’s store in Manitou Springs, Gigi's: The Animal Lover's Gift Shop, please see
http://www.rmad.org/community.html#merchandise.
According to Sarah of Three Little Figs (
http://www.threelittlefigs.com/), Sun Deli has added Vegan Cheese pizza to the menu. They use Follow Your Heart "Vegan Gourmet'. It melts nicely in their pizza oven and they have delicious vegetable toppings, too. Details: Sun Deli, Pizza & Liquor - 2299 Pearl Street, Boulder. ph: (303) 938-1078. They deliver, too.

New vegetarian restaurants are popping up in the area. In addition to perennial favorites Watercourse Foods and Cafe Prasad, the Front Range now welcomes Denver’s Cafe Karma and Boulder’s Karma Cuisine and Leaf.

Events have been added to the calendar, below. Please check them out!


- Chris

Friday, June 02, 2006

6.1.06

Happy June, Everyone.

Thank you to everyone who volunteered at The Boulder Creek Festival this past weekend and to everyone who stopped by to say hello, take some information, or to hang out. Extra special thanks to Ann Swissdorf and Donna Marino for organizing the HEALTH and RMAD booths, respectively. The task always requires a lot of time, energy and patience as you navigate the Boulder Creek Festival traffic. Thanks to Kit, MaryAnne, Jennifer, Audra, Lorissa, Steve and Monae, Steve C, Bob, Barbara, Dave H, Renee, Ashley, Matt, Lisa, Sandy, Kellie, Deb, Peter and Jessie.

Ann Swissdorf is still seeking volunteers for this weekend’s Capitol Hill People’s Fair in Denver. From Ann: There will be no selling, setting up or tearing down. You only need to know a bit about the health benefits of a vegan diet, and the effects of a meat centered diet on the environment and the animals. The Fair hours are 10 AM - 8 PM on Saturday and 10 AM - 7 PM on Sunday. The times I need covered the most are 11 AM to 2:30 PM on Saturday (so I can attend the fur demo), and 10 AM to 1 PM on Sunday. Please let Ann (
anns@rmad.org) know if you can commit to any part of those hours.

RMAD continues to be heavily involved with Keep Boulder Wild, a coalition of advocates taking on The Boulder City Council’s draft plan to kill the majority of prairie dogs within city limits. Activists braved the heat this past weekend to inform festival-goers of the truth behind Boulder’s Urban Wildlife Management Plan, under which approximately 5,900 prairie dogs will be killed. This slaughter is unprecedented for Boulder and we encourage you to join us in taking a stand! See
www.KeepBoulderWild.org for more information. And contact us if you wish to volunteer!
Keep Boulder Wild is also looking for a scientist with credentials to help prepare an alternate plan. This would be a temporary, paid position and would entail some time in Boulder. Please let Lindsey Sterling Krank (Prairie Dog Coalition Director) know right away if you have any ideas, suggestions or contact information at
director@prairiedogcoalition.org.

Dave Crawford will be on a call-in show tonight (Thurs, June 1) discussing wildlife and Boulder’s perilous Urban Wildlife Management Plan. He will be joined by Rob Edward of Sinapu. Details: Thurs, June 1, 6pm-7pm, KGNU (
www.kgnu.org, 88.5 FM Boulder, 1390 AM Denver)

RMAD has been serving the public heavily the past few weeks. We’ve had calls from all over the Rocky Mountains and beyond with requests for help with sick horses, distressed dogs, adoptions, animal hoarders, and, of course, imperiled prairie dogs. We try to assist these callers whenever possible, providing at the very least the support they often do not find from governmental agencies.

Thank you to Jeri McGinnis for raising funds for an anti-circus ad in Colorado Springs and for hosting a "Be Kind to Animals" essay/drawing contest for elementary school students. For more information about Jeri’s store in Manitou Springs, Gigi's: The Animal Lover's Gift Shop, please see
http://www.rmad.org/community.html#merchandise.
According to Sarah of Three Little Figs (
http://www.threelittlefigs.com/), Sun Deli has added Vegan Cheese pizza to the menu. They use Follow Your Heart "Vegan Gourmet'. It melts nicely in their pizza oven and they have delicious vegetable toppings, too. Details: Sun Deli, Pizza & Liquor - 2299 Pearl Street, Boulder. ph: (303) 938-1078. They deliver, too.

New vegetarian restaurants are popping up in the area. In addition to perennial favorites Watercourse Foods and Cafe Prasad, the Front Range now welcomes Denver’s Cafe Karma and Boulder’s Karma Cuisine and Leaf.

Events have been added to the calendar, below. Please check them out!


- Chris