June 2006 PR

         

Day of Action Will Highlight Elephant-Sized
Controversy at Philadelphia Zoo
 
Philadelphia, Pa. -- Friends of Philly Zoo Elephants (FPZE) and In Defense of Animals (IDA), accompanied by “Dulary” the elephant, will deliver petitions containing over 5,000 signatures of concerned Philly-area residents and vistors to city council members during Thursday morning’s council meeting to urge them to pass a resolution requesting the transfer of the Zoo’s four elephants to a sanctuary. The groups, also leafleting later that day at Philly Zoo’s “Zoobilee” Fundraiser, are concerned about the inadequate conditions under which the elephants are currently held. 
 

What: Delivery of petitions to Philadelphia City Council
When: Thursday, June 8, 10:00 a.m.
Where: Philadelphia City Hall, Room 400
What: Demonstration and leafleting at Philadelphia Zoo’s “Zoobilee” Fundraiser
Where: Philadelphia Zoo – Main entrance
When: Thursday, June 8, 5: 00 p.m.

 
An elephant-sized controversy has raged at the Zoo since its financially-based decision not to build a new enclosure for its elephants, who are currently confined to a 1940’s-era exhibit under cramped and unnatural conditions that are detrimental to their health and well-being.
 
According to American Zoo and Aquarium Association, the Philadelphia Zoo has already decided to close the elephant exhibit and send its four elephants away. Elephant advocates have urged the zoo to transfer the elephants to The Elephant Sanctuary (TES), a 2,700-acre refuge in Tennessee that has the space and natural conditions necessary for elephants to thrive. 
 
The Zoo threatens instead to send the elephants to another zoo. No U.S. zoo has an exhibit large or naturalistic enough to meet the biological and psychological needs of elephants, who in the wild walk tens of miles a day and live in large, extended family groups. (The largest elephant exhibit at a U.S. zoo is just eight acres. There are 640 acres in one mile.)
 
Of particular concern is the Zoo’s treatment of Dulary, a 42-year old endangered Asian elephant who has been warehoused in a concrete barn for more than nine months since she was “attacked” by one of the Zoo’s African elephants. In March, In Defense of Animals (IDA), a national animal protection organization, and FPZE notified the Zoo that its treatment of Dulary violated the federal Endangered Species Act. 
 
On Thursday, elephant advocates will urge the Philadelphia City Council to pass a resolution requesting the immediate transfer of Dulary to TES, before her health declines further in solitary confinement at the zoo.                     
 
Friends of the Philly Zoo Elephants is a local group of individuals living or working in or near Philadelphia dedicated to helping the voiceless.     
 
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