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Jim O’Dell, Buellton
April 12, 2009 12:00 AM
The heart-rending story of two displaced mountain lion cubs demonstrates that Fish and Game is not the only government department lacking facility.
California needs to revise the protocol for handling wildlife to engage private enterprise, such as Animal Rescue Team Inc., embracing a growing trend toward a partnership that makes efficient use of tax dollars and enhances delivery of service.
The animals deserve no less. If Animal Rescue needs a license to house wildlife, give it to them.
Fish and Game deserves our support, too. I am puzzled, though, that the familiar recitation of its limitations does not exclude out-of-state transport. Texas? That’s one line item I’d like to see.
April 17, 2009 The state’s Natural Resources Agency and other officials need to investigate the California Department of Fish and Game’s operations on the Central Coast.
Doesn’t it seem as if the first option for some of these “wildlife officials” is to kill large mammals? Sometimes there also can appear to be indifference or negligence, such as with the case involving two mountain lion cubs recently found on Aarhus Drive in Solvang. Witnesses said the cubs appeared to be starving on the two different days they saw them. The mother was nowhere in sight on either occasion.
A community-supported nonprofit group had to step in to provide medical care.
None of this is new.
Think back to 2005 when we wrote on these pages: How naive and gullible do officials from the California Department of Fish and Game think residents of this state are? Are Californians supposed to believe one lame excuse after the next when government employees unnecessarily shoot and kill wild animals, from mountain lions to black bears?
That year officials killed an escaped tiger in Ventura County in the chaparral-covered hills near the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley. Fish and Game had tracked the declawed animal over days and had time to come up with a plan to sedate or capture the tiger.
Just weeks later, a federal tracker shot dead a mountain lion in the Santa Ynez Valley with the department’s blessing. The cougar’s supposed “crime”? Hunting two alpacas. Instead of educating the rancher to avoid problems in the future, though, state Fish and Game signed off on the shooting.
And who could forget that officials also shot a black bear with tranquilizer darts in Los Olivos? But rather than save its life, they proceeded to take the bear into the forest and kill the animal with a bullet to its head. Next, they tossed its body into a trash dump.
The News-Press reported: “After the animal was shot with tranquilizer darts, it was taken to the forest where it was killed, which Lt. Roland Takayama of Fish and Game said was in keeping with state policy. After it was killed by a single shot to the head, its body was dumped at the Tajiguas Landfill.”
Fish and Game officials rebuffed efforts by experts in animal rescue –
the same ones who acted to help the Solvang cougar cubs – to save the bear.
Lt. Takayama also was involved in the case of the cougar cubs.
Until there’s an investigation, it will be hard to believe that much coming out of the local Fish and Game office involving mountain lions and bears is credible information.
Take it all with a lot of skepticism.
Robert Fermin, Santa Ynez
April 16, 2009
I want to thank Julia Di Sieno for her persistent and relentless search for the two orphaned and hungry mountain lion cubs in the Solvang area the night and days of April 2 and 3. Ms. Di Sieno and all those who care for her Animal Rescue Team organization are to be commended for their efforts in preserving what others might deem frivolous. All will be lost if our children and grandchildren cannot witness the animal cycle of life and its place in our world where their dependence becomes more and more critical as we have infringed upon their territory. May 15, 2009 12:00 AM
The founder of Animal Rescue Team Inc. said Thursday she might be forced to leave her Santa Ynez location because the property owner is apparently being forced to sell.
Julia Di Sieno said in an e-mail that she has been informed the property may go for $850,000 to $1 million.
Ms. Di Sieno said she hopes to raise enough for a down payment, and qualify for a loan in order to purchase the 1.4-acre site.
“Had we known (about a sale) earlier on, we would have held off on the expense of building the (eight) $20,000 … enclosures that the Santa Barbara News-Press Holiday Fund donated, and where the (mountain lion) cubs were kept safely for the first hour (on April 3) after ART captured them,” she said.
“My heart is broken,” said Ms. Di Sieno, noting she had moved nine times in eight years.
The property, she added, fulfills her nonprofit group’s every need.
A fundraiser is set for Sept. 26
May 13, 2009 8:33 AM
SANTA BARBARA — Ellen DeGeneres opened her syndicated talk show on Tuesday with a nod to victims of the Jesusita Fire. “I really want to send a shout out to everybody who has been affected by the wildfire in Santa Barbara,” said Ms. DeGeneres.
She also put out a call for donations to Julia DiSieno’s nonprofit organization Animal Rescue Team Inc., in Santa Ynez, which saved and sheltered many animals affected by the fire, including a days-old fawn and a bobcat pup, which were featured on the front page of the News-Press.
Animal Rescue Team was one of two 2008 News-Press Holiday Fund beneficiaries.
Ms. DeGeneres told viewers, “If you have extra crates you can donate, or money, anything, please, these people are amazing.”
To donate, go to www.animalrescueteam.net.
SCOTT STEEPLETON, NEWS-PRESS CITY EDITOR
June 12, 2009 12:00 AM
The trip from an animal rescue facility in Solvang to a zoo in New York has not been a good one for a cougar cub who, along with its sister, was found wandering and malnourished in a residential neighborhood in early April, the News-Press has learned.
Possible shoddy treatment by a baggage handler at Syracuse Hancock International Airport, who apparently reveled in parading the young cat around for buddies on the back of a moving cart, is just one incident that may have left the animal, in the words of the man now ultimately responsible for its care, panicked and spooked.
“Let’s just say it’s a little on the aggressive side,” Mike Janis, director of the Binghamton Zoo at Ross Park, told the News-Press on Thursday.
The cougar arrived at the zoo, in upstate New York about seven miles north of the Pennsylvania border, on May 11, bound for the soon-to-open $500,000 Wonders of Nature exhibit, which Mr. Janis said will feature cougars, snow leopards and meerkats.
But a month after it arrived, the cougar is still not ready for its debut.
“Health-wise, it’s doing very well,” he said. “Attitude-wise, it is definitely a wild cat.”
After a month, said Mr. Janis, zoo staff would expect the animal to be more comfortable in its new surroundings. But that’s not quite the case.
“We have volunteers sitting with it, not in the same cage because it would take their faces off, but in the same building, with a radio on, trying to calm the little girl,” he said.
The cougars have been a lightning rod for controversy since they were taken from the Animal Rescue Team Inc. facility, after being tracked to Aarhus Drive in Solvang by the nonprofit organization’s executive director, Julia Di Sieno.
“It’s nauseating what’s been done to these cubs,” Ms. Di Sieno, told the News-Press Thursday.
“When they were separated by just 20 yards, these cubs were crying for each other,” she said.
As a result of the April capture of the 3-month-old cats, in which Ms. Di Sieno and an assistant allegedly defied a Fish & Game warden’s order not to tranquilize the cats and “darted” them anyway, Ms. Di Sieno has been the subject of an investigation that could be turned over to the District Attorney’s Office for possible prosecution.
A Fish & Game spokesman told the News-Press on Thursday that the investigation has not yet been completed.
From the beginning, Ms. Di Sieno urged keeping the cougars together, pleas that fell on deaf ears.
Kevin Brennan, a biologist with Fish & Game, determined where the cats ultimately were sent, according to department spokesman Harry Morse. Mr. Brennan was in the field and not available for comment on Thursday.
But Ms. Di Sieno isn’t the only person who called for the cats to be kept together.
“They should not have split the cubs up,” Joe Maynard, president of the Rosamond-based nonprofit Exotic Feline Breeding Compound’s Feline Conservation Center, told the News-Press.
Mr. Maynard, who has been involved in wild and exotic animal rescues since 1969 and helped Fish & Game write the parameters for caging such animals, said familiarity goes a long way.
“These two cubs should have stayed together until they become adults, about 2 years old,” he said.
“It’s less stress on them.”
Even Binghamton Zoo’s Mr. Janis was looking forward to keeping the pair together.
“We would have taken both,” he said.
Mr. Janis said he could have gone through a breeder to get cougars for his zoo, but that would just encourage more breeding. Instead, he contacted the nonprofit Mountain Lion Foundation.
That was in March.
“The word spreads through the grapevine, so when these (the Solvang cougars) became available, we were the first ones they called, because we were first on the list.”
After learning that the other cougar would be going elsewhere, Mr. Janis said he was disappointed. But the Northeast Wisconsin Zoo, near Green Bay, he added, is an excellent facility.
Calls to “NEW Zoo” for comment Thursday were not returned.
Shipping the cougar from California to New York cost $500, but the trip wasn’t exactly first-class.
The metal-mesh windows of the cat’s portable kennel were left uncovered, said Mr. Janis, allowing the cat to see out.
“What we would have done is put some burlap on the sides so she couldn’t see what was going on around her. It would be much more secure,” he said.
“Unfortunately, that didn’t happen, so it was panicked and spooked during the flight.”
“And at Syracuse airport, nobody wanted to get it off the plane because they were afraid of it,” added Mr. Janis. “If it was covered, they could have done it.”
The cat’s perceived poor treatment apparently didn’t end there.
“Somebody finally got it out of the cargo hold, then they put it on one of their carts and drove it around and showed it off to their buddies,” said Mr. Janis.
A request for comment from airport administration went unanswered.
The cougar was transported to Binghamton, about 80 miles south of the airport — and zoo staff spend time every day trying to coax it out of its funk and into accepting its new home.
The effects of the trip may have taken a toll on the animal.
“I’m not sure it made it this way, but it didn’t help either,” said Mr. Janis. “It had a bad flight.”
“It probably would have been easier on it if one place had gotten both of the cats.”
e-mail: ssteepleton@newspress.com
Scott Steepleton
August 10, 2010 11:52 AM
Animal Rescue Team Inc. is seeking a temporary home for a rescued female Belgian Malinois that was brought to the nonprofit group’s facility for critical care and rehabilitation.
The dog was found on a large parcel in Woodstock in Santa Ynez, crawling, and dragging its back legs.
“Because she was so weak, wobbly and skinny, the kind couple who found her immediately brought the dog to a vet in Santa Ynez,” said Julia Di Sieno, ART’s executive director. “Blood work and other tests revealed and diagnosed the dog with megaesophagus and extreme starvation. She also needs to be tested for myasthenia gravis.”
A shock collar found on the dog was removed, said Ms. Di Sieno, adding, “It has also been determined that her esophagus has so much scar tissue, from being shocked repeatedly, she lost her ability to bark, as well as swallow.”
“She is very sensitive around her throat, and cannot be touched in the immediate area,” said Ms. Di Sieno. “Ali is so weak she cannot hold her head over her food dish. She requires four-five small feedings daily, with her bowl held for her. It’s one of the saddest neglect cases I have ever seen. And I have seen it all!”
The dog is about two years old, is in heat and responds to the name Ali.
Once the dog is deemed healthy, it will be spayed, vaccinated and placed into a forever loving home, said Ms. Di Sieno.
To help out with Ali, or to make a donation for the care of this dog or other ART animals, contact Ms. Di Sieno at 896-1859.
You can also go to ART’s website, http://animalrescueteam.net.
Karna Hughes
February 27, 2009 7:16 AM
More than a dozen volunteers turned out last week to build a fence for Animal Rescue Team Inc., a nonprofit that rehabilitates injured and orphaned animals.
The fencing, which was placed along part of the group’s new 11/2-acre property in Solvang, will help keep out trespassers and keep resident critters in.
Volunteers also worked on enclosures for birds of prey, coyotes, foxes, bobcats and small animals.
The same day, locals Carol Dailey and Jared Guthrie donated a trailer, which the group will use for large mammal rescues and disaster evacuations.
ART’s co-founder and president, Dr. Michael Behrman, plans to donate his Acura MDX SUV, which has a tow hitch, to pull the trailer, making it a one-of-a-kind “animal ambulance,” according to Julia Di Sieno, Animal Rescue Team’s executive director.
Springtime marks the birthing season for wild animals, and ART expects to rescue between 200 and 300 orphans, said Ms. Di Sieno.
The group will host a volunteer training on feeding and raising orphaned wildlife from 1 to 4 p.m. March 21 at its facility on 2848 Covered Wagon Road.
The group is currently looking for an electrical contractor to donate services to wire its animal nursery, hospital and board member room.
To volunteer your services, e-mail info@animalrescueteam.net.
A bear, likely the one that was hit by a car in Ventura more than a week ago, was caught in the backyard of a Ventura resident early this morning. The young male bear was released this afternoon into Los Padres National Forest after a veterinarian for the state Department of Fish and Game examined him. Doug Newlee said he was inside his home on El Cerrito Street when he heard his black lab barking in the backyard around 6:30 a.m. He went out back to see what the dog was barking at. “I saw it was somebody up in the tree. Then I could see it had fur,” he said. Newlee wondered if a dog had somehow gotten up in the tree. He brought his dogs in the house and then heard his neighbor knocking on his door. The neighbor asked if he knew there was a bear in his backyard. “Then I realized, ‘Oh my God, it’s a bear,’” Newlee said. Ventura police, state Department of Fish and Game and county animal control showed up to help with the bear, which appeared to be injured. The bear was tranquilized without incident and taken to the California Wildlife Center, a wildlife rehabilitation facility, said Cindy Wood, a warden for the Department of Fish and Game. The vet examined the bear, which Wood guessed was about three or four years old and weighed about 225 pounds. Though it had some abrasions and injuries, the vet felt it could be released, which was done around 1 p.m. at Los Padres National Forest, Wood said. It was likely the bear was the same one hit by a car more than a week ago. Wood said they couldn’t confirm that it was the same bear, but it did have abrasions and injuries. An adult black bear was hit on July 16 on Blackburn Road, which is nearby. Authorities searched the area at the time, but did not find the bear. |
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