» Site Navigation
0 members and 640 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,916
Threads: 249,118
Posts: 2,572,199
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
|
-
Ohio Ban on exotic pets to expire Wednesday
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources will let a temporary ban on exotic-pet ownership implemented by outgoing Gov. Ted Strickland expire this week.
The agency announced the decision Monday, with officials saying they do not have the legal authority to enforce the prohibitions that were part of Strickland’s executive order.
Instead, ODNR officials said they will meet with the Humane Society of the United States and other groups and accept public comments to determine a next step — possibly recommendations that state lawmakers would need to approve.
“I think we’re going to be very aggressive on this,” Scott Zody, assistant ODNR director, told reporters, in response to a question about the time frame for developing those recommendations. “I don’t think we want to let this sit around for very long because ... there is a high degree of interest in this issue.”
He added, “My hope would be that this would be a matter of months, not a matter of years.”
In one of his last official actions before leaving office, Strickland signed an emergency executive order banning new ownership of wild or exotic animals, including alligators, bears, gray wolves and pythons.
Under the terms of the order, existing owners would be allowed to keep their animals, though they would have to register with the state by May 1 of this year and annually thereafter.
The executive order also gave the ODNR the authority to develop rules prohibiting the private ownership of wild animals.
The executive order stemmed from an agreement he helped to broker between the Humane Society of the United States and major farm groups to keep an animal- welfare issue off the November ballot.
Kasich was supportive of the order initially, telling reporters at the time: “We don’t want exotic animals here where somebody’s bringing something in and then some neighbor gets hurt. So we’ll look at it. It sounds reasonable, but let me just take a look at it. I would be inclined to say we should continue it.”
But the new administration slowed the rules-filing process earlier this year after hearing concerns from business owners, and ODNR officials have not been enforcing the ban, which will expire Wednesday.
Wayne Pacelle, president and chief executive officer of the Humane Society of the United States, called the ODNR decision a disappointing but temporary setback.
“We do remain hopeful that a new rule will be issued to achieve the same purposes — and we hope it’s done in rapid fashion,” he said. Pacelle said his group still has more than 500,000 signatures on petitions in hand that it could use to place the exotic animal and other animal-welfare issues before voters.
http://www.vindy.com/news/2011/apr/0...ets-to-expire/
-
-
Re: Ohio Ban on exotic pets to expire Wednesday
I guess this is good news for now! it's only a matter of time until they try something else though.
Thanks for posting!
-Jordan
Balls
0.1 Pinstripe.............................1.0 DH Lavender Snow
0.2 PH Lavender Albino.............0.1 Bumblebee
0.1 Pastel PH Ghost..................1.0 Pastel Het Ghost
0.2 PH Ghost (Twins)................1.0 Cinnamon
0.1 Het TSK Axanthic................1.3 Mojave
0.1 Het Albino..........................1.0 Albino PH Pied
1.1 Het Pied.............................1.0 Dinker
1.2 Normal...............................1.0 Pastel Lesser
Boa
0.1 Super Salmon Het Sunglow
Check us out at: http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Dem...13090085417762
-
-
Dangerous Animal rule under review
COLUMBUS — Ohio Gov. John Kasich and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources will develop new policies and procedures for owning and selling dangerous wild animals.
Kasich supports the regulation of dangerous wild animals to ensure the public’s safety and animals’ humane treatment, according to a statement yesterday from ODNR.
Kasich also wants to develop new rules in a transparent way with public input, the nature agency said.
The governor will allow to expire the Executive Order and Emergency Administrative rule banning the “possession, sale, and transfer” of dangerous wild animals. That rule, issued by former Gov. Ted Strickland, expires Wednesday.
“Concerns were raised with the rule’s short-term and long-term funding, legal authority, safety, and the overall feasibility of being able to efficiently and effectively enforce such a ban,” said a statement by ODNR.
Despite the executive order, the Ohio Division of Wildlife does not have the legal authority to regulate non-native dangerous wild animals such as tigers, lions and many poisonous snakes, said Laura Jones, ODNR spokeswoman.
The state natural resources agency will begin seeking public input from key groups, including the Association of Zoos & Aquariums, Humane Society, Ohio Farm Bureau, the Buckeye State Sheriff’s Association, the Ohio Veterinary Medical Association and the Ohio Association of Animal Owners Inc., Jones said.
Kasich has not made a schedule for legislation or an executive order, but the nature officials expect to begin a work group possibly as soon as next week, Jones said.
Yesterday, Lorain County wild animal owner Sam Mazzola predicted Kasich’s efforts would not involve people who own exotic animals. Rather, the legislation will be influenced by the political lobbyists of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which has called for Mazzola to be charged with homicide for the death of his friend, Brent Kandra, 24, who was mauled by one of Mazzola’s bears last year.
“Those scumbags, and you can quote me on that, from PETA have all the money and all the politics behind them and they will be heard,” Mazzola said.
PETA lied to Strickland and to Kandra’s family when the organization claimed Strickland’s order could prevent similar accidents with people and wild animals, Mazzola said. Last year, Kandra’s mother, Deirdre Herbert, wrote to Strickland to encourage his proposed ban on wild animal ownership.
“It’s a real sad thing because PETA has used her love and her heart to get their message across,” Mazzola said. “They don’t care about Brent. They don’t care about his mother.”
Mona Rutger, operator of Back to the Wild animal rehabilitation center in Margaretta Township, said she would support more rules in Ohio.
Zoos and education and rehab centers for wild animals are appropriate, Rutger said.
Animal babies, such as raccoons and foxes, are adorable but grow up to be problems, she said. Back to the Wild has two bobcats that were declawed and sold as pets to owners who later could not take care of the animals, Rutger said.
Now, those cats can’t return to the wild and won’t make good pets for anyone, she said.
“You can’t predict their behavior,” Rutger said. “They can be trained, but they can’t be tamed. There’s a big difference. Wild animals can’t be tamed. It’s an accident waiting to happen.”
morningjournal.com/articles/2011/04/05/news/mj4352890.txt?viewmode=2
Last edited by ER12; 04-05-2011 at 06:21 PM.
-
-
Registered User
I'm thrilled, I hope something of less regulation is instituted. I can see bans on Tiger, Lions, Bears, etc. But to put those animals side by side with domesticated boa constrictors and pythons is going too far. I'll go into a Burmese Pythons enclosure a million times before I set foot in a lions den.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|