California's
elephant man
Assemblyman wants
zoos to expand space
or lose animals
By Peter Hecht --
Bee Capitol Bureau
Published 2:15 am
PST Sunday, March
12, 2006
Story appeared on
Page A3 of The Bee
SAN ANDREAS - Winky,
a 9,500-pound Asian
elephant who was a
featured attraction
for 36 years at the
Sacramento Zoo, savors
her retirement with
seven other elephants
on a sprawling range
in the oak-studded
hills of California's
Gold Country.

Her arrival at the
Ark 2000 sanctuary
of the Performing
Animal Welfare Society,
or PAWS, was arranged
due to Winky's aching
feet and pointed acknowledgments
by two zoos that their
artificial elephant
habitats were ill-equipped
to meet the needs
of the massive animals.
"Our small,
1940s exhibit was
substandard by anyone's
standard," said
Leslie Field, lead
animal keeper at the
Sacramento Zoo, which
decided to close its
elephant exhibit in
1991. "Our desire
was for Winky to have
elephant friends and
to go to another place."
But Winky's next stop,
the Detroit Zoo, also
closed its exhibit,
declaring in 2004
that Winky and another
elephant, Wanda, suffered
from chronic arthritis
as well as psychological
problems. The zoo
said its 1-acre habitat
wasn't helping either
elephant.
Now a California state
lawmaker is pushing
legislation that could
force some of the
state's leading zoos
to give up their elephant
populations if they
don't significantly
expand acreage for
their popular pachyderms.
The so-called Elephant
Protection Act introduced
by Assemblyman Lloyd
Levine, D-Van Nuys,
would require zoos
to set aside at least
5 acres of usable
habitat for every
three elephants, plus
an additional half-acre
for each additional
elephant.
The measure, AB 3027,
would also ban the
use of steel-tipped
bullhooks and chains
to herd or restrain
the animals.
"I simply want
the treatment of elephants
to improve,"
said Levine, who held
a recent news conference
in the parking lot
of the Los Angeles
Zoo to announce the
bill. "If zoos
build these (expanded)
compounds because
it is the right thing
to do, fine. If they
can't and they send
them to elephant sanctuaries,
that's fine, too.
But these highly intelligent
and highly social
creatures should live
in a way that doesn't
promote suffering."
The bill is drawing
protests from the
Los Angles Zoo and
the San Diego Zoo
and its Wild Animal
Park. The zoos say
they have invested
or are investing millions
of dollars to upgrade
their elephant facilities.
The American Zoo
and Aquarium Association
is charging that the
bill sets arbitrary
acreage requirements
for zoo elephants
that are unsupported
by science.
"We believe
that these changes
are another attempt
by animal rights activists
to effectively ban
elephants from zoos
today and then ban
other species, such
as giraffes, lions
and penguins, from
zoos tomorrow,"
the organization said
in a statement.
Only one California
zoo - the Oakland
Zoo - would meet the
standards of the legislation.
It houses four elephants
on 6 acres, including
a 3.4-acre exhibit,
and doesn't use bullhooks
or chains.
"This bill doesn't
take away people's
right to see the animals,"
said Nicole G. Paquette,
general counsel for
the Animal Protection
Institute in Sacramento,
which pushed for the
legislation. "It
is not banning them
in zoos or circuses.
It's saying: Treat
them humanely, break
the chains, get rid
of the bullhooks,
and give these animals
the space they deserve."
At the Ark 2000 sanctuary,
situated on 2,300
acres of oak woodlands
and grassy hills in
Calaveras County,
the PAWS group houses
three African elephants
in one 80-acre enclosure
and five older, less
mobile Asian elephants
in a 35-acre pen.
Five of the elephants
are from zoos, including
Lulu, a 38-year-old
African elephant who
was relocated after
the San Francisco
Zoo closed its elephant
exhibit last year.
Two others are former
circus elephants,
and one came from
a private owner.
Pat Derby, the PAWS
founder who oversees
Ark 2000, said their
relocation to the
sanctuary reflects
an increasing concern
by animal rights activists
and some scientists
that the elephants,
which can walk up
to 30 miles in a day,
need far more room
than most zoos can
provide.
"They are incredible
walking machines,"
said Derby, a former
animal trainer for
television programs,
including "Gunsmoke,"
"Lassie"
and "Flipper."
At the Los Angeles
Zoo, home to three
elephants, officials
are seeking a $13.9
million expansion
to create a Pachyderm
Forest that would
increase the zoo's
elephant habitat from
a just more than a
half-acre to 3 acres.
Though the acreage
would fall short of
the standards sought
in Levine's bill,
zoo spokesman Jason
Jacobs said the plan
carefully considers
the needs of the zoo's
elephants, including
one diagnosed with
a chronic foot infection
and an arthritic condition.
"You have to
look at the whole
program - what you
do with that space,"
Jacobs said.
The San Diego Zoo's
Wild Animal Park has
eight African elephants
in a 3-acre exhibit
and six Asian elephants
in a 2.5-acre habitat.
The San Diego Zoo
houses one African
elephant and three
Asian elephants in
a 1-acre exhibit.
The Zoological Society
of San Diego, which
runs the two zoos,
said the Elephant
Protection Act would
"compromise the
capability of animal
care science professionals"
to decide what is
best for the elephants."
"Zoos have a
critical and increasing
conservation role
in helping manage
sustainable populations
of endangered species
and should not be
limited in their ability
to play this role,"
the society's statement
read.
But Derby said she
hopes the Levine bill
will pressure zoos
- as well as circuses
that transport often-chained
elephants in cramped
conditions - "to
raise the bar and
force better standards."
She said many elephants
that came to the sanctuary
suffered physical
problems from having
to stand, and sleep,
on concrete and move
about in limited,
unnatural spaces.
Winky and Wanda,
well-advanced in years
at 53 and 48, respectively,
are experiencing few
physical problems.
Veterinarians soaked
their giant feet and
removed abscesses.
They appear happy
and limber strolling
the San Andreas sanctuary,
Derby said.
But she said she
would prefer that
other elephants remain
in zoos - with improved
facilities and care.
She said she isn't
campaigning for more
pachyderms.
"We just did
Winky's and Wanda's
feet," she said.
"I'm not clamoring
to get any more."