By Melanie Grayce West
Sept. 19, 2019 Wall Street
Journal
Badgers and boomslang snakes
would seem to be dangerous animals to the average New Yorker.
State environmental
officials now want to
make it an official designation.
On Thursday, the New York
state Department of Environmental Conservation released proposed regulations
that would expand the state’s list of "dangerous animals.” The regulation
would create new licensing requirements for zoos, wildlife parks and
exhibitions that have those animals.
The proposal includes 17
different categories of animals that could pose a threat to public safety. The
list includes the usual suspects like wolverines, raccoons and the Eurasian
lynx, plus the obscure and less fuzzy: the DeSchauensee’s anaconda; and the
Nile monitor, a large lizard with a nasty demeanor. Elephants are on the list,
too.
The state already considered
some animals dangerous, including wolves and coyotes, and by law individuals
can’t keep exotic animals as pets. Exhibition operators, such as animal parks
or zoos, are already required to be licensed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture for the most dangerous animals.
However, the state said that
to ensure the safety of people, fish and wildlife populations, it needed
additional powers. The public will have time to comment on the proposed
regulation before it goes into effect.
Jeff Taylor, who owns the
Wild Animal Park in Chittenango, N.Y., said the state’s move amounted to
overregulation for legally licensed operators. His park has several of the
dangerous animals, including bears.
“People already breaking the
law aren’t going to follow it,” he said. “It’s making it more of a permit
process for us.”
Conservation officials point
to a growing number of incidents with dangerous animals, including one in June
where an Orange County man was bitten by one of the more than 150 venomous
snakes he kept in his basement. In 2011, a New York woman died after being bitten
by an African black mamba snake and in 2006, a New York woman was attacked
by a capuchin monkey, the DEC says.
Sue McDonough, president
of the animal-rights advocacy group New York State Humane Association,
said such designations were needed to combat “roadside zoos” that are unlicensed,
and to address people who keep wild animals as pets.
“You have people getting
wildlife as pets without any training or background in handling wild animals
and it is a problem,” she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!