From the CBC:
“Private Ontario zoo with 450
animals up for sale in Chatham-Kent”
The potential sale of a private
zoo in southwestern Ontario where there are hundreds of exotic animals is
raising legal and moral questions about the thorny issue of the private
ownership of dangerous wildlife. Greenview
Aviaries Park and Zoo, which has operated for nearly 40 years in the community
of Morpeth in Chatham-Kent, is listed on Ontario's Multiple Listings Service
(MLS) for $4.5 million. Cody Kraus, a
broker with Century 21 Erie Shores Realty, said the purchase price includes: About
20 hectares of land. A house, maintenance sheds, livestock barns, reptile
pavilion, souvenir shop, restaurant, playground, splash pad. A personal
collection of 450 animals, including goats, llamas, hundreds of birds and a
number of large predator cats. "There's
five or six lions," Kraus said. "A lot of these animals are breeding.
They had a new lion cub that was born this year and that's one of the big
features now. There's tigers, there's a black bear, there's water
buffalo."
'It's leaving people in a
dangerous situation' Animal rights activists say the fact the zoo's
menagerie of 450 animals is included with the property illustrates the need for
better laws governing keeping exotic animals in Ontario. They argue anyone
could take ownership of potentially dangerous lions and tigers with no
licensing or training required. "It's
leaving animals in a dangerous situation and its leaving people in a dangerous
situation," said Julie Woodyer, the campaigns director for ZooCheck
Canada, a charity dedicated to the protection of wild animals. Ontario has no
laws governing the ownership or breeding of potentially dangerous animals, such
as lions and tigers, and no standards for training on how the animals should be
handled. "Anyone can buy
this. They don't have to have any training or understanding of the biology of
the animals nor how to manage them," Woodyer said. In Ontario, it's up to each municipality
to enact its own bylaw, which critics say creates a confusing and inconsistent
patchwork of rules when it comes to public safety and the keeping of
potentially dangerous wildlife.
Greenview has exemption under
local bylaws
(Four white lions stare at the
camera in this 2018 picture taken at Greenview Aviaries and posted to social
media.)
Chatham-Kent passed its own
exotic animal bylaw in 2015. The legislation gives Greenview Aviaries an
exemption under the bylaw. Don
Shropshire, the municipality's chief administrative officer, told CBC News on
Monday that municipal lawyers said the bylaw exemption would be transferred to
the new owners once the property is sold. He also noted the facility under its
current ownership has never presented a problem for local law enforcement
officials. The zoo "has been
operating successfully for many years. I am not aware of any concerns being
raised about either safety or the care of the animals. Hoping whoever buys the
business will carry on with this tradition." Also on Monday, Brian Daly,
who co-owns the zoo with his brothers Ken and Scott, told CBC News the family
would only consider serious offers when it came to selling their 38-year-old
business. "If somebody is going to
buy a zoo, they would have to know what they're doing, wouldn't they? I mean
it's just common sense," Daly said.
Brothers will keep zoo going
if they can't find buyer Daly wouldn't say how he and his brothers intend
to determine how a potential buyer is qualified to handle the animals,
especially in a jurisdiction where there are no regulations on training or
qualifications for the public display of lions and tigers. "We'll find that out when the time
comes," he said. Daly said
he and his brothers decided to sell the zoo because they're looking to retire.
"I'm in my mid 60s," he said, noting he's worked seven days a
week for the past 38 seasons and is looking forward to having weekends off. Daly called his career in animal handling
a "labour of love," and said if he and his brothers can't find a
serious buyer, they'll likely keep the business going. "The worst thing that could happen is
if it isn't a zoo anymore," he said. Brent Ross, a spokesperson for the Solicitor
General's Office, told CBC News the province did not want to comment on the
sale. "Animal Welfare
Services is not involved in real estate or business-to-business transactions,
and cannot provide comment on this specific matter."
^ This kind of situation should
never have been allowed to happen. Now that it has it’s important to find good
new homes for the 450 animals. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/greenview-aviaries-morpeth-ontario-1.6325443
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