Major Victory for Elephants: No Bullhooks for Zoo-Backed Elephant Center in Florida

Baby elephant being "trained" to perform unnatural tricks.

Baby elephant being "trained" to perform unnatural tricks.

In a major victory for elephants that will send shockwaves through the zoo industry, the St. Lucie County Board of Commissioners in Florida made it very clear that the cruel use of bullhooks on elephants is not welcome in their county. The commission today voted to allow the National Elephant Center (NEC), an elephant holding facility and breeding facility, to proceed, but it applied strict conditions that prohibit bullhooks, limit the number of elephants, and encourage the formation of an advisory committee to monitor the NEC.

The commission’s vote serves as a wake-up call for any zoo still using archaic circus-style training that relies on the bullhook, a steel-tipped device used to inflict pain and intimidate elephants with the threat of pain and violence. It’s clear that once the practice is exposed, that the public and elected officials will not tolerate the cruelty it inflicts.

IDA joined with national, state and local organizations to oppose the project, which is intended to facilitate the continued display of elephants in zoos, despite the fact that elephants are suffering and dying prematurely in inadequate exhibits. IDA program director Suzanne Roy addressed the commission, along with representatives from PETA, Animal Rights Foundation of Florida and United for Animals.

IDA will continue to monitor the NEC, as there are outstanding concerns about the facility including:

  • NEC will be a breeding and holding facility that shuttles elephants in and out; such transfers are detrimental to elephants and may cause premature death
  • Several of the zoos involved with the NEC have a close affiliation with Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus
  • Ringling has stated an interest in sending elephants to NEC

Many zoos and both U.S. sanctuaries do not use bullhooks and instead employ a positive-reinforcement-only style of training that is humane for the elephants and safe for handlers. Do you know how the elephants are trained and managed at your city’s zoo? Call the zoo and ask, and then let us know the zoo’s response. If your zoo is still using bullhooks, make it clear that you oppose the use of this cruel device and urge the zoo to switch to using “protected contact” management only.

Thanks to all the Florida residents who wrote and called the St. Lucie County commissioners, opposing the project!

4 Responses to “Major Victory for Elephants: No Bullhooks for Zoo-Backed Elephant Center in Florida”

  • Laura Guttridge:

    Elephants belong in the wild, not in captivity!

  • Larry K:

    The National Elephant Center Board of Directors are reassessing whether to open their facility in St. Lucie County because they don’t want to give up their bullhooks and they don’t want an advisory board to report back to the County Commissioners about what is going on at the facility. I guess the Commissioners now know all they need to know about the real intent of these characters. They don’t want any oversight, they don’t want to be accountable. They want to operate this glorified “puppy mill” style breeding and abuse-training center in secrecy. What a surprise!

  • Noelya:

    I thought that the whole idea of the elephant center was a bad one, because the animal orgs. said that it was a breeding center mostly for zoos and circuses, so I don’t how good can it be that they would allow the center to be built without any further protests.

  • FYI: Video on Demand link of meeting in St. Lucie County, referenced in this article. The NEC discussion begins about 55-56 minute into the meeting.

Leave a Reply

IDA News Archive
Pages
Social Network with IDA!



Bookmark and Share

Hope Animal Sanctuary