CBC TV The National, July 22, 2003
Aquarium sticking to plans for more dolphins
VANCOUVER - The Vancouver Aquarium says it will ignore the request
by the Park Board, to hold off bringing in any more dolphins for
the time being.
Aquarium president John Nightingale says there's a five-year-old
agreement in place - allowing the facility to bring in new dolphins
taken into captivity before 1996.
"The marine mammals we have left are vital to our mission
and we'll do everything we can to keep them," he says.
He thinks the aquarium's 16-year-old dolphin, Spinnaker, should
have company. "We'd really like to have a group of three or
four because that makes a really good social mix."
The aquarium already phased out killer whales two years ago. Now
there's pressure from the group - Coalition for no Whales in Captivity
- to phase out dolphins too.
"This is about the whole concept of the commercial trade in
whales and dolphins in the whole world, and the Vancouver Aquarium
is part of that problem not part of the solution," says coalition
spokesperson Annelise Sorg.
Many of the Park Board commissioners who made the original deal
in 1998 are gone now, and their replacements are wondering if they
have to stick to the original plan.
"We've also asked our staff to send a letter to the aquarium
asking them for a voluntary moratorium on bringing in any more dolphins
until this issue has been dealt with," says Park Board commissioner
Loretta Woodcock.
The Park Board is seeking legal advice, but won't make a final
decision until the fall
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