VANCOUVER SUN Wednesday July 23, 2003
by Nicholas Read
Search for dolphins will continue
Aquarium president will defy park board while city studies legal
submission from 'No Whales'
Vancouver Aquarium president John Nightingale said he would continue
to look for new dolphins for the aquarium even if the city's park
board asks him to stop.
At a meeting of the board Monday night, board chair Heather Deal
said the board would ask Nightingale to voluntarily refrain from
importing any more dolphins into the aquarium until city staff has
a chance to review a legal submission put forward to the board by
the Coalition For No Whales In Captivity.
The coalition wants the board to implement a comprehensive ban
against importing whales and dolphins into Stanley Park.
Nightingale said Tuesday that he has not received any such request
from the board, and that even if he does, he would ignore it and
continue to engage in discussions with other aquariums "as
they come up."
"We will continue looking," Nightingale said. "That's
a long process whose timing is not under our control."
Board vice-chair Anita Romaniuk said a letter would be sent to
Nightingale this week.
She also said the board "would be very unhappy" if Nightingale
continues to search for dolphins while city staff conducts its review.
"We can't force him to stop," she said. "So that
would make the relationship somewhat strained, I would say."
She said the review is expected to be completeed some time this
fall.
Nightingale said that according to a lease negotiated between the
aquarium and a then NPA-dominated park board in 1998, he is permitted
to import dolphins and whales providing they were not caught from
the wild or, if they were, that they were taken before September
1996.
The lease was negotiated following a series of public meetings
about keeping whales and dolphins captive in 1996. At the time the
park board asked the aquarium to phase out keeping whales and dolphins
in captivity, but the aquarium refused.
The aquarium's intention, Nightingale said, was "to follow
the letter and spirit" of its lease, which expires in 2014.
Coalition representative Annelise Sorg said she was "very
dissapointed" with Nightingale's position.
"It's a public aquarium built on public land," Sorg said.
"There's a lot of public interest in keeping whels and dolphins
in captivity, and we're in the middle of a public discussion."
Romaniuk said while she and other members of the current COPE-dominated
board are personally opposed to keeping whales and dolphins in captivity,
the board would not enact an outright ban without gauging public
opinion first.
"We want to have a public process around this," Romaniuk
said. "That is the feeling of the COPE people - that there
should be public consultation around this."
Sorg said she is happy with that position.
"I think most people in the city feel awful about keeping
these poor animals in captivity. Unfortunately the spin doctors
have managed to tug at the heartstrings of the public by saying
this about obtaining another dolphin companion for Spinnaker (the
aquarium's only dolphin). That's not what this is about. This is
about the international commercial trade in whales and dolphins
and a Vancouver park board bylaw that was intended to ban the importation
of all whales and dolphins and does not."
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR sunletters@pacpress.southam.ca
Letters to the Editor
VANCOUVER SUN
Wednesday, July 23, 2003 letter to the editor
Aquarium's good works always overshadowed
Re: Aquarium claims lease allows dolphin purchase, July 22
I find The Sun's aquarium-related articles incredibly biased. They're
always reported from the protesters' side. I would like to see the
story from the aquarium's side. For example, why is Spinnaker, the
dolphin, in captivity?
First, in Vancouver, he has a better home than he had in Osaka,
Japan. There, he was an extra, used just for breeding. Here he is
getting positive stimulation, and is thriving.
Second, why is he even in an aquarium? If you look at his pectoral
fin, you can see scar marks from where he was caught in fishing
net. He was saved. He should have been rehabilitated and released,
but he wasn't. So why not give him the best life possible?
Without the Vancouver Aquarium, Springer, the orphan orca, would
never have been successfully moved to rejoin his pod. The sea otters
coated in oil from the Exxon Valdez would not have been successfully
rehabilitated. Our marine mammal rescue and rehabilitation centre
would not be running, nor would conservation projects like River
Works (www.riverwirks.org), the leatherback turtle program and killer
whale adoption program.
The positive impact the aquarium has on the community and the globe
is so much more than the bad. But the good points are always overshadowed.
Michelle Wille, North Vancouver
-------------------------------
Anti-aquarium group's proposal would kill facility, says director
Charlie Anderson
The Province Wednesday, July 23, 2003
An anti-captive-whale proposal that got a sympathetic hearing at
Vancouver Parks Board would mean the "dismemberment of the
aquarium one species at a time," says Vancouver Aquarium director
John Nightingale.
The Coalition for No Whales in Captivity called for a comprehensive
ban of any new whales or dolphins at the aquarium Monday before
the board, something Nightingale called an "attack" on
one of Vancouver's most popular attractions.
"If the coalition got what it asked for last night, it would
mean at some point . . . no more whales or dolphins," he said.
"I have no doubt that the group would take after other species
in the aquarium.
"The community hasn't spent the last 50 years building this
aquarium to see it go backwards and out of business," Nightingale
said.
The board decided to "request" the aquarium not bring
in any new dolphins as a companion for Spinnaker, its Pacific white-sided
dolphin.
The request is pending a review of the parks bylaw that allows
the aquarium, its tenant, to bring in dolphins that were caught
before 1996 or born in captivity.
Coalition head Anneliese Sorg argued there was no way to determine
accurately a dolphin's age, something Nightingale said was not true.
Nightingale said that the bylaw, the aquarium's lease and a memorandum
of understanding all set out the conditions through which the facility
can bring in dolphins. The aquarium's lease expires in 2014.
The aquarium has been looking to add one or two more dolphins to
their display.
canderson@png.canwest.com
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