zooboy28
Well-Known Member
Dolphin Marine Magic is a small marine park in Coffs Harbour, New South Wales, which features dolphins, seals and various other wildlife. Hix reviewed it here: http://www.zoochat.com/24/coffs-harbour-pet-porpoise-pool-213487/. The park appears to have been in the news a bit lately, being targeted by the group Australia for Dolphins following the airing of an ABC children's TV show, Blue Zoo, which was filmed at the park. Subsequent investigations were conducted by the NSW Department of Primary Industries, which appears to have become a bit of a political scandal.
Story here: Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian
Story here: Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian
STAFF of NSW Primary Industries Minister Katrina Hodg*kinson have accused a fellow Nationals MP of getting his facts wrong when he told parliament the minister had swum with dolphins at a marine park — a move which bends her department’s own regulations.
Coffs Harbour member *Andrew Fraser told parliament in August that Ms Hodgkinson and her family went swimming with the dolphins at Dolphin Marine Magic in September 2013 — less than year before her department granted the park a new *licence which included a “variation” *on the number of dolphins allowed to be kept in one pool.
Now, after an 11,000-strong petition demanding action on the conditions at the Coffs Harbour park, and a complaint — against “intensive human contact and animal rides” — the department has launched an investigation.
Mr Fraser told parliament that Ms Hodgkinson’s family made a trip to the park on September 19 last year. “Her children were with her for the weekend and they all took the opportunity to swim with the dolphins,” he said.
But when asked about the comments, Ms Hodgkinson’s chief of staff, Paul Terrett, said Mr Fraser had his facts wrong.
“It was only her two kids — she didn’t go for a swim,” he said.
The Department’s of Primary Industries’ standards for exhibiting bottle-nosed dolphins in NSW says human contact with dolphins “shall be kept to a minimum and shall be carried out as quickly and carefully as possible”, that “contact by the public shall only be permitted on veterinary advice”, and, “in particular, precautions must be taken to prevent visitors transmitting any pathogens”.
Founder of Australia for Dolphins Sarah Lucas, whose organisation issued the complaint, said while swimming with the dolphins did go against department standards, Mr Fraser’s revelation also brought into question its *decision to grant the variation.
“(The department) allowed Dolphin Marine Magic to operate in violation of the law at the *expense of the animals. Now we find out the responsible minister and her family were entertained at the park, so there has to be a question as to how objective (its) decision was,” Ms Lucas said.
“We would like DPI to assess any possible breaches at Dolphin Marine Magic and to be open in communicating these breaches with the public.”
A spokeswoman for the minister said the “DPI takes all complaints against animal exhibitors very seriously and all complaints are investigated by skilled DPI *inspectors”.
“Under the standards, contact by the public shall only be permitted on veterinary advice and only in the presence and under supervision of an adequate number of experienced, uniformed staff,” she said. “Dolphin Marine Magic employs a veterinarian.”
The Australian shone the spotlight on the park last month, revealing the ABC had spent taxpayers’ money co-producing the ABC3 show Blue Zoo, which features four local and four Irish teenagers training at the park to be “marine experts” by teaching bottle*-nosed dolphins to perform a show. The show also features Bucky, allegedly the oldest dolphin in captivity.