The Franklin Zoo Charitable Trust is very pleased to announce the recruitment of a world class elephant programme manager to facilitate the relocation of Mila, ex circus African elephant at Franklin Zoo & Wildlife Sanctuary in New Zealand to a facility in the US.
The new elephant manager is very experienced in protected contact elephant management and uses positive reinforcement to create a trust based relationship that will enable Mila to be trained for all behaviours necessary for her safe transport. This includes medical testing, crate desensitization, and basic health care.
We want to find a home for Mila that will allow her to socialize with other African elephants and will provide expert care as she ages. This elephant manager will not only facilitate Mila’s day to day care, but will also oversee the travel logistics and extensive permitting required to transport Mila to her new home.
The elephant manager is currently travelling around the appropriate facilities in the USA to ascertain the best facility to care for Mila’s individual welfare needs as well as dealing with the US biosecurity agencies. We anticipate her arrival in New Zealand towards the end of October or early November.
It is hoped that Mila will be ready to travel to her new home by March or April 2013 and the Franklin Zoo Charitable Trust will be fundraising for this very expensive and complex process.
Donations towards Mila’s care travel and future can be made on the web site
Franklin Zoo | Have A Wild Time or please make cheques payable to: Franklin Zoo Charitable Trust, 83 Ridge Road, Tuakau RD 4, Auckland 2694, New Zealand.
Or by Direct Credit: Franklin Zoo Charitable Trust, The National Bank of New Zealand, Papakura branch account: 060401
0327303 00.
ZAA (Zoo and Aquarium Association of Australasia) have done a wonderful job facilitating and planning the re-homing for most of the exotic animals into facilities with the correct skill base to care for each animal’s individual welfare needs and Franklin Zoo Charitable Trust is extremely grateful to ZAA’s care and professional assistance to ensure the animals are going to be well taken care of.
The re-homing process will take some months and the Franklin Zoo & Wildlife Sanctuary continues to care for the animals while their new homes and travel arrangements are being prepared. All domestic animals are now safely installed in their new homes.
We are also very grateful to Auckland Zoo, who continues to provide expertise and support to the Franklin staff, Mila and to the Franklin Zoo & Wildlife Sanctuary.
Article two - Helen Schofield has recieved the 2012 Assisi award from the New Zealand Companion Animal Council
There is no doubt that Helen Schofield dedicated her life to helping animals, and now a posthumous award in her honour has recognised the passion and love she had for them.
Schofield, 42, was killed on April 25 when Mila the elephant, formerly known as Jumbo, crushed her to death at Franklin Zoo and Wildlife Sanctuary, just south of Auckland.
Schofield was honoured last night, at an awards ceremony in Wellington, with a posthumous Assisi Award from the New Zealand Companion Animal Council, an umbrella organisation which incorporates animal welfare bodies, veterinarians and academic researchers.
NZCAC spokesman and SPCA executive director Bob Kerridge said the awards honoured people who had made a "very real difference" in the lives of animals.
"Helen cared passionately about animals from her childhood onwards and was, above all, dedicated to saving exotic animals, including those, like Mila, who had been rescued from circuses," Kerridge said.
"Having qualified as a veterinarian, Helen invested in Franklin Zoo, which she was transforming into a sanctuary, where such animals could spend their last few years in dignity and safety. Her untimely death is a great loss to all New Zealanders who care about animals and to the creatures she looked after."
At her funeral in May Schofield was described as a hero. Friends and family spoke of how she started volunteering at the local SPCA age 10 and would leave notes, signed "from the SPCA", in people's letterboxes if she thought they were mistreating their animals.
She was inseparable from the family dog, and would look out for sick sheep to tend to them when driving through the country.
Johanna Brens QSM, a woman with hearing impairments who helped found and inspire Hearing Dogs for Deaf People in New Zealand, respected Auckland pet shop industry veteran Rolf Jansen and Otago University student and animal campaigner Danielle Duffield were some of the other recipients at tonight's awards ceremony, which is named after St Francis of Assisi, patron saint of animals.