Franklin Zoo (Closed) Elephant Kills Woman at Franklin Zoo

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In that case, given the shaky state of the American economy, Jumbo would be safer staying where she is.

I think you're quite right Steve. $1.5m could provide for further care and staff. It seems a very sad and extreme resort that if they can't obtain the funds the poor elephant will be euthanased. There has to be some other alternatives? Maybe not but she is the only African elephant we have in New Zealand. Just me being perhaps unrealistic but she deserves to live and should be allowed to live.:eek:
 
Well nobody up to yet seems to put forward any good reason why Jumbo shouldnt stay in NZ for the rest of her years.


I think a visit to see her would be on the agenda of every visiting tourist to NZ. [and a contribution $$$$ from the visitors would help!]

Its just nobody knows about her!

C`mon NZ Government and Tourist depts, why dont you let the rest of the World know you have a beautiful Elephant that most of the population of NZ want to keep?

over to you................................................
 
I totally agree that Helen had no plans of letting her go, at least not until very shortly before her death. Maybe she changed her mind a few weeks before she died, but surely not earlier.

I'm just saying that NZ on Air would not invest $100k in something that was not going to happen.

NZ On Air | News | Press Releases

Two TV One programmes have been green lit including The Year of the Elephant which will see Tangiwai producers Lippy Pictures follow the rehabilitation of a circus elephant by Franklin vet Helen Scofield.
The Year of the Elephant $109,948

Also, note the date the funding was confirmed - 21 March 2012.
 
:)
indeed we do

with ears that big the selectiveness is more defined
there are little nuances in behaviour that can take natural ability or years of experience to detect
 
:)
indeed we do

with ears that big the selectiveness is more defined
there are little nuances in behaviour that can take natural ability or years of experience to detect

like what Mr Ratcliffe has?................................
 
I was going to add that cost could be lower for private. Privates always seem to be able to achieve the same at lower cost. I'm also sure i read somewhere Franklin Zoo recieves a few donations of food from local supermarket which surely helps a bit.

Does anyone know how much was spent or her home at franklin zoo?

Quite a bit of the materials and much of the labour was donated, a local earthmoving company donated the use of diggers and trucks for free.
A lot of people including myself made small donations of things like fencing materials, building materials and labour.
A local company even donated a light truck which is used to pick up food for the animals.
If she goes the enclosure isn't going to be of much use for anything else.
The elephant seems happy to be right where she is, so why risk the trauma of moving her and trying to integrate her in a different place with creatures she has never seen before.
Just a huge pity the original idea of never going in with her was ignored for some reason.
 
the first thing i learnt with handling animals was to always expect the worst scenario
and to never drop your guard or put your self in a vulnerable situation
first lesson was a mahout of 12yrs experience turning a tap off the elephant was drinking from
she nudged him away from the tap, unluckily it was against a concrete wall
3 cracked ribs and a broken collar bone was the result
familiarity and time can lead to a letting of ones guard down
 
Update on Mila's Future

This all seems very alarmist and I cannot understand why no-one is considering the option of her living out her days at Franklin Zoo. As has been said before this seems like quite a good option, both for Mila and Franklin Zoo itself. And there is no mention of the elephant sanctuary in America, which is always mentioned in a rather vague way, making any financial conmtributions towards her move.

Franklin Zoo Elephant Faces death If Funding Falls... | Stuff.co.nz

The elephant that killed its keeper may have only a week to live with a fundraising deadline being announced to save her life.

The Franklin Zoo Charitable Trust needs to raise $1.45 million by Sunday to secure Mila's care or she may be put down.

Jenny Chung, whose sister Dr Helen Schofield was killed by Mila in April, said the trust hasn't been able to raise "nearly enough". She said the deadline was a legislative requirement of the Ministry of Primary Industries.

The animals at Franklin Zoo are being cared for by keepers from Auckland and Hamilton zoos and there isn't enough money to continue caring for Mila, she said.

"All of these places can't keep supporting Mila, so they've said that we need to raise the money by June 10."

The plan is for Mila, an ex-circus elephant, to be transported to a US sanctuary so she can live with other African elephants.

The $1.45m needed would go towards funding an accredited zoo operator, an elephant programme manager, two more elephant keepers, a custom-built travel crate, vet care, medical testing, crate training, freight to her new sanctuary, quarantine and the final transfer to her new home.

If the money isn't raised by Sunday, Mila may be enthanised as there is no other facility in New Zealand to care for her.

"I'm trying not to think about that at the moment. I don't know what will happen," Chung said.

She said she accepts the deadline because "there has to be a line in the sand with every issue".

Chung wants animal lovers to dig deep into their pockets and is also appealing for corporate sponsorship.

"There is a very tight timeframe. This may seem like a huge ask but I am sure there is a corporation, organisation or individual who believes in this cause and has the resources to help make this happen."

Donations can be made online at the Franklin Zoo website.

There is detailed information on the zoo's future post-Helen in their May newsletter, here: Newsletter ? HOW YOU CAN HELP

From that newsletter, the costs making up the $1.45 million needed are as follows:
-Care for Mila at Franklin Zoo for 12 months to prepare her for the move: $570,000
-Moving Mila to her new home: $580,000
-Caring for all the other animals at Franklin Zoo & Wildlife Sanctuary for the next 12 months:$300,000
-Total Fund Raising Required: $1,450,000

The costs for caring for Mila in the next year are significantly higher than suggested above (~$80,000), and I really can't believe it would cost that much to care for her, and 'prepare her for the move', I don't know what costs would be involved there, except for a crate presumably.

I would imagine that re-opening the zoo would be a good way to raise some funds, especially if the receptionists are volunteers (which I think they are), which would mean it shouldn't cost much to actually be open. Is there any real need for the zoo to be shut now?
 
"Alarmist" is a very good word to use I think. What are they going to do in a week's time when they don't have $1.45 million? Shoot her in the head?

I find it really interesting too how a quite large portion of the money ($300,000) "needed" to save the life of the elephant has nothing at all to do with the elephant (namely, "Caring for all the other animals at Franklin Zoo & Wildlife Sanctuary for the next 12 months").

I don't really understand the rationale behind the zoo being closed either (presumably -- reading between the lines here -- until the elephant is off the premises). There's not a killer elephant rampaging round the property; she's confined inside a custom-built elephant enclosure! There is literally no danger to anybody so long as they don't do something stupid like, I don't know, go in the enclosure with her!!


The $1.45m needed would go towards funding an accredited zoo operator, an elephant programme manager, two more elephant keepers, a custom-built travel crate, vet care, medical testing, crate training, freight to her new sanctuary, quarantine and the final transfer to her new home.
and one further thing: why is Franklin being expected to pay the costs of the quarantine in America?! Surely that, at the very least, should be the responsibility of the sanctuary there?
 
I don't really understand the rationale behind the zoo being closed either (presumably -- reading between the lines here -- until the elephant is off the premises). There's not a killer elephant rampaging round the property; she's confined inside a custom-built elephant enclosure! There is literally no danger to anybody so long as they don't do something stupid like, I don't know, go in the enclosure with her!!

If they didn't want the public to see Mila, it wouldn't be impossible to make her exhibit off-display, it is at the edge of the zoo, so some tall brushwood fencing or simialr could screen it out of view, although it would probably make some other enclosures off-display as well.
 
Can any of you Kiwis please find out who actually owns this elephant, and what the MAF direction truly is??

Thanks.
 
Whoever is running the show is really in a dash for cash.:confused:

Sounds a lot like the "lion man fiasco" and "all the lions will be put down":rolleyes:
 
Can any of you Kiwis please find out who actually owns this elephant, and what the MAF direction truly is??

Thanks.
this has all got very confusing has it not? As far as I can make out the SPCA still owns her, unless that organisation gave her to Franklin??? From all the media reports lately they make it sound like Franklin does???

And also, when we weren't looking, MaF became the Ministry of Primary Industries (I can never remember the name of that unless I double-check, and so always end up putting the Ministry of Impulse Buying...). I was trying to find out what the truth is behind the elephant's deadline (pun intended) but couldn't find anything.

Anyway, harking back to the earlier comments about the cost and length of time it would take to crate-train Jumbo and the cost of the crate itself, etc etc, from media releases and news items it seems the training was already well underway before Helen's death, and presumably they already had the crate ready, as in this article from SAFE (yes, I know, its SAFE but still):
SAFE : Free Jumbo Campaign
SAFE's Executive Director, Hans Kriek, spoke to Dr Schofield about Mila only the day before her death. "Helen had been full of enthusiasm for Mila's future, making plans to send her to live with other elephants in a specialist US sanctuary. Helen had been crate-training her: teaching her to walk into a crate without fear so that she'd be comfortable traveling. She said the training had gone well, and Mila was ready to be transported overseas. SAFE is committed to ensuring that still happens."
and:
Helen Schofield, New Zealand Zookeeper, Killed By Mila The Elephant (UPDATED)
Pat Derby's Performing Animal Welfare Society in San Andreas was going to be home to the 39-year-old elephant now called Mila after being known as Jumbo during nearly 30 years with the circus.

...................

For the past four years, Mila has been at the zoo while Schofield worked to place her elsewhere. Derby said she and Schofield had been working on the move for about two years.

Schofield was training Mila to live in a crate during the trip. She exchanged emails with Derby a month ago saying the training was going well and she was feeling good about the move.

"We didn't actually have a date," Derby said. "It was sort of whenever crate training was finished and they felt she was comfortable enough to make the trip."

Hans Kriek, executive director of Save Animals from Exploitation, said he talked to Schofield the day before she died and she told him she believed Mila was ready to ship.
 
Well who can decide whats best for her?

1.she goes

2. she stays

My humble opinion based purely on economics is, She should go.

Looks like you lot in New Zealand have neither the money or the inclination to raise the money to keep her in FZ.

Since I dont know enough about elephants, especially Jumbo/ Mila, then I dont feel I am qualified to say "I think she should stay!"


So, since it was the plan of Helen Schofield to send her to US and the plans where in the latter stages,. Where was the $$$$ coming from to send her?

I find this very confusing
 
It is confusing because the whole issue is built on untruths and deceit.

The figures quoted by the Trust [there's an oxymoron for you] are pure fantasy.

As Monty puts it so accurately - this is a dash for cash.

The rest of the reports are riddled with BS.

The elephant was never ready to ship. There was not even a crate to "crate train" her. I know that for a fact as I was there recently. Jumbo had not been at FZ for "four years". And, as Cadders has pointed out, Helen had no real intention to ship her out - rightly or wrongly she was Helen's raison d'etre.

For PAWS to require FZ to pay for a crate that would remain with PAWS, the quarantine health checks, the freight and all the associated costs and then end up with an elephant that they would use to squeeze more money out of their donors should alert thinking people to just what this "charity" is really all about.

The whole tragedy of Helen's death has now well and truly reached farcical proportions.

However, there may be some hope. It is possible that TV3 will make a positive statement sometime soon.

In the meantime, I would be grateful if any of you can establish just exactly what this MAF or MPI deadline is truly all about.
 
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