Accreditation team inspects ICC
Zoo review: Accreditation team inspects Fairhope conservation center
Randy Griffith
FAIRHOPE — Inspectors for Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium got a little bonus Thursday with a road trip to the idyllic countryside of southern Somerset County.
The team of inspectors spent the day reviewing conditions and operations at the zoo’s International Conservation Center in Allegheny and Fair*hope townships.
Currently hosting five elephants, the 724-acre center off Glen Savage Road is designed to provide a natural environment conducive to the zoo’s breeding program for endangered animals.
“It has been a tremendous program out here in Somerset,” zoo President and Chief Executive Officer Barbara Baker said.
“We are looking forward to bringing more animals.”
African painted dogs and springbok gazelles will join the elephants this fall, Baker said.
The painted dogs originally were scheduled to arrive in the spring, but preparations for the inspection set back construction work on a building to shelter the animals.
Although the International Conservation Center is one of just a handful of off-site facilities operated by zoos in the United States, it must meet the same standards as traditional zoos, said Ed Aster, chairman of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums inspection team assigned to Pittsburgh.
In addition to the usual administrator, veterinarian and animal care expert, Aster’s team includes an elephant expert because of Pittsburgh’s large African elephant exhibit and breeding program.
The team spent Tuesday and Wednesday at the zoo’s main facility in Pittsburgh’s Highland Park.
“They look at everything: Financial, marketing, education, all of the animal areas and our animal care center,” Baker said.
Aster’s team will wrap up its work in Pittsburgh today and submit a report to the zoo association’s 12-member accreditation commission. Those findings will be presented at a hearing during the association’s annual meeting in September in Phoenix, Baker said, explaining that she will participate in the hearing.
The zoo will be notified of the commission’s findings following the annual meeting.
“The accreditation commission has three choices on its findings,” Aster said. “A zoo can be fully accredited, they can table the accreditation because there were some problems with the inspection, or they can be denied.”
His team does not make any recommendations and is not involved in the final decision, Aster said.
“We don’t make those decisions,” Aster said. “The team is the eyes and ears of the (accreditation) commission. It is our job to give them as much information as possible.”
Baker said she welcomes the inspections, which come every five years.
“The Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium likes to exceed expectations,” she said. “This is our chance to shine.”
Zoo review: Accreditation team inspects Fairhope conservation center Local News The Tribune Democrat, Johnstown, PA