Not debatable at all, I reckon.
Having visited both during the David Gill years and immediately after he was ousted, and having heard and seen a lot of information relating to subsequent developments, it is nowhere near as bad now as it was a decade ago. The matter of debate, rather, lies in how much improvement and development is still required..... but even if one was to argue a lot remains to be done, it cannot be denied a vast amount has already been done.
That is a fair comment, but for me, what I dislike most is now it seems their driving force is to have the public feeding as many animals as possible, certainly a lot more than when it was in the DG era.
Public unsupervised feeding of Kangaroo's which is potentially life ending, especially with young children running around.
Twice a day anything from 25-50 people feeding Giraffes, often leads to Giraffe standing on the fence line when they see a number of people as they think it's feed time.
Jaguars being fed twice a day by 10 people at a time, often sees them congregate in that area as if they are waiting to be fed.
I've nothing against training/healthcare/enrichment public feeds, or limited hand feeding which can help for welfare checks, but providing it is not done every day, and en masse. South Lakes, every time they have a new animal, they have an encounter, they have far too much public to animal interaction, and makes me feel they keep animals for human reasons and not animal reasons.
They keep a Sloth in an old Pygmy Hippo house, with NO arboreal living quarters. In fact he sleeps on the floor by the heater and red light, around a number of Sulcata tortoises. I have personally witnessed, the Anteater and Sloth having disagreements and both swiping for each other, when the Anteater has come into the Sloth's housing area and the Sloth is on the ground, and as a result, the head keeper had to come and move the Anteater outside and not give it access back into that house. But with no heating high up, and no platforms for the sloth, he is forced to sleep in a unnatural area to keep warm! mainly laying around faeces from Tortoises, and approached by the Anteater.
Add to this Rhino's having very little outside access in winter months for a group of this size, and next to no grazing when they are allowed access anyway, and a cramped indoor house for such a group that size, it surprises me that they continue to breed them with such limited space.
Plus hybrid Lemurs on public show (appreciate accidents happen, but they should not be in public view), I think there is a hell of a lot more they should and could do, before it could be sensibly seen as a "improved" place.
The Sloth used to be in the tropical house, with more heating, arboreal platforms, etc. But now he is in an exhibit once designed for Pygmy Hippo, with very little arboreal access and he spends most of his day on the floor in the house, or outside around 3-4ft off the ground in a bush! Oh with people feeding him twice a day.
I personally feel, that South Lakes have too much public involvement with their animals, increasing unneeded stress levels, making them show many unnatural behaviours and for all there have been improvements, ie lovely Red Panda exhibit, reduced numbers in the wildlife safari walk, better housing for its Spectacled Bears, the suitability to all year access for things like the Rhino/Giraffe, and inadequate exhibits for a Sloth really should not be happening in this day and age.
I'm not doubting they have improved many aspects, but they are still doing so much wrong, both for the animals and ethically. Their response is the animals like it, and it's good for the public!
I can't bring myself to visit there anymore. For me it feels like the animals are used for human benefit, which no zoo should be doing. I appreciate many wont feel this way, that is fine, but in my eyes, the sooner the place is closed down for good and the animals move to more suitable collections, the better.