Title: NC Zoo Response to Animal Escape
1NC Zoo Response to Animal Escape
2NC Zoo
- Large Land Mass (2000 acres)
- Rural Location
- Heavily Wooded
3Primary Containment
4Primary Containment
- Approximately 1500 animals of 225 species
- Several Dangerous Species
5Secondary Containment
- 8 foot tall perimeter fence
614,500 Linear Feet of Perimeter Fence
7Escaped Animal Recapture Procedure
- Written Document
- Quarterly Drills
- Firearms Training for Key Personnel
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9Incident Commander
- Oversees all Operations
- Makes Key decisions
- Interfaces with outside agencies
- Coordinates Zoo teams
10Outside Agencies
- Randolph County Sheriffs Department
- State Highway Patrol
- North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission
- North Carolina Forestry Service
- Eastside Volunteer Fire Department
- Notified if Animal Breeches Perimeter Fence or
Serious Injury or Death
11Operations Chief (Capture Coordinator)
- Coordinates all aspects of animal recapture
- Weapons Team (Dispatch animal if necessary)
- Veterinary Team (Dart Animal if possible and
necessary) - Animal Keepers (gather necessary equipment, man
gates, assist with capture of non-dangerous
animals)
12Park Rangers
- Communications
- Crowd Control
- Traffic Control
- First Responders in case of injury (Rangers are
EMTs) - Call 911 to notify outside agencies if necessary
13ZooCom
- Part of Ranger Section
- Monitors all radio traffic
- Records Radio Traffic During Event
- Documents events as they occur
- Coordinates Communications
14Media Relations
- Brief State Agencies as Necessary
- Brief News Media as Necessary
15First Tier Dangerous Animals
16First Tier Dangerous Animals
17First Tier Dangerous Animals
18First Tier Dangerous Animals
19Second Tier Dangerous Animals
20Second Tier Dangerous Animals
21NC Laws Governing Keeping of Exotic Animals
22No State-wide Legislation
- North Carolina is one of 20 states that has no
ban or state-established rules on owning exotic
animals - The state makes it illegal to own indigenous wild
animals such as cougars, bobcats, deer, squirrels
or skunks.
23Attempted State-wide Legislation
- In 2007, Sen. Ed Jones, D-Halifax, introduced a
bill that would ban private ownership of wild
animals after a Wilkes County fourth-grader was
killed by a tiger kept in his aunt's backyard,
but the bill was met with instant opposition
24- After an Ohio man freed dozens of lions, tigers,
bears and other dangerous animals before killing
himself, Ohio changed its' law regarding
keeping exotic animals. This law was based on the
NC proposed legislation
25N.C. SESS. LAWS 153A-131 - Possession or
harboring of dangerous animals
- A county may by ordinance regulate, restrict, or
prohibit the possession or harboring of animals
which are dangerous to persons or property. No
such ordinance shall have the effect of
permitting any activity or condition with respect
to a wild animal which is prohibited or more
severely restricted by regulations of the
Wildlife Resources Commission.
26NC Counties with Exotic Animal Ordinances
- Lee
- Montgomery
- Orange
- Randolph
- Surrey
- Cabarrus
- Chatham
- Davidson
- Forsyth
- Gaston
27N.C. SESS. LAWS 160A-187 - Possession or
harboring of dangerous animals
- A city may by ordinance regulate, restrict, or
prohibit the possession or harboring within the
city of animals which are dangerous to persons or
property. No such ordinance shall have the effect
of permitting any activity or condition with
respect to a wild animal which is prohibited or
more severely restricted by regulations of the
Wildlife Resources Commission
28NC Cities with Exotic Animal Ordinances
- Charlotte
- Garner
- Havelock
- North Topsail Beach
- Sylva
29N.C. ADMIN. CODE tit. 2, r. 52B.0212 -
IMPORTATION REQUIREMENTS WILD ANIMALS
- Skunk
- Fox
- Raccoon
- Ringtail
- Bobcat (includes Lynx and other North and South
American felines as cougars, jaguars, etc.) - Coyote
- Marten
- Brushtail Possum (Trichosurus vulpecula)
30North Carolina Wildlife Resources CommissionNC
ST 113-294
- State law prohibits holding any wild animal or
bird in captivity without a license from the
Wildlife Resources Commission. Before the
Commission can issue a license authorizing a
person to keep a wild animal or bird in
captivity, it must determine that the animal or
bird was acquired lawfully and will not be kept
merely as a pet. An approved facility must be
provided.
31Incidents (Escapes and/or attacks) involving
exotic animals in NC (1990-2012)
- Big Cats 11
- Reptiles 11
- Primates 8
- Wolf/Hyrdid 2
- Emu 2
- Serval 2
- Water Buffalo 1
- Coati 1
32Locations of Incidences
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