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Vancouver Park Board commissioner Constance Barnes said she was devastated to hear allegations that former Stanley Park goats were killed. Feb. 12, 2012. (CTV)

Retired Stanley Park zoo animals feared slaughtered

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CTV British Columbia: Fate of Stanley Park goats
Animal control officers have seized the last remaining goat adopted by a Langley hobby farm from the now-defunct Stanley Park Petting Zoo, following reports the animals were being sent for slaughter. Julia Foy has more.
CTV News Channel: Should farm be prosecuted?
Esther Klein with the Animal Defence League of Canada says this story is extremely disturbing, and explains the farm should be prosecuted.
CTV British Columbia: Petting zoo allegations
The Vancouver Park Board is outraged tonight after learning goats and sheep at Stanley Park petting zoo may have been resold as meat. Peter Grainger reports.

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Vancouver Park Board commissioner Constance Barnes said she was devastated to hear allegations that former Stanley Park goats were killed. Feb. 12, 2012. (CTV)

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Vancouver Park Board commissioner Constance Barnes said she was devastated to hear allegations that former Stanley Park goats were killed. Feb. 12, 2012. (CTV)

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Date: Mon. Feb. 13 2012 1:27 PM ET

City of Vancouver officials are expressing their outrage after learning that livestock retired from a shuttered local petting zoo may not have had the pastoral retirement they were promised.

In a statement released Sunday, the chair of the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation said a hobby farmer who was supposed to be caring for sheep and goats retired from the now-closed Stanley Park Children's Farmyard may have sent them to the slaughterhouse instead.

If true, Park Board Chair Constance Barnes said the city's legal team is under orders to take "aggressive legal action."

"We need to be as diligent as we can now, going forward, making sure this person is absolutely held accountable, because this was not part of the agreement," Barnes told CTV Vancouver on Sunday.

According to records from a local animal auction yard, the farmer may have started selling the dwarf and pygmy goats for slaughter shortly after they arrived at his Fraser Valley farm.

The petting zoo had been a park fixture for decades, until a nearly $3 million budget shortfall led to its closure in January of last year.

But even as the zoo succumbed to the chopping block, its displaced inhabitants weren't supposed meet such an abrupt fate.

When the zoo closed its doors, a handful of adopters stepped up to care for the animals under agreements city officials insist specified the creatures would be looked after for the rest of their natural lives. In total, more than a dozen families took on an assortment of animals that included cows, pigs, donkeys, a llama and a pony, as well as other birds and small animals.

According to the park board's animal adoption contract, all of them agreed that the receiver "will not sell, trade, loan or give away these animals .. nor have them destroyed except on the advice of the SPCA."

In fact, the agreement stipulated board or SPCA approval for virtually any change in the animals' living conditions.

According to the board's chair, the terms of the agreement came after careful consideration.

"The SPCA has said that our due diligence was second to none. We followed very stringent, thorough practice to check everybody out," Barnes told CTV, noting that letters of reference were sought and site inspections carried out.

"I've never seen anything like this," Barnes added.

In addition to the investigation of the Fraser Valley farmer, Barnes said the board is also following up to determine the treatment and living conditions of the animals distributed amongst the 12 other adopting families.

With files from CTV Vancouver's Peter Grainger

Comments are now closed for this story

jesus
said

you people complaining about these poor goats sound stupid. its just a goat, they are bred to be eaten. smarten up


John Lethbridge
said

Horrors in Canada alright, I say the SPCA is out of control - that livestock should have been sent to market right away. Adopt farm animals as pets? Almost as dumb as having dogs and cats in your house (unless of course you have a serious mouse problem). Time for some of you city slickers to visit the country. Or get a life.


Dave n
said

At the end of the day, all you have is an civil matter, not a criminal one. Breech of contract. This is live stock, not endangered animals. These species at slaughtered on a daily bases. The city of Vancouver who set up the petting zoo is just at fault. If the people of Vancouver with all their rich people and corporations actually cared about these animals, they would have kept it going until the animals all died out by natural causes. For you city dwellers, these animals were nothing but farm animals.


CS
said

Funny.....animals get slaughtered for food (which happens everday) and all these animal activists are up in arms. If you don't like it, dont eat meat...simple. Prosecute the farmer...please. For what, doing what other livestock farmers do. Isn't there more important issues to worry about,such as violence against women, bullying in schools, homeless people...etc rather than talking about whats on my dinner plate.....


Susie-Q Mtl.
said

To Eei Homura:-I agree with you. The farmer if he did send those animals to the slaughterhouse should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. I hope they do a very careful inspection. I'm glad they plan on inspecting all other places the animals were sent to. I have yet to figure out why people are so cruel to animals. At one time in my life i lived beside a farm. The cows & horses grazed on part of our land. We had 16 acres in Laval near Pont David bridge. The other side was Bois-de-Filion. There is a big difference between city people & country people. I like to think of myself as a country mouse living in the city. It sure does help. Have a good day all. Bye-Bye.


John from K-town!
said

Number one red meat consumed world wide=goat. If you are worried about a promise (read 'the law') being broken then let justice see it through. If you are worried about cute animals being eaten then become a vegan and campaign online.Just don't believe in evolution which tells you it is okay to try and survive nor Christianity which tells you beasts were put on the Earth to feed man.


Stu
said

Holy cow!! Am I missing something here? These were animals whose main course on earth is to live and become food for our people. Are you telling me that when you see a cow in the field you don't realize it may be on your plate at the restaurant? Lets get on with real life here people, there are much more worthy things to worry about with human beings on our planet. Barbarians!?!


Vanc Guy
said

Shame on this NDP Parks Board, first they run a 3 million dollar deficit and then they sell off our petting zoo animals to be slaughtered! This happened under their watch!! Shame on them!


Beth Mississauga
said

Poor little guys. They probably never had a good life to begin with, living in a zoo, having no freedom, people gaucking at them and poking them. They should take the farmer and slaughter him right there in his field and feed him to the animals. Second thought, nah. They'd probably die from "farmaldehyde"


Jim McB
said

There are many more important things going on in Vancouver that need attention. It is no wonder that this place is becoming the Loonie Tunes capital of Noth America.


Lz in Edmonton
said

Goats and Sheep? Who really cares. I would rather the lawyers focus on things like, (call me silly), kids, homeless and government departments instead of barn yard farm animals that have outlived their usefulness.


Becky of Calgary
said

Horrors and in Canada too!!!.I hope this is dealt with properly but that's no help to the animals.


Sam C
said

Do we know what the "natural life" of a goat or sheep or cow might be? Should they just be moved to another farm where they can wander around until they drop dead from disease or old age? Would that be more "humane?"


KamalToews
said

How sad. . Maybe they should have sold the goats as tame pets to individuals screened by SPCA.Tori Spelling has a couple of goats as pets. . .so cute.Guess some people will eat just about anything.


Norm in Ontario
said

I hope the investigation shows that all parties lived up to their respective agreements and the animals are alive and well.


Emi Homura
said

It is indeed a serious outrage if the allegation is proved true. The farmer who sold the animals to the slaughterhouse should be prosecuted to the full exten of law.Such cruelty to defenseless animals will not be tolerated, and we, concerned citizens for the welfare of all living beings, will not let slip by such barbarism unpunished.


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