Posts Tagged ‘animal rights’

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Rally Signs

August 28, 2008
NPPMWatch sign

NPPMWatch sign

North Penn Puppy Mill Watch contacted me, through CreativePAW, about doing a ‘rally sign’ for them. And it’s finished! They’re currently working to get legislation passed to clean up Pennsylvania’s puppy mills. From Jenny Stephens, “While I’d like to say close or shut the mills, I can’t; that’s not what the legislation is about”. NPPMWatch is a grassroots organization that strives to raise awareness about the pet shop/puppy mill connection through a weekly pet shop demonstration, and through their website, www.nppmwatch.com.

They’ll be using the signs heavily this fall, and it will make its debut at the Capitol on September 16th, at a rally sponsored by the Humane Society of the United States. There are two important pieces of legislation pending: House Bills 2525 and 2532. When the House reconvenes this fall, NPPMWatch and other advocacy groups will make an effort to push legislators so that the bills will be addressed before the November election. If these bills don’t make it to the floor, it is likely the legislation will die and have to be reintroduced in January.

I started off making fairly traditional election style signs, when I remembered this photo I’d taken of our own dog, Molly. I took this of her the day I picked her up at the shelter, and it turned out to be their favorite of the designs I sent. I’m trying to prepare Molly for her imminent fame, and she seems happy to know that she’ll be helping other dogs in similar situations as hers. Or it might have been the peanut butter treats. Either way, she seems quite happy.

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Voices for Animals

June 29, 2008

I’ve been lucky to be able to work with Voices for Animals (www.vfa-online.org), combining two things I’m passionate about – design and animal welfare.

I’ve done a few small projects for them, most recently putting together flyers for their South Side Park Wildlife Awareness Day. This wildlife awareness day is another step in their ongoing campaign to make Pittsburgh a no-kill community. Pittsburgh officials have opted to round up and kill most of the flock at the park, despite promising to put a comprehensive non-lethal strategy into effect. VFA will be passing out these flyers around the park to inform the community about some things they can do to cut down the goose population in a humane way.

Most of the people who feed the geese and ducks at Riverfront Park do so with generous intentions and consider the action helpful, but unfortunately it does more harm than good. The public must be educated on the reasons why this is harmful – the posted “Please do not feed the ducks and geese” signs do not explain the reasons behind the message.

Feeding the ducks and geese can cause a number of problems. These include: poor nutrition, spread of disease, unnatural behavior, pollution, overcrowding, and delayed migration (in migratory birds). The most generous thing you can do for these animals is to simply not feed them. Ducks and geese are wild animals and are capable of finding food on their own. In order for their natural behaviors to emerge, they must have this opportunity.

Overcrowding has caused serious problems in the past, and an abundant food source will only bring more waterfowl to the area. Last year, the RIDC (Regional Industrial Development Corp.) paid the USDA to kill many of the geese residing in Southside Riverfront Park due to the geese occasionally frequenting the property it manages across the river. The birds needed more land due to their numbers.

We must not allow this situation to occur again, so please, do not contribute to the problem. Observe and enjoy the geese as a close part of nature, but allow them to be the wild animals they are and please, do not feed them!

In addition to the problems of overcrowding, litter is becoming a huge problem in RIDC park. One piece of litter can be the difference between life and death for wildlife. Recently, a seagull whose neck was wrapped
with fishing line was found dead in the water at Southside Riverfront Park. This animal choked to death due to the negligence of those littering in the area.

Voices for Animals has investigated this and several other areas and has discovered that litter of this type is often found at many fishing holes. Major sources of litter stem from, but are
not limited to: cigarette butts, fast food waste, chewing gum, plastic bags, and fishing line.

Littering does far more than make an area look messy – it can cause unnecessary deaths in nature. Wild animals have suffered and died simply due to the gross negligence of campers, fishers, joggers, etc. Death and illness are caused by the entanglement, ingestion, and toxicity of this litter. Please be sure to do yourself, nature, animals, and aesthetics a helping hand and properly dispose of all trash and waste properly!

To find out more information about VFA or their Wildlife Awareness Day, go to http://www.vfa-online.org, email VoicesForAnimals@gmail.com, or call 1-877-321-4VFA.