United Poultry Concerns
(UPC)
June 2016
On March 11-13, 2016, the Chandler Arizona Chamber of Commerce sponsored its annual Ostrich Festival. A fundraiser begun in 1989, the festival hires an exotic animal supplier to provide ostriches, emus, camels and zebras to be ridden rodeo-style. The Chamber describes the ostrich races: “Professional riders take the reins of a chariot or ride the large birds bareback around a race track.” The prospect of a chariot wreckage or other upset is part of the “unpredictable” fun of the races.
Ostrich Festival in Chandler, Arizona (photo:
Afterglow-spins.livejournal.com)
Urge the Chandler Chamber of Commerce to eliminate the ostrich races from
the 2017 festival. Urge them to make the festival a positive event that
respects the life and feelings of all creatures. Just as Chandler’s
evolution to a high tech center has benefited the town financially, so the
Ostrich Festival can evolve to a lucrative attraction in which ostrich races
and their like are relegated to a past that no longer reflects the evolving
consciousness of today’s society toward animals. Respectfully request a
written reply to your concerns.
Contact :
Terri Kimble, President/CEO
Chandler Chamber of Commerce
25 S. Arizona Place, Suite 201
Chandler, AZ 85225
Phone: 480-963-4571
[email protected]
Nick Debus, Public Policy & Government Relations:
[email protected]
Sarah Miranda, Special Events & Programs
[email protected]
Lee Hines, Accounting & Finance
[email protected]
Michael Beagle, Business Development
[email protected]
Mike Wells, Vice President of Business Development
[email protected]
Paulette Pacioni, Marketing & Communications
[email protected]
Brenda Whipple, Business Development
[email protected]
Barbara Caravella, Business Development
[email protected]
Yvonne Torres, Administrative Assistant
[email protected]
Mary Ann Przybylski, Director of Special Events & Programs, and Sponsorships
[email protected]
Sarah Bruner, Business Development
[email protected]
You can post a message to the Chandler Chamber of Commerce through their
website by clicking on Contact Us at
http://www.chandlerchamber.com
You can also reach them through their Facebook and Twitter pages.
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/ChandlerChamber
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/chandlerchamber
All letters, phone calls and Internet messages to the Chandler Chamber of
Commerce should be polite, caring, respectful and concerned. Our goal is to
make the world a more just, enlightened, and compassionate place.
“On one occasion I saw and sketched a female tending her hatchlings. The
young will get careful attention from both male and female adults before
they develop the necessary independence to be on the move with the family
group.”
— John Seerey-Lester
Tension between Chandler’s evolving high-tech industry and the city’s
vanishing rural past was a theme of this year’s Arizona Republic coverage
and Chamber of Commerce pronouncements. The once small community southeast
of Phoenix is today “more of a mecca for information technology corporations
than for farmers of large birds,” the Arizona Republic reported echoing the
Chamber’s effort to reconcile past and present in a festival that its
president, Terri Kimble, calls an event of “family fun and entertainment.”
This year’s festival featured many new animal-free attractions including a
racing game of motorized, remote-controlled cars and a Batman and Superman
Show “about bullying,” presumably showing children that real heroes do not
act like bullies. Yet the ostrich races and other animal attractions are all
about bullying and ridiculing captive birds and other animals “trained” to
perform dangerous, demeaning and unnatural acts.
Beneath all the fluff about “family fun and laughter” a spirit of malice and
meanness informs these performances, illustrating what Jim Mason calls in
his book, An Unnatural Order, “Rituals of Spectacular Humiliation.”
Such rituals, he writes, are designed to “reinforce myths of animal
stupidity, inferiority, and willingness to submit to human domination by
reducing animals to toys and clowns.”
Ostriches and emus are the oldest living birds on earth. In their natural
habitats, these fleet-footed nomads, designed by 90 million years of
evolution to roam vast desert spaces and survey the land with their large
brilliant eyes in all directions at once, are stately, dignified birds
devoted to their families. The ostrich festival strips them of their
dignity, puts them in danger, and makes fun of them. Ostriches and emus are
not suited by temperament or anatomy to pull chariots and be ridden by
“cowboys.” Their large fragile eyes, long necks and legs are easily injured.
Once said to draw 250,000 visitors, the Ostrich Festival now attracts about
100,000 people, according to the Chamber of Commerce. An Arizona activist
told UPC in March, “The event does raise a great deal of money, yet they
came up with new events this year, so they need to take the high road and
create more events and get out of the animal abuse entertainment business.”
Thank you for everything you do for animals!
Return to Action Alerts
Find
area codes
Find zip
codes
Find
your state legislators
Find Embassies
Worldwide