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Time to ban horse-drawn carriages in New York City! You can make a difference for NYC carriage horses.
Number of animals killed in the world by the meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage. This does not include the billions of fish and other aquatic animals killed annually.
Based on 2007 statistics from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations' Global Livestock Production and Health Atlas.
This is it! Another horse suffering a needless and horrifying death. I will never visit New York again until horse-carriages are banned. I urge everyone to call or write the Mayor of New York and tell him he will be losing a lot of tourism dollars because of this.
Marcela D's comment on the Web site of the Toronto Humane Society, in September 2007 following the death of the NYC carriage horse Smoothie.
Read an article from the Toronto Humane Society following the Feb. 7, 2008 death of Clancy, a New York carriage horse. It asks a pointed question: “Mayor Bloomberg, you've cut off these poor horses from city water, where are they getting their water from???”
Read an expert opinion on the plight of NYC carriage horses. Holly Cheever, DVM, writes of "unexplained deaths" and "grim conditions."
High incidence of misidentifications. The same ID# referring to different horses each year is evidence of "switching" horses--or very bad record-keeping.
of a New York City carriage horse (New York Times, 2007)
Etelka said:
New York City Horse Carriage Blog post on the Web site of the Toronto Humane Society (1/29/08)
”Another N.Y. carriage horse death underscores the need for a city-wide ban on carriage horses,” a Humane Society of the United States news release says following the death in February 2008 of Clancy.
Nationwide, it's impossible to know how many work-related horse deaths have happened over the years; many aren't reported publicly, and carriage operators are wary of bad press. Whatever the number, animal advocates and medical professionals agree on one thing: an urban setting is not the place for horse-drawn carriages. Newsweek Web exclusive (2007)
"Stall confinement contributes to colic, and exacerbates arthritis because of lessened joint lubrication, and
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