Vol 3 • No 17, April 27, 2008
Ten Most Recent Members of the 3000 Club - Thank You!
569. Leanne, Valencia CA
568. Twitch, Anaheim CA
567. kk, Huntington Beach CA
566. Gina, Portland OR
565. tsuminokizuru, Everett WA
564. Jo Brickner, San Diego CA
563. DiamondPrincess, Anaheim CA
562. John R, Inyo kern CA
561. rondinii, redding CA
560. Mary and Ed , Buena Park CA

Not A Member? Sign Up Here

Latest News -
Getting the Environmental Impact Report Mailing Done
 
Our efforts this week has been to get a mailing of 60 or so large packets out the door via certified mail.  The data collected will be sent to our consultant and the needed Environmental Impact Report (EIR) will officially get started - oh happy days!  We raised $500 to cover the cost of the mailing last week - thank you everyone.
 
The only thing I can say is - Dawn, Lance, Anita ~ work faster!
Its a Slow Week At LegalizeFerrets.org
 
One nice thing about publishing an electronic newsletter as opposed to a paper newsletter is that you don't have to worry about printing a certain number of pages.  I give you what is going on don't worry about how long or short it is - so here's the news.
 
Jan Goldsmith Back in the News and Ferrets are Mentioned
 
The very first author of a ferret bill, then-Assemblyman, currently a superior court judge is running for San Diego City Attorney.
 
Judge Goldsmith is a leading candidate facing a controversial incumbent.  There are a lot of big names in the race but the smart money is on Judge Goldsmith making the run off then beating the current city attorney Mike Aguire. 
 
This time the political establishment is behind Goldsmith.  When he was fighting for ferrets he was the butt of a lot of jokes.
 
One paragraph in the Voice of San Diego had to say it:
 
"A look into Goldsmith's three decades in the legal world revealed an accomplished and respected business lawyer, a hard-working legislator possibly best known for a bill to legalize owning pet ferrets, and a well-organized and fair judge who was not without his critics within the legal community."

This is why it is hard to get a legislative sponsor - anyone with the courage to help us will be "best known for... ferrets."  Read the whole article here.

While serving as a judge, Judge Goldsmith would not, and really could not get re-involved in the ferret issue.  Perhaps as a candidate for city attorney we will regain a valuable ally.

Continuing Our Path Down Memory Lane - The Beginning of Ferrets Anonymous
This is a nice segue.  I have been really annoyed to see distortions on how Ferrets Anonymous started.  Since it is a slow week I pulled from the LA Times archives this article:
 

Los Angeles Times (pre-1997 Fulltext) - Los Angeles, Calif. 
Author: TONY PERRY
Date: Jul 11, 1993

 
A political revolution must begin with a single shot, and so the lovers of domestic ferrets took to the street last week to seek redress of their grievance.

An estimated 100,000 households in California keep ferrets in defiance of state laws making it a misdemeanor to harbor, house or otherwise provide succor to the furry animals. Now, thanks to the diligence of two local Libertarian Party leaders, San Diego has become a nest of ferret activism.

Libertarian Pat Wright, who makes a living in the book publishing trade, felt so strongly that he ran for the Assembly last year on a free-the-ferrets platform against incumbent Mike Gotch (D-San Diego). Wright got 3% of the vote.

Not easily discouraged, Wright has continued searching for a politician to sponsor a bill to repeal the anti-ferret laws, which he says are based on the mistaken assumption that ferrets are wild animals and thus a danger to birds, livestock, crops and children.

Last week, Wright staged a demonstration outside the San Diego office of Sen. Lucy Killea (I-San Diego) in hopes of persuading her to join the pro-ferret movement. Wright and fellow Libertarian John Wallner organized about 50 ferret owners into a noisy, orderly and media-genic event.

Killea was in Sacramento during the protest, but an aide promised she would study the issue. "Lucy is not philosophically opposed to ferrets," Mike Nelson said.

"All we want is to stay home and take care of our ferrets without being harassed by the Fish and Game Department and their neo-Nazi tactics of seizing ferrets," said Wallner, a computer engineer, law student and unsuccessful congressional candidate last year.

Although ferret seizures are rare, talk of seizures is continuous in the ferret community. "We live in a climate of fear," Wright said.

Fish and Game hears the clamor but is unmoved, even by the fact that ferrets are legal in 46 states. Inquiring reporters are given information about ferret bites and ferrets as a threat.

Fish and Game, the Department of Health Services, and the Department of Food and Agriculture are foursquare against ferrets. They successfully banded together in 1986 to get California law toughened to include male ferrets, along with the female ferrets already banned by a 1932 law.

The ferret demonstrators spoke lovingly of their pets, which are cousins of the weasel and the skunk and rarely grow bigger than six pounds and 24 inches.

"Ferrets were domesticated 500 years before the cat," said a public employee who gave his name only as Frank. "They're the perfect pets for people who live in condos or apartments."

W.G. Johnson, a college student and strength coach for athletes, said his albino ferret White Fang (named for the Soupy Sales character) kept him from going stir crazy while he was recuperating from back surgery.

"He's a tremendous companion," Johnson said. "He would curl up on my chest and go to sleep for hours. No way am I going to let Fish and Game take him away."

Killea's response to the pro-ferret forces was more hospitable than that of some other legislators.

Sen. David G. Kelley, a Republican who represents parts of Riverside, Imperial and San Diego counties, turned Wright down flat and wrote, "Studies have documented many cases in which pet ferrets bit and seriously injured human infants and young children. At least one of the attacks was fatal."

Ferret lovers have heard this before and they respond by citing studies (like one in the Journal of the American Medical Assn.) showing that ferret bites, on a per-animal basis, are less frequent than cat bites or dog bites.

Much of the dispute is zoological.

Wildlife and agriculture officials are afraid that ferrets will get loose and start feral colonies that will survive by marauding. But the Colorado-based Office of Information for the Ferret Unity and Registration Organization (FURO) says the wildness has long ago been bred out of ferrets and that lost ferrets are no threat to anybody and quickly starve to death.

Wright and Wallner promise to continue their political agitation and their search for a legislative sponsor, in conjunction with a ferret owners association in Northern California. Wright was asked whether repeal of anti-ferret laws will have to wait until a Libertarian takeover in Sacramento.

"I don't want to wait that long," he said.

 

 

Senator Killea referred us to Jan Goldsmith.  It just so happened that Assemblyman Goldsmith was addressing the San Diego Libertarian Supper Club - and John Walner (mentioned in the article) asked Goldsmith if he would author a ferret bill.  Goldsmith without hesitation answered "yes" and was a very principled ferret legalization proponent. 
 

One Good Segway Deserves Another
 
For awhile I was considering holding the next Ferret Legalization Revival (held in September) in Las Vegas.  Sure would be fun.  I'm kind of banished from Las Vegas, especially Pet Kingdom 2000 (Attn Alice K - don't open the link, it has snakes).  I've always wanted a pet monkey and for only $6000 you can buy one. (I'm only half-kidding, I know how impractical that would be).
 
Since the last Ferret Round Up was in Northern California and the next one will be in Orange County - I'm thinking of keeping it simple and doing it in San Diego again.  Perhaps (and here's the segue) Jan Goldsmith will speak to our group.  I also want to invite our EIR consultant, who at this point I can't even name and the contract isn't signed yet.
 

 Ferret Photos
 
Not a lot of ferret photos came in this week - so thank you to who sent this in:
 
 
These came in last minute - click on the thumbnail for a bigger size
 
Help Settle An Argument At My House
 
 
In Conclusion
 
Last week's CLIFFNotes was the most opened ever - so far we know of 707 people who opened the email.
 
I appreciate everyone's help and enthusiasm.  Three ferret clubs are working together to present ferret legalization at the Artichoke festival in Castroville.  Nice to be pulling in the same direction.
 
Continue to expect good things and finally progress being made on this issue which was solved many years ago in every other state.
 
Pat Wright
CLIFFNotes Editor
CLIFFNotes@legalizeferrets.org
(619) 303-0645
 
Lance M.
Founder, OCFerrets /
President, Ferrets Anonymous

Website:
http://www.ocferrets.org/
OCF Email:
info@ocferrets.org
FA Email: LanceM_FA@yahoo.com
(949) 241-1189