Anchorage
Daily News
October 26, 2007
Original Article
The U.S. Air Force will fly Maggie, Alaska's
only elephant, to her new digs in California
next week.
Officials at Elmendorf Air Force Base were asked
to transport the 25-year-old African elephant
to an elephant sanctuary run by the Performing
Animals Welfare Society but needed approval from
the Pentagon to do so, said Air Force spokeswoman
Capt. Kelley Jeter.
Maggie is scheduled to leave Anchorage on Thursday
aboard a C-17 cargo plane that will take her
to Travis Air Force Base. The PAWS sanctuary
is located about 55 miles from Travis, which
is near Sacramento.
PAWS turned to the Air Force for help because
no safe commercial transportation options were
available. Maggie will travel in a specially
designed 10-by-8-by-18-foot, 10,000-pound crate.
Zoo handlers have been training her for weeks
to tolerate being crated for the trip.
The trip from her current home at the Alaska
Zoo to the PAWS facility should take about 12
hours, according to the Air Force. Handlers and
veterinarians will accompany her.
PAWS will reimburse the Air Force for the full
cost of the flight at regular commercial rates,
Jeter said Thursday.
The bill is expected to be about $200,000, she
said.
The Air Force is happy to provide the service,
Jeter said.
"This gives our guys an opportunity to
train on loading something on their aircraft
that is very different than what they usually
do. This is great training for them."
After years of criticism from elephant experts
and animal rights advocates about the conditions
under which Maggie was forced to live -- alone
and inactive in a small space and a cold climate
-- members of the Alaska Zoo board of directors
finally agreed last month to send her to PAWS.
Their change of heart had been helped along when
the Anchorage Fire Department and winches were
needed twice in one week this past summer to
lift Maggie to her feet because she was unable
to stand on her own.
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