Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

Zoo denies Suburban Life's FOIA request

By Laura Bollin, lbollin@mysuburbanlife.com
Posted Nov 10, 2009 @ 04:12 PM
Last update Nov 10, 2009 @ 04:18 PM
Print Comment

Brookfield Zoo officials denied Suburban Life’s Freedom of Information Act request for the release of Affie the elephant’s necropsy report in a letter Oct. 29.

Affie, one of the zoo’s African elephants, died last May from heart failure at age 40.

In Defense of Animals, a California-based animal advocacy group, also sought the necropsy report in October saying that Affie’s “sudden death raises important questions that can only be answered through the public disclosure of her veterinary records and final necropsy report,” said

Catherine Doyle, the IDA’s campaign manager. Doyle said the IDA received no response from the zoo.

Ken Kaduk, the senior vice president of finance and administration for the Chicago Zoological Society, which manages Brookfield Zoo, claims the zoo does not have to release the report requested in the FOIA.

The Chicago Zoological Society, Kaduk wrote in the rejection letter, is a “private sector, not-for-profit corporation,” and the FOIA applies only to public and government organizations.

“The Chicago Zoological Society manages Brookfield Zoo for the Cook County Forest Preserve District on a fee-for-service basis,” Kaduk wrote. “The Chicago Zoological Society gets a portion of its funding from the FPD and presents an annual budget to the Forest Preserve District, but the society hires all of its own staff, sets its own salaries and fringe benefits and is free to manage its affairs and operations separate and apart from any government involvement. The society is not a government entity or a political subdivision of the State of Illinois.”

“We respectfully deny your information request on the basis that the society is a private, rather than a public entity, and we do not disclose such information.”

Don Craven, the interim executive director of the Illinois Press Association, said  the Chicago Zoological Society did appear to be a private organization, so its records would not be subject to a request under the Freedom of Information Act.

As such, Suburban Life will instead send a FOIA request to the Cook County Forest Preserve District, which is a public entity.

Brookfield Zoo officials denied Suburban Life’s Freedom of Information Act request for the release of Affie the elephant’s necropsy report in a letter Oct. 29.

Affie, one of the zoo’s African elephants, died last May from heart failure at age 40.

In Defense of Animals, a California-based animal advocacy group, also sought the necropsy report in October saying that Affie’s “sudden death raises important questions that can only be answered through the public disclosure of her veterinary records and final necropsy report,” said

Catherine Doyle, the IDA’s campaign manager. Doyle said the IDA received no response from the zoo.

Ken Kaduk, the senior vice president of finance and administration for the Chicago Zoological Society, which manages Brookfield Zoo, claims the zoo does not have to release the report requested in the FOIA.

The Chicago Zoological Society, Kaduk wrote in the rejection letter, is a “private sector, not-for-profit corporation,” and the FOIA applies only to public and government organizations.

“The Chicago Zoological Society manages Brookfield Zoo for the Cook County Forest Preserve District on a fee-for-service basis,” Kaduk wrote. “The Chicago Zoological Society gets a portion of its funding from the FPD and presents an annual budget to the Forest Preserve District, but the society hires all of its own staff, sets its own salaries and fringe benefits and is free to manage its affairs and operations separate and apart from any government involvement. The society is not a government entity or a political subdivision of the State of Illinois.”

“We respectfully deny your information request on the basis that the society is a private, rather than a public entity, and we do not disclose such information.”

Don Craven, the interim executive director of the Illinois Press Association, said  the Chicago Zoological Society did appear to be a private organization, so its records would not be subject to a request under the Freedom of Information Act.

As such, Suburban Life will instead send a FOIA request to the Cook County Forest Preserve District, which is a public entity.

Loading commenting interface...

Site Services
Subscribe
Public Notices
Place An Ad
Submit Your News
Rate Card
Archives
Market Place
Classifieds
Find Brookfield jobs
Cars
Real Estate
Shopping
Coupons
Neighbors
Riverside
La Grange
La Grange Park
Lyons
North Riverside
Blogs
On The Go