UC-Davis Sued Over Primate Center Expansion
from
apiforanimals.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contacts: Alan Berger, API Executive Director
Nicole Paquette, API General Counsel
(916)447-3085 www.api4animals.org
SACRAMENTO - The Animal Protection Institute (API) & In
Defense of Animals (IDA) filed a lawsuit Friday (Jan. 4) seeking
to block the proposed expansion of the California Regional Primate
Research Center at UC Davis (CRPRC).
In the complaint to the California Superior Court in Yolo
County, API & IDA contend UCD's Environmental Impact Report (EIR)
does not comply with required state environmental regulations. In
that report, UCD acknowledges several "significant, unavoidable
impacts" to the environment. The main points in challenging the
EIR are UCD's failure to analyze the no-animal testing
alternative, as well as its improper reliance on prior
Environmental Impact Reports. API & IDA are asking the Court to
set aside proposed Primate Center projects until UCD complies with
CEQA regulations.
UCD is pushing to expand the Center's research & breeding
programs, arguing it must meet an increased demand for animals in
research. However, UCD admits in its EIR that the use of
non-animal alternative research techniques is "environmentally
superior", and maintains that animal experiments should only be
authorized when all other alternatives have been exhausted, which
has yet to be done. Yet UCD dismisses the no-animal testing
alternative in favor of an alleged need for animal research. In
reviewing the EIR, API & IDA found no clear justification to
support the need for 750 additional rhesus macaque monkeys for
invasive research, or the ability to provide adequate health care.
Scientifically, it is nearly impossible to take data from
experiments on one species and apply those results to members of
other species. However, that "need" conspicuously coincides with
large National Institutes of Health funds available for primate
center expansion & animal-based experimentation.
"This is a time when a clear majority of the public desires a
reduction in the number of primates used in research," says API
Executive Director Alan Berger. "The certification of the Primate
Center must be set aside & come into compliance with the law."
According to IDA President Elliot Katz, the lawsuit aims to
delay expansion, but the intent is more reaching. "We are opposed
to any expansion of the primate center, for it is time to
reallocate funds from animal-based testing to non-animal testing,"
says Katz.
The Animal Protection Institute (API), a Sacramento-based
national non-profit animal advocacy organization with 85,000
members, including 18,000 Californians, has expertise in rescuing
& rehabilitating primates, operating a sanctuary which houses over
400 primates, many retired from research facilities. In Defense of
Animals is also a national non-profit animal advocacy group, based
in Mill Valley, with 80,000 members.
David DeWitt
Communications Coordinator
Animal Protection Institute
(916)447-3085 x223
(916)447-3070 fax
DDeWitt@api4animals.org
Other Contacts:
Alan
Berger, API Executive Director
Nicole Paquette, API General
Counsel