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Protecting A Sanctuary

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Published: February 9, 2008

CITRUS PARK - Concerned about development and an incident that involved teenagers shooting paintballs at leopards, Big Cat Rescue officials began the first phase of installing a 10-foot-tall wall around the sanctuary's property.

The wall is a major project for the nonprofit organization, which operates with an annual budget of about $1 million.

Howard Baskin, Big Cat Rescue advisory board chairman, said it cost about $106,000 to install about 940 feet. An additional $20,000 will be spent on two gates.

More donations are necessary to finish the goal: enclosing the remaining 6,000 feet around the refuge's 45 acres.

Big Cat Rescue cares for about 146 exotic cats, including cougars, tigers, bobcats and lions. On some feeding days, the refuge uses up to 500 pounds of meat.

Baskin said many of the felines suffered abuse, neglect and abandonment before being taken to the sanctuary. Some were retired from performing in acts. Others were bred to be pets or to be killed for their fur.

In addition to taking care of the cats, Big Cat Rescue also seeks to educate people about them, he said.

Tour guides who take visitors on trips into the refuge make sure no taunting of the cats takes place, he said.

Baskin said the cats are contained with specially designed wire cages, and staff members follow safety procedures.

The cats are kept in cages with "safety entrances" - or passageways leading into the cages with locked doors on each end.

Only the most experienced staff members have keys accessing these padlocked doors. After entering through the first door, staff members secure the door behind them before proceeding down the tunnel to the second door into the cage.

As a secondary barrier, the perimeter of the refuge is surrounded with a chain-link fence with barbed wire and an electrified wire on top, he said.

Baskin said the new concrete wall is primarily meant to keep humans from getting inside or disturbing the cats.

About a year ago, some teenagers shot paintballs though the chain-link fencing at leopards, he said.

"The father worked with us to ensure it wouldn't happen again," Baskin said.

However, the incident, along with the prospect of development, created a sense of urgency to get the wall project going, he said.

Property outside the northwestern portion of Big Cat Rescue could become town homes, Baskin said.

That area was selected as the starting point for the new wall.

When selecting a formidable barrier, Baskin said he researched and chose a precast concrete wall system rather than blocks.

Columns were put into the ground, and then concrete panels were slid into place between them. The majority of the work was completed in about four days.

Scott Powlus, an operations coordinator for Brooksville-based Duratek Precast Technologies, said the large panels, each weighing about 6,500 pounds, required a crane to lift them into place.

The columns are 180 inches long and buried about 60 inches deep in concrete, Powlus said. The wall can withstand 146-mph winds, he said.

IF YOU GO

WHAT: Big Cat Rescue

WHERE: 12802 Easy Street, Tampa

INFORMATION: Visit www.big catrescue.org/

BIG CAT RESCUE

TOTAL ACREAGE: 45

NUMBER OF CATS: 146

ANNUAL BUDGET: $1 million

PAID STAFF: 7

VOLUNTEERS: about 100

LENGTH OF A PLANNED PERIMETER WALL: 7,000 feet

LENGTH OF PERIMETER WALL COMPLETED: 940 feet

COST OF WALL PROJECT THUS FAR: $126,000

ESTIMATED COST FOR 1 FOOT OF WALL: $100

Reporter Jason Geary can be reached at (813) 865-1505 or jgeary@tampatrib.com.

Reader Comments

Posted by ( donhoward2 ) on February 10, 2008 at 8:32 a.m. ( Suggest removal )

First of all, the "paint ball incident"
has been blown WAY OUT OF PROPORTION to
give BCR an excuse to beg for more money from the public. The animals were never in danger.
Second, how did their 'ANNUAL BUDGET' go from about $350,000 to $1,000,000 in just a few years?
The few animals they have taken in have been offset by their animal losses in the last couple of years.
Carole Lewis Baskin used to claim just 3 employees, now she says she has 7.
That's a big budget increase.

Report Inappropriate Comments

Posted by ( meowycat1 ) on February 12, 2008 at 8:14 a.m. ( Suggest removal )

MORE MONEY?

Carole Lewis Baskin has a background in real estate. Howard Baskin has a background in business and finance.

A records search under Wildlife on Easy Street (WOES), now known as Big Cat Rescue (BCR), shows tons of real estate holdings in a maze of land trusts.

Pasco County tax records search:
Parcel 15-25-17-0100-17000-0090 10420 ATLEE ST, ATLEE SOUTH LAND TRUST, WILDLIFE ON EASY STREET INC TRUSTEE
09-25-17-0010-00I00-0030 11842 DOAKS ST, NASSAU LAND TRUST, WILDLIFE ON EASY STREET INC TRUSTEE
10-25-17-0050-06600-0150 13129 TEXEL AVE, TEXEL LAND TRUST, WILDLIFE ON EASY STREET INC TRUSTEE
28-25-17-0200-27800-0770 12715 VALIMAR RD, VALIMAR LAND TRUST, WILDLIFE ON EASY STREET INC TRUSTEE
28-25-17-0200-27900-0390 (No Physical Address) PO BOX 340189, Tampa, VALIMAR SOUTH LAND TRUST, WILDLIFE ON EASY STREET INC TRUSTEE
21-25-17-0110-19800-0080 9713 XENIA ST, XENIA LAND TRUST, WILDLIFE ON EASY STREET INC TRUSTEE

Just how RICH does a NONPROFIT have to be? Why don't they sell some of this land to pay for the wall?

If you view Carole's video "The Science of Getting Rich" on the BCR website, you will see it's all about MONEY, MONEY, MONEY . . .

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Posted by ( zarkmud ) on February 14, 2008 at 10:39 a.m. ( Suggest removal )

"Concerned about development and an incident that involved teenagers shooting paintballs at leopards." How would one know if they actually hit a lepord with a paintball. Now a polar bear I can understand...but a leopard....I don't think so.

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Posted by ( Sunnyboy ) on February 14, 2008 at 3:45 p.m. ( Suggest removal )

Beggin' Baskin again? She needs a wall because it's "better if the neighbors don't know" that she has cats, yet she mailed letters to 1500 neighbors of her competitors...fellow licensed, professional sanctuaries and exhibitors...not 'pet' owners...notifying these neighbors that they were living next door to 'dangerous wild animals!'

Let her first build walls for these animals she put in danger of harassment before she builds her own.

Learn the truth about this breeder turned scamtuary! http://www.rexano.org/bcr.htm

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