Wildlife savers get a boost -- CITY FOCUS
Bryce Alderton
For years the injured wildlife of Orange County has been rushed to
Huntington Beach, where frustrated volunteer veterinarians have done the
best they could under meager conditions.
Now, the burden of treating the often delicate wildlife in cramped and
ill-equipped conditions is near an end -- a new 1,000-square-foot
wildlife hospital is built as part of the new Wildlife Education and Care
Building behind the AES Power Plant.
The 4,200-square-foot center will replace the Wetlands and Wildlife
Care Center of Orange County, which now sits on the two-acre site at
Newland Street and Pacific Coast Highway.
Construction is expected to begin in August or September and take
about four to five months to complete, said Gary Gorman, project manager
for the Huntington Beach Wetlands Conservancy.
The center now nurses animals such as pelicans, opossums, coyotes,
gray foxes and squirrels back to health in trailer-like buildings with
outdoor enclosures, pools and an outdoor washing area.
The project, a vision that has been in the works at the conservancy
for nearly 10 years, will be funded by a $600,000 grant from the Wildlife
Conservation Board of the California State Department of Fish and Game.
The money will be used to construct the care center, which will
feature a classroom for training volunteers and wildlife technicians, a
visitor information center and a treatment center complete with X-ray and
surgical facilities the current center does not have.
“I’m super-thrilled about getting the funding to make this a reality,”
Gorman said.
The conservancy owns and manages the care center.
“We’ve been working on this since 1993. It will greatly enhance our
operations here and with the adjoining wetlands. We’re planning on making
this an educational experience,” Gorman said.
Getting a center with expanded services for X-rays and surgery, not to
mention one that has heating, air conditioning and restrooms were the
reasons behind the push to secure grant money to build the new facility,
Gorman said.
The conservancy recently purchased 14 acres of coastal wetlands
adjacent to the care center using grant money from the California Coastal
Conservancy.
The care center, the only one of its kind in Orange County, was
originally created to care for wildlife injured by oil spills. It was
built in 1998 with settlement funds from the American Trader oil spill
that occurred off the coast of Huntington Beach in 1990.
In 2000 the center was closed for nearly a week because it lacked the
money to pay for improvements required to keep its city permit.
But after media stories reported the center’s closing, money began
streaming in, with donations finally totaling $20,000.
The $600,000 grant is the largest the conservancy has received for use
on the care center. It also has received $600,000 in grants for land
acquisition such as the recently acquired wetlands, Gorman said.
Volunteer veterinarians can treat more than 400 injured birds and
animals at one time.
“We take birds and mammals, except marine, and the occasional coyote
and opossum,” Gorman said. “Lifeguards bring birds in from the ocean.
Animals can be sick, injured or orphaned.”
* BRYCE ALDERTON is the news assistant. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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