home / aphis_reports

Semantic search

citations

8 rows where hash_id = "0cfd70aec4a16d44"

✎ View and edit SQL

This data as json, CSV (advanced)

rowid ▼ hash_id code kind repeat desc narrative
17419 0cfd70aec4a16d44 2.40(a)(1)   0 ATTENDING VETERINARIAN AND ADEQUATE VETERINARY CARE (DEALERS AND EXHIBITORS). There is a written Program of Veterinary Care from the owners veterinarian in Montana. This veterinarian is going to remain as her primary veterinarian visiting at least twice a year. A second veterinarian for emergency purposes and hands on treatment is required. A written Program of Veterinary Care describing which animals will be seen and medical care provided by the emergency veterinarian needs to be completed.
17420 0cfd70aec4a16d44 2.40(b)(2)   0 ATTENDING VETERINARIAN AND ADEQUATE VETERINARY CARE (DEALERS AND EXHIBITORS). A Giant Flemish rabbit has matted fur on its rump. Animals should be free of matted fur, which can lead to dermatitis, including skin infections, limitations of movement and discomfort. This mat was removed during this inspection.
17421 0cfd70aec4a16d44 2.131(c)(1)   0 HANDLING OF ANIMALS. Although this facility mostly conducts guided tours, it is arranged as a walk-through animal exhibit. One exhibit(cid:25)s barrier consists of trees with a single thick rope about 3 feet high between them. This serves as a visual barrier, but does not prevent people and especially small children from going past the rope and up to enclosure. All enclosures housing animals are required to have barriers that prevent the public from directly accessing the enclosure. These barriers should be sturdy enough to prevent the public (adults and children) from climbing over, under, around, or through them to assure the safety of the animals and the public.
17422 0cfd70aec4a16d44 3.1(c)(2)   0 HOUSING FACILITIES, GENERAL. Two New Guinea Singing Dogs are each in separate wood and wire enclosures. Not all of the wood structures in one of the enclosures (Mick) are sealed with waterproof stain as a few areas were missed. In the second dog enclosure (Sheila), there is green microbial growth on the wood in several areas and one platform has lost its stain coating. These areas need to be sanitized and resealed. All surfaces in which dogs come in contact must be maintained on a regular basis.
17423 0cfd70aec4a16d44 3.78(e)   0 OUTDOOR HOUSING FACILITIES. The public barriers in front of the primates are not adequate to prevent physical contact between the public and the nonhuman primates. The capuchin and brown lemur are in separate enclosures on either side of a sheltered building leading to a large room housing animals. Some panels of metal fencing are loosely placed in front of these cages to serve as barriers. These are inadequate as they are easily moveable and they are too close to the primates cages. A metal fence of sufficient height is in front of the two outdoor cages housing the 2 ring tailed lemurs and the one vervet, but the fence is incomplete and easy to walk around. If public members come into the indoor large animal room with the two bush babies, then a barrier is needed to keep the public from coming into contact with the primates. All barriers need to be adequate to protect the public and the animals.
17424 0cfd70aec4a16d44 3.81   0 ENVIRONMENT ENHANCEMENT TO PROMOTE PSYCHOLOGICAL WELL-BEING. The owner brought a brown lemur and a bush baby to the new facility to add to the existing primate collection of a capuchin, vervet, two ring tailed lemurs, a marmoset, and a bush baby. The current environment enhancement plan does not include all of the primates currently on the property and does not adequately address the particular environmental enrichment needs of each species. A new written plan needs to be developed with and approved by the Attending Veterinarian to describe how the social needs of these primates will be met, including the four who are singly housed. The enrichment plan needs to be species specific in describing the environmental enrichments provided due to the different cognitive abilities and behavioral needs of these primates. The plan needs to be in accordance with currently accepted professional standards as cited in appropriate professional journals or reference guides, and as directed by the Attending Veterinarian.
17425 0cfd70aec4a16d44 3.127(d)   0 FACILITIES, OUTDOOR. There is no separate 6 foot perimeter fence at least 3 feet away from the primary enclosure for the yak in a front pasture housed with several horses, nor for the young camel housed with the two llamas in an enclosure which has one side consisting of part of the six foot perimeter fence for the rest of the exotic animals. Either a separate perimeter fence needs to be built or a variance from the perimeter fence requirement needs to be requested and approved.
17426 0cfd70aec4a16d44 3.128   0 SPACE REQUIREMENTS. A large number of leaf nosed bats (estimates of 80 to 100) are housed in a wood and wire structure measuring 6 feet tall by 4 feet by 4 feet. This structure is pyramidal shaped and narrower at the top, probably only 3 feet X 3 feet and contains no darkened roosting spaces. Bats are nocturnal and sufficient darkened roosting spaces must be made available in the primary enclosure during daylight hours. This is a pre-use site inspection for a second site for a Montana licensee. No licensed activity allowed until above items have been corrected and no other items are found in non-compliance. Exit interview conducted on 8-19-15 with VMOs Lisa MacElderry and Mary Ann McBride. Additional Inspectors Mcbride Mary Ann, Veterinary Medical Officer

Advanced export

JSON shape: default, array, newline-delimited, object

CSV options:

CREATE TABLE "citations" (
   [rowid] INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
   [hash_id] TEXT REFERENCES [inspections]([hash_id]),
   [code] TEXT,
   [kind] TEXT,
   [repeat] INTEGER,
   [desc] TEXT,
   [narrative] TEXT
);
Built by Noomatic and Geoff · Powered by Datasette · Queries took 2285.676ms