The Daily
Utah Chronicle
New student fights for primates
By Cara Wieser
Published: Tuesday, March 2, 2004
Media Credit: Bob Plumb
Kim Bowman´s primate freedom tag shows his support for the
animals.
The fight isn't only between Jeremy Beckham and the U anymore.
Sophomore Kim Bowman, member of the Utah Primate Freedom Project,
received his own bill for more than $200 from the U for requesting
details about one of the marmosets housed at the Animal Resource
Center.
Both students, believing such details to be public information,
requested the documents through Utah's open records law under the
Government Records Access and Management Act.
Bowman is one of 30 "defenders," each a proud owner of
Primate Freedom tags. The steel tags, displayed on a necklace or
key chain, have the serial number, birth date, gender, species and
location of one of the primates living at the center.
Using the number, concerned defenders plan to request further documentation
about the treatment of their adopted friend and any experimentation
being conducted on the animal.
In a letter displayed on the project's Web site, defenders, like
Bowman and Beckham, ask the U for "all laboratory reports,
protocols, daily care logs, veterinary reports, photographs, videotapes"
pertaining to the specific primate.
However, lofty fees imposed by the U have successfully ground further
requests from the group to a halt. Beckham asked other members to
hold their letters until he has dealt with his and Bowman's fees
in a legal setting.
U attorney Phyllis Vetter sent Bowman the same form letter she
sent Jeremy Beckham, charging them both for "legal review,"
"technical review," and "physical redaction."After
battling Beckham in front of the State Records Committee in January,
Vetter and the U retained a right to charge a fee for copies and
for employing someone to review the documents. Beckham and other
members of the project never thought the documents would be so costly,
however, and plan to
appeal the fees even if they have to take the battle back to the
committee.
Vetter did not return phone calls.By purchasing a tag for $10,
each defender accepted an oath to wear the tag to publicly display
his or her outrage of primate captivity and experimentation.
"The University of Utah and the vivisectors who they employ
may consider primates to be furry test tubes for their disposal,
but we view them as intelligent, sentient individuals with minds
of their own," the oath states. "Using primates in unconsenting
experimentation is no more ethical or appropriate than using human
children."
cwieser@chronicle.utah.edu
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