Showing posts with label Raccoon Rabies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raccoon Rabies. Show all posts

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Parents Concerned Over Daylight Raccoon Sightings In Central Park

RACCOON SWOON:  Hungry playground critters are putting Central Park parents in a panic.
A racoon looks for food in the garbage piled high in Adventure Playground In Central Park. Park patrons are feeding the animals.

Manhattan


Masked bandits are overrunning Central Park playgrounds in broad daylight — and they’ve got black eyes and bushy tails.


Recent raids of the kid zones by rogue raccoons have prompted angry parents to demand the city get rid of the furry troublemakers, according to the New York Post.


“People think they’re cute, but they don’t understand the danger,” said Lori Schechter, of the Upper West Side. “When they’re becoming bold enough to be near children, it’s a real problem.”


The raccoon racket started a few months ago at Rudin Playground near Central Park West and 96th Street. Since then, the critters have happily munched at afternoon pizza parties and scampered near the swing set.


Last week, Schechter watched in horror as nannies fed one furry bandit and two kids by hand. She pulled 4-year-old daughter Ariella away.


“The raccoons aren’t responding to being shooed away,” fumed Schechter, who called 311 only to be told nothing can be done unless they’re rabid.


A spokeswoman for the Health Department said raccoons throughout the city are routinely tagged and vaccinated for rabies.


In 2010, a record 145 raccoons tested positive for the disease.


No animals near Central Park have tested positive this year, though authorities found rabid raccoons in The Bronx and Staten Island on June 1. Rabies has not been seen in humans since 1953.


“It just scares me that my daughter has no fear,” mom Meg Heminger said of 1-year-old Ella. “Who knows what the animals can do?”


Read More:

New York Post -July 1, 2012 - By Kate Briquelet

Friday, January 15, 2010

Raccoon Rabies Scare in Manhattan Parks

MANHATTAN


Between 2003 and 2008, only 1 rabid animal was found in all of Manhattan. In the past month and a half, city health officials have confirmed 16 rabid raccoons in the borough, according to the West Side Independent. 

The NYC Health Department first raised the alarm about rabies last month after finding four rabid raccoons in Manhattan from the beginning of the year through Dec. 3. But since that release, the virus has continued to spread, mostly in the northern part of Central Park (and many of them on the west side of the park), the health department told the Westside Independent on Tuesday. Rabid raccoons have also been found in Morningside Park. In total, 12 rabid raccoons were found in 2009 (10 in the month of December alone), and four more since the beginning of 2010.

The city is now planning to vaccinate the raccoon populations in Riverside, Central and Morningside Parks to stop the disease from spreading, the health department told us.