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Catfight over Hemingway's House
by Brian A Kennedy | July 18, 2007 at 05:56 am
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Ernest Hemingway's house in Key West has long been a haven for cats -- 47 of them to be precise, including six of the famous polydactyl (that means six-toed) versions. But all that might change soon; the US Animal and Plant Inspection Service is arguing that since the tourist attraction is a National Historic Landmark, it requires a special license to keep all the kitties.
Local municipalities are fighting back. The government's planning on sending a vet down to the Keys to assess the critters' well-being -- but something tells me they're doing just fine on their own.
U.S. Animal and Plant Inspection Service officials argue that the house, listed as a National Historic Landmark since 1968, requires a federal Animal Welfare License, like a circus or zoo, in order to keep housing the cats.
The city of Key West and Monroe County, which includes Key West and the other islands in the Keys chain off Florida's southeastern tip, are fighting back against federal intervention.
"I think it's kind of sad that a government agency would be spending taxpayers' money on this," said Linda Mendez, the home's event director and author of the "Hemingway Museum Cats" souvenir book. "We're against caging them because they're not used to it."
The museum opened in 1964 and estimates it has spent nearly $200,000 (97,800 pounds) to comply with federal animal regulations that require proper food storage, veterinary care and containment, such as mesh atop the 6-foot (2-metre) wall around the property.
'WHISPURRER'
The U.S. Department of Agriculture said the museum is subject to federal regulations because it promotes the cats online, exhibits them during paid tours, uses them in advertisements and markets them on souvenirs.
It plans to send veterinarian Terry Curtis, an animal behaviorist from the University of Florida -- already dubbed the "cat whispurrer" by locals -- to observe the cats' mental state and physical condition on July 23.
The Hemingway Museum failed three compliance inspections and several cats have been injured or killed since October 2003, the USDA said.
"In 2005 alone, there were 12 occasions when cats left the property; in two of these cases, Hemingway cats were killed by cars," it said.
A federal judge has ordered the two sides to work out their differences.
The spat began when the Florida Keys Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals lodged a complaint in 2003, spurred on by a former Hemingway House volunteer.
According to the tale told to 400 to 600 daily visitors, a ship's captain gave Hemingway his first polydactyl cat, Snowball, and many of the current felines are Snowball's descendants.
The macho writer, an avid fisherman and sportsman, was photographed with cats at his homes in Key West, Cuba and Paris.
But one book claims the cats are descendants of a Key West neighbour's pet crippled by a bullet Hemingway fired to put it out of its misery after it was injured, possibly by a car. The neighbour's cat lost an eye but survived.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 18:53 on July 18th, 2007
Hey I just found this link relating to the story dated July 9, and it sounds promising for the cats.
http://cbs4.com/local/local_story_189213307.html