Carriage Horse Dies in Accident in New York City's Central Park

by merrie | September 15, 2007 at 02:31 pm
1153 views | 7 Recommendations | 4 comments

Photos

Carriage Horse Dies in Accident in New York City's Central Park

Carriage Horse Dies in Accident in New York City's Central Park

see larger image

uploaded by merrie

In a long-overdue audit into the Horse Carriage industry in New York
City, it has been reported that compliance with city regulations
enforcement is extremely inadequate.The report marked the first time the comptroller's office scrutinized
the city's monitoring of the carriage horse industry, which has long
drawn complaints from animal-rights advocates. The objections
intensified last year after Juliet, a horse that spent 17 years taking
visitors through the park, collapsed in front of a crowd and died hours
later.The city Department of Consumer
Affairs is in charge of licensing horses, drivers, carriages and
stables, while the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene is tasked
with insuring that horses are able to work. The agencies generally
comply with city regulations, but efforts to enforce them are spotty,
the audit found.

Witnesses said the horse, which became startled by a street performer playing a drum, ran nearly a block along the sidewalk on the southern edge of the park before colliding with the tree, said Joseph Pentangelo, assistant director of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

The witnesses, who spoke to ASPCA inspectors, said the crash spooked a second horse that took off into the busy street, carriage still attached. The buggy collided with a Mercedes Benz sedan, and both vehicles sustained minor damage. The sedan driver was issued a summons for unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, Pentangelo said.

"We are devastated by the tragic and sudden loss of our mare Smoothie," said Carolyn Daly, a spokeswoman for the Horse & Carriage Association of New York. "This afternoon's freak accident was overwhelming to all of us in the industry who so dearly love our horses."

Smoothie, 13, had been a carriage horse for only a year, Daly said.

The incident comes amid increased scrutiny of the carriage horse industry in New York. An audit released last week by the city comptroller concluded the animals work without enough water, shade or oversight from authorities.

Last year, a horse pulling a Central Park carriage to a stable on the far West Side became spooked in traffic and galloped down a busy street until it collided with a car. The carriage driver was injured, and the horse had to be euthanized.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
Jennings David L
Jennings David L
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:41 on September 15th, 2007

merrie, very sad story.  With all the traffic in New York I'm surprised this doesn't happen more often.  The horses and carriages are such a tradition around the park I'm sure Smoothie will be missed.  Thanks for reporting.

0
merrie

 

Greetings Jennings,

Thanks for the flag. For sure the industry isn't exercising any oversight. While it may be fun for tourists,

it's putting those beautiful horses at terrible risk. They are the silent victims. 

ryan
ryan
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:46 on September 15th, 2007

merrie, good context...thanks for bringing this to our attention.

0
merrie

 

 Greetings Ryan,

Thanks for the flag. This is a terrible situation, mixing horses with vehicles and sometimes crowded streets.

They need advocates to be their voices. It may be fun for tourists, that aren't aware of the conditions

the horses are forced to endure. 

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

Jennings David L
First Flagged at 2:41 PM, Sep 15, 2007 by Jennings David L
These members have powered this story:

Most Recommended Stories in Style

 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from