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    Circus Under Attack

    Ringling Bros. popularity plummets amid growing protests over animal cruelty

    Teresa Gubbins
    Aug 31, 2014 | 10:52 am

    It's opening night for the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at American Airlines Center in Dallas, making its annual summer trek through Texas on this not-too-hot night on July 30. Two scraggly lines form at the entrance; turnout seems low.

    At a booth by the door, a young employee in a brightly colored vest stacks up programs. Pacing nearby is a man in his 40s, in a comb-over and polyester suit; he's part of a small posse of Ringling suits on patrol.

    Their attention is focused on a line of about 80 protesters on the sidewalk, stretching across the front of the venue, holding signs that read "Ringling beats animals" and "Boycott the circus." One protester uses a bullhorn. Every time she speaks, the guy with the programs tries to drown her out: "Get your program right here!" One suit mutters to another, "Boy, they're really out tonight."

    Ringling has been met by protests in Dallas for years, just as in other cities. But the recent SeaWorld controversy has ignited more criticism.

    The suits are not the only ones eyeing the protest group. Bicycle police officers straddle their bikes; two detectives stand next to an unmarked police car. The suits confer with the detectives. And then comes the police warning to the protesters: Stand back. No bullhorn.

    "We have the right to have a bullhorn," says Savanna B., one of the organizers. "But the police presence has really increased in the past few years."

    It's not the first year that Ringling has been met by protests in Dallas, nor in other cities. But the recent controversy over SeaWorld, whose treatment of animals has come under attack since the release of the documentary Blackfish, has ignited more criticism of the use of animals for entertainment, and the number of protesters has grown.

    At the same time, companies that profit from the use or sale of animals have hastened to enact legislation protecting them from scrutiny. Some states now make it illegal to photograph or videotape at a factory that processes animals for food. A recent law called the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act has been used to arrest protesters for doing nothing more than marking a street with chalk, distributing leaflets and protesting.

    No one gets arrested at the circus in Dallas, but there are confrontations. When a petite protester recites how baby elephants are separated from their mothers and tied down to be immobile for days and even months, an aggressive guy in a buzzcut marches over and screams in her face, "Don't talk to my kids! You don't have the right to talk to my kids!"

    Nearly 40 towns and cities in the United States and more than 30 countries have banned or restricted the use of animals in circuses.

    A mother yells at the protesters, "How could you hold those signs in front of the children?"

    It feels like a long time since 1985, when Neiman Marcus founder Stanley Marcus triumphantly rode an elephant for his 80th birthday and Ringling paraded 22 elephants, 30 horses, six zebras, four camels and two llamas through downtown Dallas to broadcast its arrival. Each year since then, the number has declined: 18 elephants in 1989, 14 elephants in 2000, down to no more than eight and sometimes only six today.

    In search of new customers, the circus has cannily sought out partnerships where it can prey on children. During the '90s, they partnered with the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Dallas to guarantee a steady infusion. These days, the circus has gone to more desperate measures by hiring clowns to visit libraries in poor neighborhoods and hand out free tickets for kids, drumming up business two months before the big show arrives. The mainstream media is mostly complicit, with unreflective writers who dutifully add it to their entertainment picks list year in, year out.

    Ringling's owner, Feld Entertainment, won a legal victory in May with a $15.75 million settlement, following a 14-year battle with animal groups over its treatment of its elephants. The animal groups lost because their key witness, a former employee, was found to have been paid to testify. But the animals lost because the settlement meant that the court never got to rule on the abuse issue. With the circus constantly on the move, it's hard to track its behavior or hold it accountable.

    Nonetheless, nearly 40 towns and cities in the United States and more than 30 countries have banned or restricted the use of animals in circuses.

    In April, Los Angeles banned the use of bullhooks, the sharp-edged tool used by Ringling trainers; in June, Mexico banned the use of animals entirely. A year-long investigation by Mother Jones found that Ringling elephants lead miserable lives, are afflicted by illnesses that the circus ignores, and that a number of elephants have died "under disturbing circumstances."

    In the past few years, the circus has taken steps to shield the way it handles elephants, says Susan O., who has been protesting the circus for more than a decade.

    "When it was at Reunion Arena, they'd walk the elephants to the train box cars when it was all over, and you could see how painful it was for the elephants to board," she says. "Many of them suffer arthritis and other debilitating conditions. But three years ago they stopped walking them, to get them out of public view. Now the elephants are trucked to the trains instead."

    It's a transport that's heavily guarded, says Savanna. "In Dallas, the police are really out in force when they’re moving elephants," she says. "They won't let us anywhere near the tracks."

    Not helping Ringling's prospects in Texas this year was the terrible accident in which a two-year-old girl fell from the stands and was hospitalized.

    Not helping Ringling's prospects in Texas this year was the terrible accident in which a two-year-old girl fell from the stands and was hospitalized. On August 9, the circus' final Saturday night and its best shot at a blockbuster, less than half the seats were filled; traffic cops who would have been waving cars to the parking lot stood idle.

    Groups across the country have organized a national weekend of action against the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA) from September 5-7 with a goal of educating the public about federal laws that specifically target animal advocates, with an event being planned for Dallas, as well. A Facebook page has more information.

    After Dallas, the circus packs up and heads to Fort Worth. The protesters are there with signs one night, and leaflets the next. On closing night, they try one last time to catch sight of the elephants as they're loaded onto the train for their next city; according to Wildlife Advocacy, the animals perform between 48-50 weeks each year, sometimes three performances in one day. They're "chained in box cars while traveling from town to town, chained all night long, and chained for most of the day." That's perhaps worse than SeaWorld. Or are the two equally villainous?

    The protesters never do get access to the elephant loading in Fort Worth. But one circus-goer promises he won't come back, while another looks chastened, saying, "I didn't know." Small victories, and unfortunately there's always next year.

    Approximately 80 participants turned out for the Dallas protest.

    Ringling protest
    Photo by Marc Lee
    Approximately 80 participants turned out for the Dallas protest.
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    City Hall News

    Dallas community rallies in support of keeping iconic City Hall

    Teresa Gubbins
    Nov 3, 2025 | 3:52 pm
    Dallas City Hall
    Wikimedia
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    Dallas community leaders are rising against an initiative to abandon the current Dallas City Hall building. There's a public meeting on the topic taking place on November 3 at 6 pm at City Hall, 1500 Marilla St.

    City of Dallas leaders are considering a proposal to abandon Dallas City Hall, the building designed by renowned architect I.M. Pei and completed in 1978. Most famously, it appears in the film Robocop.

    The building's sharply angled design has drawn both admirers and haters alike. Some who've worked in the building applaud its open design, while others say it is not up to modern standards. Regardless of its functionality, its fans view it as a masterpiece of modern architecture — significant enough that it was recently recognized by the Dallas Landmark Commission, who voted to initiate historic designation.

    Mayor Eric Johnson and other Dallas leaders say the building is in disrepair and that it will cost millions to fix. Exactly how much is not known, but a range has been cited as between $150 million to $356 million, versus an estimated $1 billion to build a new city hall.

    They're trying to make it happen fast. A Special Meeting of the Economic Development Committee & Committee on Finance was called for November 3 to discuss "the state of City Hall," to deliberate the purchase, exchange, lease, or value of real property located at 1500 Marilla St. They made the meeting "closed session," meaning behind closed doors and out of the public eye, claiming that "deliberation in an opening meeting would have a detrimental effect on the position of the governmental body in negotiations with a third person."

    In a post called "Why It’s Vital City Hall Remains Standing," Candy's Dirt interviewed a passel of Dallas architects who defended its preservation. In addition, community leaders such as Betty Culbreath have come out against the action.

    "City Manager Tolbert should make a clear statement of condition of the Dallas City Hall building supported by certified estimate of needed repair in total," Culbreath says. "The Manager should at that point make a recommendation to the Dallas City Council of best use for building — repair or rebuild — at that point Council should make decision.The Fox in the henhouse is the Sports teams wanting a new arena. We all know the Mavericks new owners want a place that will accommodate an eventual Casino if and when Texas lawmakers approve gambling, so for the City to put all its eggs in the basket with the Vegas group is foolish when they already purchased the land in Irving and has it approved."

    Petition
    A petition to "Save Dallas City Hall: Protect Our Iconic Landmark" has been launched, stating that "demolishing this architectural icon would be an irreversible loss for our city, erasing a landmark recognized worldwide for its form, engineering, and vision."

    The petition calls on the Dallas City Council to:

    • Halt any rush to demolish this irreplaceable civic landmark and actively engage the public in discussions about its future.
    • Commission a comprehensive, transparent study by qualified professionals to objectively evaluate renovation, modernization, and repair options. Rigorously compare costs and community benefits versus relocation before making any irrevocable decisions. Keep community stakeholders fully informed at all points in the process

    In a post, Dallas' former director of the Park and Recreation Department Willis Winters references the theory that city leaders are paving the way for the owners of the Dallas Mavericks to build a new stadium on the site, replacing American Airlines Center in Victory Park.

    "Where is the impetus for demolition coming from—decades of budget neglect, or the sudden dramatic need for a site for a new arena for a basketball team owned by a Las Vegas gambling family?" Winters asks. "There is plenty of space for an arena within the footprint of the master plan for the new KBH Convention Center, yet the development buzzards are circling Dallas City Hall as if it is road kill."

    Winters also notes the complication with the plaza in front of City Hall, which is a city park and thus requires special treatment.

    "This building cannot be replaced at an equivalent cost of less than $900 million," Winters says. "The overinflated staff guesstimate of $345 million for renovation is a bargain compared to the price of purchasing a new site and constructing a new building of equal stature to that of our current City Hall. There is also the complicating issue of City Hall Plaza, which is designated as park land, and which CANNOT be sold to the buzzards without a public referendum."

    "Dallas aspires to be a 'world class city,' yet the destruction of this magnificent building will bring world-wide disclaim," Winters says. "I implore our city leaders to do the right thing—don’t cave in to development pressures and certainly not to a basketball team that no longer has relevance, but to instruct the City Manager to undertake a detailed study by a competent consultants to analyze the condition of Dallas City Hall and to produce a comprehensive estimate of the true cost of renovations to bring it into the 21st century. Only with this information in hand can the City Council make the right decision."

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