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Eureka Springs Wildlife Refuge Advocating for ‘Big Cat’ Legislation

BB King, one of many rescued tigers currently living in Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge.
Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge
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Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge
BB King, one of many rescued tigers currently living in Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge.
BB King, one of many rescued tigers currently living in Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge.
Credit Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge / Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge
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Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge
BB King, one of many rescued tigers currently living in Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge.

Not everyone keeps a pet tiger or mountain lion as a house pet.  But an animal refuge in the Ozarks says there are some people who do—and that's why it’s asking members of Congress to protect these big cats. 

The Big Cat Public Safety Act would ban any lay person from breeding or possessing prohibited wildlife species, which include tigers, lions, cougars, and other big cats.

Turpentine Creek Wildlife Refuge, a big cat sanctuary in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, is pushing for this federal bill to pass.

Lisa Brinker heads up the online advocacy program there.

“We promote it because we don’t want to have to take in cats. We want them to have happy lives where they belong.”

Brinker says that most states don’t have laws regarding ownership of big cats.   However, if this bill were to become law, stricter measures would be enforced nationwide.

Many opponents of the bill are big cat owners and breeders.

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Claire Kidwell is a freshman at Missouri State University, and is majoring in Global Studies with a minor in Music. She is from Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and is involved in Model United Nations, the MSU Chorale, and the MSU Aerialists.