Wednesday Letters: Like in Montreal, ban horse-drawn carriages

SHARE Wednesday Letters: Like in Montreal, ban horse-drawn carriages
june_nights_at_navy_pier_32110030.jpg

Montreal recently imposed a one-year ban on horse-drawn carriages.

Montreal just passed a one-year ban on horse-drawn carriages. I applaud Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre for his forward thinking and hope he will make the ban permanent. I also urge Mayor Emanuel and the City Council to do the same in Chicago.

There may have been a time when horses in big cities made sense, but that is no longer the case. Forcing these majestic animals to walk on hard or icy pavement in extreme temperatures, breathe exhaust fumes and deal with erratic, honking taxis, buses and cars and wailing sirens is indefensible. It is no way of life.

Nobody wants people to lose their jobs, but no one should make a living off the suffering of animals. Proponents of the horse carriages will talk of romance and history, but as someone who loves to travel, I am saddened when I see carriage horses. Animal welfare plays a big role in how I, and many others, spend tourist dollars.

The Chicago Alliance for Animals has an online petition with more than 8,000 signatures to ban horse-drawn carriages in Chicago. and has gotten hundreds of signatures in person over the last year at our monthly educational outreach demonstrations.  We talk with many locals and tourists alike who tell us that they don’t like seeing the horses suffering in the street.

Recently, the nation of Israel and the cities of San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Asheville, North Carolina, have ended this archaic practice, as have many other progressive cities. Chicago should join these compassionate locales and be a leader in animal protection.

Jodie Wiederkehr, Chicago Alliance for Animals

SEND LETTERS TO: letters@suntimes.com. Please include your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes.

Taxpayer anger

At first impression, I thought that the Sun-Times’ front-page headline on Tuesday — “Anger, Hatred and Revenge” —referred to the outrage of Illinois taxpayers, who have every reason to feel great anger, hatred and revenge toward a state government that keeps bleeding taxpayers dry. Why do Illinois taxpayers, who already pay too much, have to pay still more for the state government’s mistakes and mismanagement?  Why should the state or the City of Chicago get any more money from citizens when the state and city have constantly squandered the enormous taxes we already pay?

Jean Scott, Irving Park

Medicaid scams

The latest arrest of three people at a West Side clinic for Medicaid fraud highlights the need for major change. Medicaid should only be for the disabled. It’s too easy for healthy people to qualify, especially when they have kids. Second, the arrests of these three people indicates it’s not only the patients who abuse the Medicaid program, but providers, as well. Gov. Bruce Rauner has taken a lot of heat for making cuts to state spending, but a lot of the people who complain aren’t the ones who pay the taxes that support these programs.

Mike Mannard, Schaumburg

The Latest
Illinois has the most operating nuclear reactors among all the states, but it’s been crickets from public officials on the potential weakening of nuclear oversight.
Woman no longer wants to be with man who pays no rent and asks for gambling money.
Chicago has so much riding on this casino’s success. Mayor Johnson says he’s not worried, but Bally’s $800 million financing hurdle is just the latest glitch in the project’s bumpy road.
A long primary campaign season reaches its crescendo Tuesday. Here’s a final look at the top races on the ballot.
Enbridge’s Line 5 oil and gas pipeline trespasses through sovereign tribal lands and is an environmental disaster waiting to happen, Ben Jealous writes.