9 months ago

Long Island Zoo Closing After Years of Animal Neglect Allegations

Author Bio

Nicholas Vincent is a passionate environmentalist and freelance writer. He is deeply committed to promoting... Read More

shutterstock_2513308469-e1759320793208

Long Island’s largest zoo, the Holtsville Ecology Center’s animal refuge, is officially shutting down after more than 40 years of operation. According to the New York Post, Brookhaven town officials confirmed that the taxpayer-funded facility, which has long faced alarming allegations of animal abuse and neglect, will close by March 2026. The roughly 100 animals still housed at the site — including bald eagles, bobcats, buffalo, and farm animals — will be transferred to accredited rescue facilities.

The closure follows years of criticism over the center’s treatment of its residents. Reports surfaced of a mountain lion drowning, untreated infections in roosters, a duck suffering lead poisoning, and Honey the bear enduring rotting teeth while confined to a cramped enclosure and sprayed with hoses. Advocates argued that the town never had the veterinary resources to provide proper care. Humane Long Island director John Di Leonardo called the decision “the only one that was right by the animals,” celebrating both the welfare outcome and the expected taxpayer savings of more than a million dollars annually.

While some locals expressed sadness at losing a free family attraction, the broader sentiment is that ending the facility’s operations is a necessary step forward. For decades, the zoo operated on a reclaimed landfill and became a popular destination, but its closure reflects shifting public views on what constitutes ethical treatment of animals and the responsibilities of government.

This decision underscores a growing recognition that wild creatures belong in their natural environment or legitimate sanctuaries, not roadside zoos. It also highlights how our relationship with animals must evolve if we are serious about protecting the planet and prioritizing compassion. As vegan and plant-based lifestyles become more mainstream, so too does awareness that animals deserve lives free from exploitation.

Change is never easy, but this closure represents progress. Supporting real sanctuaries, choosing compassionate diets, and advocating for animal welfare are all ways we can ensure stories like Honey the bear’s are never repeated.

Sign These Petitions! 

Please sign our latest and most urgent petitions to help the planet. Every signature counts!

Related Content:

Easy Ways to Help the Planet:

  • Eat Less Meat: Download Food Monster, the largest plant-based Recipe app on the App Store, to help reduce your environmental footprint, save animals and get healthy. You can also buy a hard or soft copy of our favorite vegan cookbooks.
  • Adopt-a-Pet: Visit WildWatchers, a watchdog platform specifically designed for animal, earth, and wildlife warriors to actively give back, rescue, and protect animals and the planet.
  • Reduce Your Fast Fashion Footprint: Stand against fast fashion Pollution by supporting circular brands like Tiny Rescue, which create cause-based collections using recycled, zero-waste clothing designed to be returned and remade, ensuring it never ends up in a landfill.
  • Shop Sustainably for Your Home: Visit SustaiNOBLE.org, an eco-friendly and ethically sourced home decor store that will empower your home with luxurious fair-trade, and sustainable products made by global artisans. 
  • Support Independent Media: Being publicly funded gives us a greater chance to continue providing you with high-quality content. Please consider supporting us by donating!
  • Sign a Petition: Your voice matters! Help turn petitions into victories by signing the latest list of must-sign petitions to help people, animals, and the planet.
  • Stay Informed: Keep up with the latest news and important stories involving animals, the environment, sustainable living, food, health, and human interest topics by subscribing to our newsletter!
  • Do What You Can: Reduce waste, plant trees, eat local, travel responsibly, reuse stuff, say no to single-use plastics, recycle, vote smart, switch to cold water laundry, divest from fossil fuels, save water, shop wisely, Donate if you can, grow your food, volunteer, conserve energy, compost, and don’t forget about the microplastics and microbeads lurking in common household and personal care products!

 

 

 

 

 

Discover Our Latest Posts

Comments:

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.