Following weeks of public complaints and concerns about the welfare of a large number of horses living in poor conditions on a farm in Oro-Medonte, Ontario, and later in Port Perry, they have been seized by the province’s Animal Welfare Services (AWS).
A series of disturbing events became the catalyst for this response when a horse-owning neighbour of Stephanie Redlick’s, Jim Horne, was alerted that a newborn foal was in distress at the farm on Feb. 2. The filly was found unblanketed in an uninsulated barn and despite assurances she would be properly cared for, she later died. Horne noted that other horses in Redlick’s care were in very poor condition and there was a noticeable lack of fresh water and feed.
From that time until Feb. 10, many concerned individuals – including the mayor of Oro-Medonte and the Orillia OPP – contacted AWS to make formal complaints about Redlick and the horses, four of which she eventually agreed to relinquish to a caring family. One of those, a five-year-old Thoroughbred named Seattle Sunrise who had raced at Woodbine, was so starved that even with heroic veterinary care, he had to be euthanized.
After relocating her remaining 16 horses to a newly-leased property in Port Perry around Feb. 8, Redlick was subsequently barred from the premises by the property owners, apparently due to unpaid rent. On Feb. 12, Ontario Animal Welfare Services (AWS) inspectors attended the property in Redlick’s absence, documenting the conditions – empty water troughs, ice-filled buckets, horses without shelter, and emaciated animals picking through their own manure in search of food – and issued written orders requiring specific tasks to be completed by Feb. 20. AWS officers then returned to the property a day ahead of schedule, and after veterinarians inspected the horses later that afternoon, they were all seized and placed in AWS custody.
Redlick reportedly operates under many aliases including Stephanie Alessia, Stephanie Alessiia, Stephanie Schwartz, Aless Stephanie, Stephanie Quickfall, Sammy Srz, Healthy Equine Homopathy, SBR Equestrian Breeding And Sales Ltd., Precision Stables, and King Livestock Transportation. She is currently running Kijiji ads selling horses that are not in her care. She maintained that she was “not an animal abuser” in an article posted in Barrie Today. This is an ongoing investigation and charges have not yet been laid.
Marie Bennett is the founder of Ban Horse Slaughter which raises funds and awareness to keep horses out of the slaughter pipeline. She reached out to Jim Horne when she became aware via a friend of the plight of the Redlick horses. She immediately launched a page on her website to keep concerned people and the press apprised of developments. Bennett also founded a federally-registered charity called Horse Rescue Fund, designed to help horse owners that were facing a one-time challenge, such as being injured and not being able to afford hay or veterinary expenses, etc.
Said Bennett, “I think one of the biggest things that I’d like to get out there is that Animal Welfare Services were called on the fourth [of Feb.] and they didn’t even show up at the point. They didn’t even show up at the second property until the 12th, and they did not bring vets with them. They came and they took some pictures. So that was an eight-day gap – even though they knew there were empty water troughs, horses that were skin and bones, horses with open gashes, moldy hay, and knew that the baby had died.”
Apparently, this was not the first time authorities had been alerted to Redlick, including receiving complaints as recently as a few months ago from a horse shipper and a hay supplier. “But Animal Welfare Services did not do anything about that,” noted Bennett.
Because of the extreme delay in getting AWS inspectors and veterinarians out to the farm, advocates are now calling for action to demand urgent reforms and ensure that no animal endures such unnecessary suffering in the future. A protest is being organized for Monday, February 24 at 1 pm at MPP Doug Downey’s office at 20 Bell Farm Road in Barrie, ON. Participants are asked to bring posters, banners, their concerns, opinions and suggestions for improving response times and penalties.
If you would like to help, donations can be made that will be targeted to providing feed and veterinary care directly to the seized horses at Horse Rescue Fund here. Donations are also welcome on the Ban Horse Slaughter website here.
Your letters to the Solicitor General’s office can also make a difference. (Minister.SOLGEN@ontario.ca)