Official Report 454KB pdf
The second item of business is an evidence session on the Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (Scotland) Bill. We are joined by officials from the Scottish Government’s team who have been working on the bill. I welcome Andrew Voas, veterinary adviser, and Angela Lawson, solicitor. Good morning. Members have a series of questions for you, which I will kick off.
Before we start, convener, may I remind members of my registered interest?
You may do so now or when you ask a question.
I will do so now. I refer members to my registered interest as the convener of the cross-party group on and an honorary member of the Scottish Showmen’s Guild.
That is duly noted, Mr Lyle. Thank you.
We move to questions. Does the three-year gap between the consultation and the bill’s introduction pose any challenges for the Scottish Government in ensuring that the bill reflects the weight of scientific evidence and public views?
The bill is based on key ethical arguments. We are aware that there have been developments in scientific evidence, which were outlined in the Dorning and Harris report that was produced for the Welsh Government. Some of the scientific evidence might have strengthened concern about aspects of keeping animals in travelling circuses, but the key ethical arguments remain unchanged from those that we laid out in the consultation in 2014.
The Welsh Government has plans for a scheme that is aimed at addressing mobile animal exhibits more widely, and the Scottish Government has acknowledged that the current legislative framework, which in part dates back to 1925, is
“somewhat dated and might benefit from review”.
Given that, did the Scottish Government consider undertaking a follow-up consultation to seek a wider range of views and fill the gap between 2014 and now?
We are aware—and, when we were drafting the bill, we were especially aware—that there is a wide variety of other uses of wild and domestic animals for performance or public display. At one end of the range are zoos and safari parks, which have a statutory obligation to be involved in conservation and education and are generally regarded by most of the public as being acceptable. In the middle is a range of uses of wild animals, such as birds of prey that might be seen at country fairs or animals that might be taken into schools so that, for example, children can hold snakes or see what different animals look like.
We are aware that the public do not seem to have the same fundamental ethical objection to those other uses of animals as they do to circuses. The argument is that circuses attract sufficient moral opprobrium that the only appropriate way of dealing with them—given the particular ethical arguments that apply to them—is complete prohibition, whereas for the other uses, it would be appropriate to tighten the registration and licensing requirements in order to modernise the approach that stems from the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925.
I presume that the assertion that you just made about the public view is informed by the volume and nature of the correspondence that was received in response to the call for opinions. The responses have not yet been published in detail. Will you give us a flavour of the volume and balance of the views that you received?
The consultation analysis has been published and the individual consultation responses were published very recently. The consultation took place back in 2014. The analysis extracted key points that respondents made. In addition, from United Kingdom public opinion polls that date back over the past 10 years, we are aware that 70 to 80 per cent of a random sample of the public support a ban on wild animals in travelling circuses.
The most recent poll was by YouGov in 2013 and was broken down by species. Although there was more support for banning the use of bears, big cats and elephants, there was still significant support for banning the use of creatures such as parrots and snakes.
We have also had a constant stream of correspondence. There is regular correspondence to ministers, which we answer. Some of that is sparked by events, such as the visit of the big cats to Peterhead in 2014. That took place after the consultation, but a lot of letters were sent at that time to ask why we had not yet banned wild animals in travelling circuses.
The committee has taken a particular interest in engaging with young people to gauge their views. Was any particular effort made in the consultation to get young people’s opinions and, if so, what form did that take?
The consultation was open to everyone. We are not aware of any particular responses from young people. We have not yet had any particular initiative to engage young people, but we have the option to do so as the bill progresses and we could look into that.
From the responses that were submitted, we know that a significant concern was the potentially damaging effect on young people of seeing wild animals in travelling circuses being made to perform unnatural behaviours, being dressed up in human clothing or being invited to do things that lead people to make fun of them or laugh at them. The argument is that animals are seen as props for entertainment or as ways of demonstrating the superiority or cleverness of the trainers in making the animals do certain things. Several respondents made the point that it is harmful for young people to see animals being used in such a way, because it gives them a false impression of wild animals and shows a lack of respect for the inherent nature of wild animals.
But you have not spoken to young people.
We have not specifically asked young people for their views.
Have you done any attitudinal surveys or polls on the other uses of wild animals—for example, to see what the attitude is to wild raptors being used in displays?
We have not done specific work on the other uses of animals. From time to time, people write in with concerns about other uses of animals, and we often have discussions with groups such as OneKind and the Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which have raised concerns about other uses. That is the basis for the further work that we plan to do, which the cabinet secretary recently announced, in which we will be modernising the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925.
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How do you know that the public attitude to circuses differs from the public attitude to other uses of wild animals? You say that there is quite a big ethical difference in the public’s mind between the use of wild animals in circuses and other uses of wild animals, but I am trying to work out what the evidence basis is for that. The consultation was about the bill; it was not about other uses of wild animals.
The consultation was specifically about the use of wild animals in travelling circuses. Some people made remarks about other uses of animals, but there were not many of those responses.
What is your basis for the ethical distinction between circuses and other uses of animals in performance?
That was outlined in the consultation. Key ethical arguments inevitably apply to the use of wild animals in travelling circuses, and some of those arguments apply to an extent to other uses of animals, but they do not all apply in the same way.
The first ethical argument is to do with the lack of respect that is shown for animals, which I have outlined. Wild animals are perceived to have a particular status, and they should be able to fulfil their natural potential; using them in a way that is seen as demeaning or as a source of amusement is contrary to their natural essence. That is an inherently disrespectful attitude, which, as I have said, can foster harmful attitudes in young people who are exposed to it.
The second argument is that the travelling circus environment involves keeping animals in relatively barren enclosures and subject to the stress of transport and disturbance, and it is inherently difficult in such situations to allow a wild animal to express its full range of natural behaviours and to provide suitable accommodation that allows it to do that. Although wild animals might not suffer physically if they are transported as part of a travelling circus, it is inherently difficult in that situation for them to fulfil their instincts and express wild behaviour—to breed, shelter and move about in the way that they would like to.
The third key argument is that, although we accept some compromise to the ideal welfare of domestic or wild animals—for example, we accept that farm animals are not always kept in optimal, ideal conditions—that is justified by the wider benefit to humans of the ability to have food at a reasonable price or to use animals for leather or milk production. With other types of wild animal keeping or performance, conservation values might apply. Zoos take part in planned breeding programmes, and there might be an educational value in taking wild animals into schools so that children can see them. Other wide benefits justify ethical costs or potential welfare compromises.
The argument is that circuses are basically commercial, money-making operations that purely provide a type of entertainment that is widely perceived as outdated. In the public mind, there is a lack of justifying benefit in circuses that does not seem to apply to the other possible uses of wild animals.
I now understand the bill’s ethical basis better, but I am still trying to understand whether the public view of circuses translates to other forms of animal performance. It is clear that you do not have data on that.
Let us explore the ethical issue.
The policy memorandum talks about ethical versus welfare issues. It is hard to separate them, because ethics and welfare are part and parcel of the same issue. How did you distinguish between the welfare concerns and the ethical concerns about wild animals in travelling circuses?
Some of the ethical concerns are clearly related to welfare aspects, such as, for example, whether it is possible to keep animals in circuses without compromising their welfare. That is part of the ethical concern, but the conclusion of Mike Radford’s 2007 report, “Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses”, was that it is hard to find objective scientific evidence that would apply to all wild animal species that might be used in travelling circuses.
There is probably good evidence on animals such as elephants and big cats that might suggest that their welfare is sufficiently compromised in circuses to justify a complete ban, but it is difficult to gather that sort of evidence scientifically and in sufficient detail for every single species that might be used in a travelling circus.
There is a wider ethical objection that, no matter whether a wild animal can be shown to be suffering in ideal welfare conditions, wild animals just should not be used in that sort of environment purely for entertainment, made to perform unnatural acts and dressed up in unnatural regalia or clothing. That wider ethical objection applies to all wild animals—it is not a matter of specific welfare concerns about specific species.
I think that it is fair enough to look at the ethics as opposed to welfare. We are probably talking about animals ranging from snakes all the way to seals and zebras—a really wide variety of wild animals, elephants and big cats included.
Yes, exactly.
Can you elaborate on the three ethical issues: the impact on respect for animals, the impact of travelling environments on an animal’s nature and the ethical costs versus benefits?
I have outlined those areas already. On respect for animals, the view was expressed that wild animals should be free to express their natural essence and wildness—telos is the technical term. Some of the remarks that were made in response to the consultation mentioned how putting animals in unnatural environments, making them do unnatural tricks and behaviours and dressing them up in unnatural ways is demeaning or humiliating for them. People felt that animals that should be considered as wild, free and allowed to express their natural behaviour were being portrayed in an unnatural way. They are being brought into an unnatural situation and made to do unnatural things contrary to their natural purpose in life.
What about ethical costs versus benefits?
As I said, we accept that in a variety of situations there can be a welfare cost to animals that can be justified by some benefit to animals or wider society in general. We accept a welfare compromise for farm animals; they might not always be kept in ideal conditions, but they are fulfilling a purpose by providing food and drink.
Similarly, people have concerns about the conditions in which wild animals are kept in zoos, but zoos fulfil a valuable conservation and education role. They take part in planned breeding programmes that are co-ordinated worldwide and they also do useful work in education. In fact, zoos and safari parks have a statutory obligation to be involved in such work. There is a welfare cost to those animals in being kept confined—they might be kept in more natural environments than in a travelling circus, but people still agree that there is a potential welfare cost to those animals—but that is justified by the benefit of conservation and education and a wider benefit to society.
However, if we consider the travelling circus environment, the welfare cost or the ethical objections to the use of animals in that environment surely cannot be justified by the commercial benefit to the circus owners in providing a spectacle purely for public entertainment.
It strikes me that there is a balance to be struck between an evidence-based justification for such legislation and taking into account general public opinion. Presumably, you are trying to find a middle ground where both meet.
Yes. The consultation’s approach is quite unusual because we tend to try to base legislation on objective evidence or scientific evidence, if it is available. In this case, the approach has been to try to gather evidence of the general public’s ethical objections. Therefore, the purpose of the consultation in 2014 was to seek views and opinions on the ethical arguments that had been suggested. We had more than 2,000 responses to the consultation, 95 per cent or more of which agreed that the use of wild animals in travelling circuses should be banned. However, there were some detailed responses to the specific ethical questions that were asked. We certainly did not treat the consultation as an opinion poll or a mini referendum; we were really interested in considering the detailed arguments that some of the respondents made. Those are outlined in the response to the consultation.
Let us get into the nitty-gritty of the bill.
I said earlier that I am the convener of the cross-party group on the Scottish Showmen’s Guild. Who in the industry did you consult about the proposal?
The consultation was open to all and we had some responses from the circus industry. There was a response from the circus guild of Great Britain.
Yes, but not from the Showmen’s Guild.
It was an open, public consultation, which was advertised. I do not think that we had a response from the Showmen’s Guild.
I remember going to circuses as a child—most of us can. However, the bill does not define what a circus is. Why does it not to do so? What is a circus to your mind?
Our view was that there is a common understanding of what a circus is and that it would take its dictionary definition. I will pass the question on to Angela Lawson, who is the legal adviser.
The Scottish Government’s view was that there is an ordinary meaning of “circus”. I am sure that the people who are in this room have a view of what a circus is. We did not want to be unduly restrictive in defining it and follow, for example, the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976 and the Zoo Licensing Act 1981. That legislation is more than 35 years old and describes a circus as somewhere
“where animals are kept … for the purpose of performing tricks”.
We did not want such a narrow definition because circuses have moved on since then. Often, animals are used for display purposes and are not performing tricks.
If we do not define “circus” in the bill, it will take the ordinary meaning. The “Oxford English Dictionary” is often cited and relied on by courts for defining something if it is left to ordinary interpretation. It says that a circus is:
“A circular arena surrounded by tiers of seats, for the exhibition of equestrian, acrobatic, and other performances. Also … the company or ‘troupe’ of performers and their equipage.”
Basically, it is the place of the circus and the acts that are in it.
However, the proposed ban will not apply to a static circus. In my constituency, there is a theme park that, technically, could have a static circus all year round and the bill would not cover it. Is that correct?
Yes, that is right. The justification is that the travelling environment is one of the key parts of the ethical objections. It applies to travelling circuses but not to other circumstances. There are other situations—such as theme parks, as you said—in which animals are used for performance but the reasoning is that, if they are permanently based there, there is more possibility for them to be provided with a suitable, stable environment that provides more enrichment and allows them to express more natural behaviours when they are not performing. That is why we focus on travelling circuses.
If you will allow me to develop the point, convener, the successful theme park in my area brings in reindeer for Christmas shows and so on. The reindeer travel to the theme park, as happens throughout the land for such shows. I remember being at an excellent Christmas show in Aboyne at which reindeer were present. Will such animals be covered by the act or not?
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We would not regard such displays as travelling circuses.
Okay. I will ask my other question. Across the country, people go to garden centres and see handlers standing with owls and other birds of prey. They might be raising money for charity, and kids can learn about how to treat birds and so on. Will those be covered by the act?
Again, such displays would not be commonly understood to be travelling circuses, so they would not be covered. We propose to address such situations in the future, with updated licensing or registration.
Here is my last question on this theme. Why has the Scottish Government chosen to limit the scope of the bill to the treatment of travelling circuses? People have concerns about the treatment of animals in general. I am a dog lover and do not like to hear about them being mistreated, but I dislike hearing about the mistreatment of any other animal. Why has the Government chosen to select only circuses?
The issue of travelling circuses has been the subject of public concern for many years. It was a manifesto commitment of the Scottish National Party specifically to ban wild animals from circuses. It is also something that the UK Government wants to pursue.
As I have tried to explain, the key argument is that the ethical objections to travelling circuses all inevitably apply to them, but they do not apply to the same extent to other uses of animals. As there is sufficient public opprobrium or moral objection specifically to travelling circuses, we think it appropriate to ban the use of wild animals in those environments. However, for all the other possible uses for wild or domestic animals, we do not think that there is sufficient public opprobrium to ban them completely, but we would like to improve the arrangements for their registration and to introduce licensing conditions that are appropriate to the particular uses.
Can I explore another aspect of that? The purpose of this session is to clear up any ambiguity either in the minds of members or where the bill might not be clear enough. I have read the bill a few times, and I am not 100 per cent sure whether the overwintering of animals is covered. We have had at least one case in Scotland in which concern was expressed about circus animals being displayed while they were being overwintered. For the record, I would like some clarity on whether wild animals being overwintered in Scotland will still be permissible, or will it be permissible only if they are not displayed and a charge is levied?
The bill specifically concerns the use of wild animals in performance, display or exhibition. Whether it involves a charge to the public is irrelevant. Any performance, display or exhibition of wild animals in travelling circuses is prohibited.
The term “travelling circuses” covers any premises connected with them, and so would cover overwintering premises in Scotland to which animals associated with a travelling circus might be brought. Any performance, public display or exhibition of those animals at that overwintering site would be prohibited by the bill.
The bill will not prohibit the private keeping of wild animals that might or might not have been associated with a circus at some point in the past, so it will not prohibit circuses from transporting animals through Scotland or keeping them privately in Scotland if there is no public display of those animals.
Thank you. It is useful to get that on the record.
I want to push that last point a bit further. It is hard to fathom why the bill does not prevent animals from being kept or transported by circuses while in Scotland even if they are not going to perform or be displayed or exhibited in Scotland. I understand that it might be difficult for the bill to do that, but it seems to me that that should be part of what happens.
As I explained, one of the key ethical objections was that it is the viewing of those animals performing unnatural behaviours that is potentially harmful to younger people and which engenders attitudes that are considered to be disrespectful to wild animals. It is the actual viewing of the animals that is felt to be particularly morally objectionable.
Other difficulties that we would have if we prohibited or sought to prohibit the private keeping of wild animals that had been associated with a travelling circus are that there would be inconsistencies—private individuals are allowed to keep wild animals if they comply with appropriate legislation, and wild animals can also be kept in other environments by zoos, safari parks and other enterprises. If we sought to prevent circuses from keeping wild animals, that could be perceived as discriminatory and, basically, it would affect people’s right to own property, which would contravene the European convention on human rights on a couple of counts.
If across the UK there was a general prohibition on the keeping of wild animals by people who were associated with travelling circuses, we would also potentially have the practical problem of what to do with the existing wild animals. There would undoubtedly be stories of animals having to be put down, rehomed or separated from people who regarded them as companions and, in some cases, almost as family members. There would be the practical welfare difficulty of what to do with the wild animals that were no longer allowed to be kept by people associated with circuses.
I would like to raise the question of the definition of a wild animal. There is an argument that changes could occur to the behaviour, life cycle or physiology of some wild animals when they are closely engaged with human beings or engage in particular practices over a period of time. Is there any concern that the definition of wild animals as we would understand it could be challenged?
The definition that we have used is that a wild animal is
“an animal other than one of a kind that is commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
There is a similar status for wild animals under the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006. That has allowed some useful flexibility in interpretation, and it has been widely understood and accepted.
There are problems, in that “wild” can be defined in different ways for different pieces of legislation and in different contexts. In some cases, “wild” could be associated with danger or with animals that have been free living and which are not captive. For our purposes under the bill, we have used a definition that is closely related to wording under the 2006 act, which we feel provides sufficient explanation but allows some flexibility for changes in circumstances.
Okay. Thank you.
What other approaches to addressing issues associated with the use of wild animals in travelling circuses did the Scottish Government consider? Why did it rule those out in favour of the legislative approach?
As I have tried to outline, the public demand has been for complete prohibition of wild animals in travelling circuses.
The committee will be aware that a licensing regime was introduced in England. We decided not to introduce a similar regime in Scotland, partly because we did not have any wild animals in travelling circuses in Scotland at the time. We did not feel that a licensing regime would address the key ethical issues that I have outlined, which we think justify a complete ban on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses.
That is helpful. Thank you.
We will move on to a different theme, but first I would like to get some context. Could you outline the scale of travelling circuses in Scotland?
Travelling circuses visit Scotland, and we currently have one that uses animals—it has horses, dogs and budgerigars, but last year it also had performing domestic cats. There are also human-only circuses that visit from time to time. No circuses with wild animals have visited Scotland for several years.
In England, there are currently two licensed circuses with wild animals. They have particular rounds in Wales and the English midlands, and they have given no indication that they want to come to Scotland in the near future. In effect, we have not had any wild animals in travelling circuses in Scotland for several years.
Okay. I apologise if we have already dealt with this, but if a travelling circus with animals that was based in England was heading for Northern Ireland and it travelled through the port of Stranraer, would it be covered?
As I have said, the bill would not ban the private keeping of wild animals for travelling circuses, so provided that those wild animals were not used for performance, display or exhibition while they were in Scotland, no offence would be committed by transporting them through Scotland.
Thank you. I just wanted to get that on the record.
I want to turn to the issue of enforcement. Schedule 1 makes provision for local authorities or the Scottish ministers to appoint an inspector for the purpose of enforcing the legislation. What discussions has the Scottish Government had with local authorities, the SSPCA and Police Scotland on the enforcement approach and provisions?
We have had discussions with local authorities. We anticipate that, in practice, local authorities would be the key enforcers of the legislation, although it is unlikely that circuses with wild animals will choose to come to Scotland if they know that there is a ban in place. If that did happen, we would expect local authority inspectors to be the first point of contact, as such circuses would also need to apply for public entertainment licences to perform in Scotland.
I might be wrong, but I do not think that we have had direct discussions with the police. We do not think that the Scottish SPCA would be directly involved, but it is aware of the bill and we have had general discussions about it.
Do you plan to have discussions with Police Scotland at some point?
We could contact Police Scotland and let it know about the bill.
You are saying that enforcement would be the responsibility of local authority inspectors, but to whom would they be accountable?
Local authority inspectors are appointed by local authorities as inspectors in relation to a wide range of animal health and welfare legislation. Ultimately, therefore, they are accountable to their local authority.
I turn to the issue of fines. Schedule 1 also provides for someone who commits an offence under section 1 of the bill to be liable to a maximum fine “not exceeding level 5”, which I understand is currently £5,000. How did the Scottish Government arrive at the proposed maximum fine level? How does it compare with the income from a run of circus performances?
The sum of £5,000 was chosen because it is commensurate with other offence provisions in other animal legislation, particularly the Animal Health and Welfare (Scotland) Act 2006, which allows for offences under the part of the act that deals with animal welfare to be set at level 5—£5,000—except in certain instances of extreme cruelty, such as cases involving unnecessary suffering or animal fights. If there was unnecessary suffering in a circus context, we could use the powers in the 2006 act and prosecute under those provisions, which would attract a much higher fine of £20,000.
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Are you fairly confident that, between the two possibilities, there will be an appropriate deterrent?
Yes. As the 2006 act has been in place for some time and it is generally working well, we have been able to use the information from it to feed into the provisions in our bill—in particular, the enforcement provisions.
Do you envisage a situation in which there might be multiple individuals in an organisation who could be held responsible for an offence and that each of them would be liable for a fine, or would it just be the business?
If we look at the way in which the bill is drafted, we can see that the person who commits the offence is the circus operator, and that we have listed more than one type of person who could be that operator. Therefore, in some instances, depending on the facts and circumstances of the case, it is possible that there might be more than one fine or more than one person. A lot will depend on the set-up of the circus. It may well be that the circus owner is different from the person who has overall responsibility or who is ultimately responsible for the circus in the UK, in which case there is a possibility of there being more than one fine. There are also situations in which a circus might be owned or managed by more than one person. Sometimes, families might manage a circus together. In such circumstances, there could potentially be more than one fine.
I turn to the economic impact. You come to the logical conclusion that, as there have been no circuses in Scotland for several years, the financial impact would be minimal in practice. I am sure that that is fairly easy to agree with.
As far as the evidence behind the bill is concerned, you mentioned earlier that the consultation had been published. However, we understood that the individual responses had not been published. Will you clarify that?
I will ask my colleague who is sitting in the public gallery. [Interruption.] I am sorry—the individual responses are still to be published. I thought that they had already been published. I apologise for my mistake.
That was part of the point of the question. We understand that the individual responses will be published in future. Is that correct?
Yes—they are in the process of being published.
In the absence of those, and for the record, will you tell us whether the circus guild of Great Britain, Performing Animals Welfare Standards International and Producers Alliance for Cinema and Television raised any economic concerns with the Scottish Government about the proposed bill and, if so, what those concerns were?
We had a meeting with those organisations last week. They explained that, as their circuses have not visited Scotland for several years, they are not particularly concerned about that aspect of the issue. However, they did make the point that, if there were to be a wider prohibition on wild animals in travelling circuses, it could have knock-on effects for the film and television industry. They said that some of the wild animals that are currently used in travelling circuses are also used in film and TV productions—particularly the big cats that members might have seen, many of which will have been sourced from people who also operate circuses. Therefore, there might be performing circus animals that are also used in film and TV production. The organisations’ main concern, from an economic point of view, was that if there were to be a wider prohibition, that would adversely affect those uses of animals.
Is there a timescale for publication of the individual responses?
There are some technical difficulties. I thought that they had been published, because I knew that we had given approval for that to happen. I had thought that they were in the process of being published, but there are a few technical problems to do with the volume and the physical size of the data that is to be published.
Once you have looked into that, perhaps you could write back to the committee on the timeframes that you are working to.
Yes, we will do that. We will write and let the committee know when the responses are due to be published.
Returning to the definition of a circus, it is clear that there are now multiple definitions, and you are introducing a further one, which is based on the “Oxford English Dictionary”. Could that be problematic?
We do not think so. I think that there is a general understanding that, if a word is not specifically defined for a particular purpose in legislation, it tends to take its dictionary definition. There is a common understanding of what a circus—in particular, a travelling circus—entails that is different from other uses. We do not anticipate any particular difficulty in defining what a travelling circus is, as commonly understood by the general public or the man in the street.
But it is already defined in law under several different acts. It is stated quite specifically what the nature of a circus is. I am asking about that difficulty, whereby you have two pieces of legislation, one of which defines a circus in one way and one of which—if the bill is passed—will define it in a very different way. Does that create challenges?
We find that in other situations, in which a particular word can be defined in a particular way to suit the particular context and measures in one particular piece of legislation. As I have mentioned, “wild” might be defined in different ways for different pieces of legislation. I believe that “circus” is defined for the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976, but that is in the context of that act.
“Circus” is defined in the 1976 act and in the Zoo Licensing Act 1981 for those specific purposes. The bill concerns wild animals in travelling circuses, which is quite a different purpose from the licensing of zoos. Therefore, we need a different definition of “circus” in relation to the bill.
The act from the 1970s refers to animals being used in a performance setting to carry out tricks or manoeuvres. Is that largely irrelevant to the bill, because you are taking a broader dictionary definition, and you are saying that it does not matter where they are—wild animals are not allowed?
Yes.
If the situation concerns something that would be commonly understood to be a travelling circus, or premises associated with a travelling circus, that is what is covered in our bill.
Technically, we are leaving the definition of “circus” to ordinary interpretation, but we specifically define what a “travelling circus” is, in terms of its movement from place to place.
In such a situation, we fall back on the point that we could not possibly adopt the definition from other legislation, because it would not work for the purposes of the bill. One of the key things is that we want to prohibit display. The definitions in the older legislation did not take into account the possibility that animals were going to be used merely for display.
I am hypothesising, but if someone wanted to get round the eventual legislation, they would have to conduct the circus somewhere other than in a tent, and they would have to have no other ancillary acts around it, such as
“acrobats, clowns, and other entertainers”—
I am reading from the “Oxford English Dictionary” definition. They would have to avoid all of that, and then they could get round the proposed legislation. Is that right?
Yes—but then it would basically not be a circus.
Regarding the definition, how often does a circus have to travel to be a travelling circus?
It just has to travel from place to place. If it is a circus and it moves from one place where it performs to another place and performs there, it is a travelling circus.
So if it makes two movements, it is a travelling circus.
We specifically do not want to end up in a situation in which people can get out of or avoid the legislation by, for instance, travelling just once a year. If it travels from place to place, it is a travelling circus.
You mentioned the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982, which covers licensing. The act applies only to Scotland; for showmen, the law in England is different. Councils have had many interpretations of the act, with add-on after add-on.
In relation to Mark Ruskell’s point, what if I was a circus owner and I decided to take out the circus element and put up a sign saying “Wild West Show”? I have been reminded that, for several years, there were stallions—I cannot remember the exact breed—going round for a sort of Vienna horse show. Could horse shows, safari parks, theme parks, fêtes and zoos be affected by the proposed law? You propose the law, but we have to ask about it. I am concerned, because my experience is that councils have a very different perception of the law once it gets out there.
As we have outlined, the bill is specifically limited to travelling circuses and things that will be commonly understood to be travelling circuses. Horses are domesticated animals, so they are excluded from the bill. I suppose that there could be circumstances in which a travelling circus chose to call itself something different, but people would still have to consider whether that enterprise or show included elements such as acrobats, clowns, variety acts and performing animals. If it did, there might be a common understanding that it would be reasonable to call it a travelling circus, even though it did not describe itself as such.
I am sorry to keep pressing you, but I have had experience of issues being perceived in a particular way but things turning out differently. If someone had a wild animal but it was not part of a circus, because no acrobats or whatever were involved, would that be covered under the proposed law? I see Angela Lawson shaking her head. There is a way round the bill: by not calling something a circus and not having acrobats in it, it will still be possible to have wild animals in it and we will not be able to touch it. Is that the case or not?
As we have described, if an act involves a single wild animal and there are no accompanying acts of a traditional circus nature, it will be, in effect, a single wild animal display or act.
I apologise for pursuing this, but would you class penguins, performing seals, zebras and llamas as wild animals?
The bill defines a wild animal as
“an animal other than one of a kind that is commonly domesticated in the British Islands.”
As penguins are not commonly domesticated in the British isles, they would fall under the definition of wild animals for the purposes of the bill. Zoos and safari parks would be outwith the scope of the bill, because they would not be regarded as travelling circuses.
I take it that you have never watched the penguins walk round at Edinburgh zoo.
I have, but that is not regarded as a travelling circus.
I apologise for pressing you, but my contention is that if someone wants to get round the bill, all that they need to do is remove the word “circus” from the show’s title and take out a few acrobats. As sure as tomorrow follows today, they will have got round the bill.
Such an act involving the performance or display of a single wild animal will be covered by our proposed registration and licensing requirements for all performing animals in circumstances other than those covered by the bill, if such an act is not already covered by the requirement to register under the Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925 or the public entertainments licence.
So if there were any kind of loophole, it would be closed.
Yes.
I agree that it is a difficult issue. In the south of Scotland, there is a display team that has owls and raptors in it. The staff pride themselves on the education that they do, which involves going into schools and promoting conservation. Is it correct that that would not be considered to be a circus?
Yes. It would not be commonly understood by the man in the street to be a travelling circus, so it would fall outwith the scope of the bill.
I come back to the definition of “circus”. Any law that is drafted should be as definite and clear as possible.
You say that you want to use the ordinary dictionary definition of “circus” but, as a solicitor, Angela Lawson, you must be aware that precedence will always be given to definitions that have been laid down in court or in existing legislation. How will the use of a dictionary definition overrule that?
11:15
We will make clear in the guidance exactly what is intended by the definitions involved. There is a definition in the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976, but the bill is not about the licensing of dangerous wild animals or zoos, and we would not necessarily lift a definition from an area of legislation that was not relevant to the legislation that we were dealing with. Even though a definition of “circus” has been provided in other contexts, those contexts—the Zoo Licensing Act 1981, for example—are not sufficiently similar that the definition there would overrule the ordinary dictionary definition in the bill.
Would that not be the first line of the appeal in the first case that was brought?
The Scottish Government has considered the issue and is of the view that it is better to rely on the dictionary definition and ordinary meaning of “circus”.
Are you confident that we are not creating messy legislation because of the fluffiness of the common definition of “circus”? The first thing that springs to my mind is travelling llama shows, which have been mentioned. Are llamas wild animals? They are not native to the United Kingdom. Are they commonly domesticated? The more this conversation goes on, the more I see opportunities for misinterpretation—including deliberate misinterpretation—of the bill. Are you confident that the bill will not give rise to the kind of claims that Alexander Burnett and Richard Lyle talked about? Could we do with a legal definition of “circus”?
There is the experience of England, where there is a similar definition of the animals that are covered and two circuses are licensed. I do not think that there have been difficulties in England and Wales because of confusion caused by other potential uses of animals. I think that the general public are quite clear about what a travelling circus is. The two in England have not visited Scotland for many years, so there has not been a travelling circus with wild animals in Scotland for several years. We are not expecting people to overthink the issue or suggest that particular activities are travelling circuses when a reasonable understanding of the term would suggest that they are not.
We cannot expect everyone to be reasonable. There are some determined animal rights people out there who might seek loopholes to stop travelling llama shows, which could be described as circuses. That is where I am coming from. We are not necessarily talking about people who are reasonable and who take a balanced view; we are looking at people who might want to push the law to an extreme. That might include animal rights activists who want all animal shows to be banned.
If such people took a case to court, the judgment would be based on a reasonable interpretation of what a travelling circus is, which would be the common understanding of the man in the street, rather than the argument that certain groups might put forward.
I think that the committee has covered the issues that we wanted to cover. If we have other questions, we will contact you in writing in due course. In the meantime, thank you both for your evidence, which has got us started on the process.
11:18 Meeting suspended.Next
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