The Horse Carriage industry, as seen by the NY Times

NYC-Teddy-horse

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[I]f only Teddy could talk. Then we would know what he thinks of the politicians and activists and drivers who argue about his future. He could expound on Manhattan traffic, its pollution, the cold, the heat, the hay and the shrieking girls clutching dolls who pet his nose on Grand Army Plaza.

Teddy is 11 years old, a Percheron-cross draft horse from Pennsylvania’s Amish country — a pinto with a coat the color of warm cocoa and whipped cream. He has blinders on. But even those in the know cannot foresee how long it will take for Mayor Bill de Blasio to fulfill his campaign promise to banish the Central Park carriage horses as his first legislative act.

The City Council, now led by the sponsor of a 2010 bill to ban horse-drawn carriages, Melissa Mark-Viverito, has yet to discuss the issue.

Activists who want to end the carriage-horse trade contributed more than $1.3 million to help elect Mr. de Blasio and council members who supported a ban with a solution: Replace all the horses with a fleet of antique-styleelectric cars to serve tourists, not just in Central Park, but all over the city.

The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has applauded the mayor for his stance. “The A.S.P.C.A. does not oppose horses working,” said Matthew E. Bershadker, the organization’s president. “We oppose horses pulling carriages in New York City. These horses are surrounded by buses, cabs and traffic. We believe that it no longer is, or never was, quaint or romantic.”

Fighting for survival, the Horse and Carriage Association of New York is working with the Cavalry Group, an animal-owners’ rights group. It has put up a website and thrown open stable doors to scrutiny.

Cornelius Byrne, 66, whose stable on West 37th Street houses 17 horses, said the industry cannot seem to win. “We can say forever that we take care of them,” Mr. Byrne said. “And these animal activists, they seem to be able to say, ‘No, you don’t.’ It goes on forever, this argument: ‘Are the horses happy?’ ”

Amid bitter accusations and assumptions from both sides, Teddy goes to work.

“You guys want a ride?” Teddy’s driver, Angel Hernandez, 28, casually asked passers-by last Sunday from the hack line on 59th Street, across from the Plaza Hotel.

Twenty minutes and $50 later, Mr. Hernandez was snapping pictures of a mother and daughter from London, who had arrived at Kennedy Airport at 2 p.m., dropped their bags at their hotel and come straight to the carriages.

“Ban them?” the mother, Lesley Fabri, 60, exclaimed after her ride. “That’s the whole reason we’re here!”

She came, she said, because she was enchanted by the scenes in the Robert Redford movie “Barefoot in the Park,” while her 25-year-old daughter, Nadia, was drawn by the carriages on the “Real Housewives” reality series. The women planned to return for a night ride.

Opponents of the carriage horses say that the industry is romanticism run amok. Drivers, stable owners and stable hands call it a career.

“I don’t think Bill de Blasio knows what he’s doing,” Mr. Hernandez said softly on Sunday, after watching a toddler grin with delight from petting Teddy. “Their main point is that we abuse the horses. At the end of the day, I make sure he’s O.K. first,” he said, nodding to Teddy, “and then I go home. That’s not abuse.”

Teddy works about nine hours on alternate days, Mr. Hernandez said, which includes the 20-minute commute from the Clinton Park Stables on West 52nd Street between 11th and 12th Avenues. At 9:20 a.m. that Sunday, with his white-and-magenta bridle plume bobbing, Teddy clip-clopped to the park, passing the showrooms of Mercedes and Mini.

Mr. Hernandez and Teddy had eight fares for the day, excellent for a post-holiday Sunday. Waiting on the hack line, Mr. Hernandez fed Teddy oat pellets and corn, and allowed tourists to feed Teddy carrots. He gave Teddy a manicure of sorts, applying black polish to his hooves. The front left hoof bore his number: 3527.

Mr. Hernandez himself earns $10 for every 20-minute ride, and $20 for the less common 40-minute rides that cost $90. He keeps whatever tips he gets. The rest he gives to Teddy’s owner, Angelo Collura.

Mr. Hernandez first rode horses as a child on his grandmother’s farm outside Mexico City. He came to New York as a teenager and worked for nearly five years as a stableman before studying to become a driver like his uncle. He and his wife, who works in a restaurant, live in the Bronx with their two children. After work, he goes to school to become an electrician.

“It’s hard to get another job,” Mr. Hernandez said, wearing faux-diamond studs in both ears. “It’s not like if I leave this, I’ll grab another job right away.”

Mr. Hernandez is one of 150 drivers operating 220 registered horses for 68 carriage medallions. The proposed ban would require the owners to relinquish their horses to rescue farms with the promise the horses would never work again.

“They are all bred to pull; their main and sole purpose is to pull,” said Stephen Malone, an owner, driver and spokesman for the carriage association.

Mr. Malone has been driving horses in the city for 26 years; his father did it before him. He is galled that an activist group is telling him he cannot run his business and then offering an alternative, the electric car, that could cost him $150,000 to buy outright.

“It’s an elitist class battle that we’re fighting,” Mr. Malone said. “If the bill passes we’ll have no choice but to take legal action.”

But Mr. de Blasio and Ms. Mark-Viverito have said the horses no longer have a place in New York.

“It’s over,” Mr. de Blasio said two days before taking office. Last week, Marti Adams, a spokeswoman for him, said, “The administration is looking at the most effective way to ban horse carriages, whether legislatively or other routes, and will move forward in the coming weeks.”

“It’s long past time we end these practices which treat the horses so cruelly,” Ms. Mark-Viverito said in a statement last week.Edita Birnkrant, the New York director of Friends of Animals, likened the horses’ working conditions to prison.

“They are shackled into their carriages, pulling through streets of a chaotic unnatural environment and go back to their cells,” she said. “They need the ability to graze and roam freely. They never get that in New York. They live a life of total confinement, day after day.”

Mr. Malone counters that the horses get their exercise by pulling in the park. And while they do not get to graze daily, horses take a mandated vacation to a farm for no less than five weeks each year. In 2010, the Council enacted legislation to improve the horses’ working conditions and increase drivers’ pay.

Horses are not allowed to work in temperatures below 18 degrees and above 90, but that does not factor in wind chill, humidity or pavement temperature. Their stalls must be at least 64 square feet. At all four carriage horse stables in Manhattan, each stall has a rubber mat and an inspection certificate, citing recent veterinary checkups. There are sprinklers in all the stables, fans and water hoses for drinking.

Dr. Harry Werner, a veterinarian in North Granby, Conn., and a past president of the American Association of Equine Practitioners, said he was asked by the carriage horse association to make an assessment of the horses’ working conditions in February 2010. Dr. Werner said that he and three other veterinarians paid their own expenses to observe four of the five stables then in operation.

“Based on that inspection, I found no evidence whatsoever of inhumane conditions, neglect or cruelty in any aspect,” Dr. Werner said last week, adding that he does not take a position on carriage horses. “The demeanor of the horses was, to a one, that of a contented horse.”

“What happens is that people anthropomorphize,” he said. “They see a circumstance where they wouldn’t want to work in it, and think a horse wouldn’t work in it.”

Mr. Hernandez said he takes his cues from Teddy. If he does not want to work that day, his head will be down. In that case, Mr. Hernandez would take out Shaggy, 18, another horse owned by Mr. Collura. The owner’s third horse, Rocky, also 18, has been on extended vacation for the last six months in Pennsylvania.

The city’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene monitors horse furloughs.

The A.S.P.C.A., until Jan. 1, had been the primary agent responsible for enforcement of animal anti-cruelty laws. But its 18 officers were cut to four, and the Police Department has taken over enforcement. A driver was arrested in December for overworking an injured horse, who was shown to have thrush, a common hoof infection.

Since 2011, there have been seven reported incidents involving horses: two collapsing and one dying, two getting spooked, and two involved in accidents with a taxi and an S.U.V.

Opponents cite these occurrences as evidence that the industry cares more about money than the animals. Stephen Nislick, who retired in 2012 as chief executive of the real estate company Edison Properties, founded the anti-carriage horse group NYClass, (New Yorkers for Clean, Livable and Safe Streets) in 2008, along with Ed Sayres, a former president of the A.S.P.C.A. Although a frequent critic of the stables, Mr. Nislick has not visited them. From seeing pictures, he said, he could tell the stalls were inadequate for sleeping and turning around, and that he believes the majority of the drivers and owners are only interested in working their horses.

“Do they care? Some of them care,” Mr. Nislick said. “Do the preponderance of them care? No. Can it be regulated? No.”

“It has nothing to do with horses,” said Kieran Kelly, 47, as he started his day at the Clinton Park Stables on West 52nd Street, sidestepping a pedicab driver from the garage next door. “It’s about politics.”

That two of the four stables happen to be sitting on prime real estate across from the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, near the Hudson Yards development, does not seem to be a coincidence to their owners.

Mr. Nislick and Wendy K. Neu, the chief executive of a real estate and recycling firm and an active NYClass board member, were major contributors to New York City Not For Sale, or NYCN4S, a group that spent $1,141,305 from April to August last year to oppose the mayoral candidacy of Christine C. Quinn. Ms. Quinn did not support a ban of the carriage horses. NYClass also contributed to NYCN4S’s campaign, and provided volunteers to the anti-Quinn effort.

The A.S.P.C.A. gave $50,000 to NYClass in the last year, records show. Mr. Bershadker, the A.S.P.C.A. president, said that the money was a grant earmarked for electric car research.

NYClass spent $202,225 in the four days before the primary in September, state campaign finance records show.

Mr. Nislick and Ms. Neu, who had supported Ms. Quinn in 2009, instead backed Mr. de Blasio.

“There’s so many people out there that do care about these issues and do see the connection between how we treat animals and how we treat people,” Ms. Neu said.

Mr. Nislick insisted that he was not after the stable owners’ real estate. The issue, he said, was the horses.

NYClass has paid $475,000 for Jason Wenig, a car designer based in Florida, to create a prototype for an antique-style car. It won’t be ready until the end of April, Mr. Nislick said, adding that it could be until the end of the year before his group finds space to build the cars in the city. Depending on how fast 68 cars could be rolled out, the horses would be phased out if a ban is passed.

Where the horses would go is the elephant in the room. “We will personally guarantee the rescue of any remaining horses,” Mr. Nislick said.

Owners like Colm and Ian McKeever, who are brothers, recoil at the prospect of giving their horses to the very entity that wants to abolish their business.

“It is excruciatingly expensive to keep a retired horse,” said Dr. Lisa A. Fortier, a professor of large animal surgery at Cornell University’s College of Veterinary Medicine. She also warned that some horses could end up being slaughtered. “A lot of those farms are closing down,” she said, “and that’s a lot worse fate than walking in New York City.”

Wayne Pacelle, the president of the Humane Society of the United States, said that his organization would place 40 to 50 of the 220 horses in sanctuaries. “It will be a challenge,” he said, “but it’s finite. If you continue the carriage-horse industry you have horses, for an indefinite time, being cast off and put at risk.”

At a farm in Oxford, N.J., Mr. Nislick keeps a former carriage horse, Chance, which he bought from a rescue farm in 2008 through a private investigator. Mr. Nislick, 69, said because of mistreatment during its working life, the horse had founder, a serious hoof condition, when he got it, and was going to be killed. However, the owner of the rescue farm, Christy Sheidy, said the horse had not been injured and was not in danger of being put down.

Some weekends, anti-carriage horse protesters shout expletives at the drivers in the hack line. On Sunday, they were missing. Instead, children and their parents celebrated birthdays and couples kissed in coaches after springing for the too-brief, but tranquil, ride.

A gaggle of eight girls, who took a stretch limousine in from Long Island for a 10th-birthday party, took rides before heading to the American Girl store nearby. When told the horses may go away, 9-year-old Sydney Lazare shook her head. “That is awful,” she said, indignantly, “What kind of a world is this?”

Another friend shrugged and said, “Can we go back to the limo now?”

Piper Augut, 10, from Yarmouth, Mass., had chosen Teddy because of her love for spotted horses. As the carriage turned off Avenue of the Americas into Central Park, Mr. Hernandez told Piper and her parents about movie scenes filmed there (“Home Alone 2,” “Love Story”).

Teddy passed the charging stations for the park’s hybrid vehicles.

The only thing that seemed to bother Teddy during nine hours of work on Sunday was when his stablemate tailgated him on 55th Street. He jerked the reins.

It was just before 6 p.m. when he pulled into the stable. Mr. Hernandez and a stableman unfastened the carriage. As soon as Mr. Hernandez took off the harness and bridle, Teddy bounded down the hallway to his stall and went straight for the hay. He was home.

Correction: January 26, 2014 

An article last Sunday about the battle over New York’s carriage horse industry quoted incorrectly from comments by an activist who wants to see the trade banned. The activist, Edita Birnkrant, called the horses’ environment a “chaotic, unnatural environment,” not a “chaotic natural” one. The article also misspelled the surname of a former president of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. He is Ed Sayres, not Say




Single-Issue Campaigns: The Building Blocks Of The Animal Rights Movement

ROLAND VINCENT
SPECIAL EDITOR, ECOSOCIALISM & ANIMAL RIGHTS
OpEds-Tactics & Strategies

Gary Francione

Gary Francione

[T]he appalling ignorance of some leaders in the Animal Rights movement is mind-numbing.
Otherwise well educated and informed, their grasp of strategy, history, and mass psychology is almost nil, and their personal successes have deluded them into thinking they are capable of wading into waters well over their heads. 

A case in point is Gary Francione, a respected lawyer, professor, and talented writer.

Using this tortured logic, Francione opposes campaigns against whaling, sealing, bullfighting, the dogmeat trade, elephant and rhino poaching, etc, as somehow supporting the slaughter of cattle, pigs and sheep.

 

Such campaigns are called “single-issue” campaigns, and their value extends far beyond their stated purposes.
Single-issue campaigns are the building blocks of social movements.
They cast the widest possible net to attract supporters.
They educate.
They develop personal, professional, and political relationships. They sway public and media opinion.
They recruit volunteers.
They develop leaders.
They train staff and provide experience for subsequent battles.

Mindless, juvenile, rejection of this most valuable and indispensable tool of the Animal Rights movement is tantamount to joining the other side.

However well intentioned Francione might be, he is as dangerous to the animals as the people coming at them with stun guns, knives, and scalpels.
He is undermining the Animal Rights movement under the guise of philosophical purity.
He is leading his followers down a road that leads nowhere.
It is a dead-end street lined with missed opportunity and self agrandizement.

Francione may be a brilliant lawyer, but his street smarts are still in the school playground.

 




Unless We Change Strategies, The Animal Rights Movement Will Fail

ROLAND VINCENT
SPECIAL EDITOR, ECOSOCIALISM & ANIMAL RIGHTS

The mass murder of animals implicit in factory farming is not enough for some people.

The mass murder of animals implicit in factory farming is not enough for some people.

Unless we change strategies, the Animal Rights movement will die.
Our present course is doomed to failure.
We are converting vegans at a slower rate than the human population is growing.
In a few short years, the movement will be an historical footnote.
Just as the numbers of animals needing rescuing is increasing, so is the opposition to all we do.
Sheer numbers will engulf us in a floodtide which we will not survive.

Unless we change course.

Clearly what we are doing is not working.
The Animal Holocaust continues, and promises to increase with the growing world population.
Even our recruiting is not keeping pace with the population.

Animal Rights, the concept that animals have the same rights to be here as do humans, and the same rights to be free of exploitation, slavery, and murder, requires government action. Only governments can recognize, protect, and enforce rights.
No government in the world has yet to recognize Animal Rights, and it is unlikely any will do so in our lifetimes.

But we can take steps to build a government that will do so in the future.
Or we can keep doing what we are doing and guarantee that Animal Rights will never be achieved.

To win Animal Rights we must recognize that our struggle is a political and social one. Animal Rights are just one of a host of rights that fall under the umbrella of Universal Rights: rights for women, children, people of color, gays, the elderly, the infirm, the poor, the homeless, the unorganized, and the underprivileged.

All of us face common enemies: the capitalist system which oppresses and exploits us, and the Conservative politicians who do the bidding of their capitalist masters.

Only by defeating the capitalist system that controls almost every country on Earth can we begin to change the world for humans and for animals.

We must build broadly based alliances with other rights advocates, join coalitions to defeat Conservative politicians and Conservative governments, here and abroad. We must take our necessary place in the leadership of the Left and assure that Animal Rights is always a top priority of every revolutionary effort, everywhere.

We must recognize we are not Americans, or Europeans, or Africans, or Asians.
We are Earthlings.
We are Revolutionaries.
We are the Future, if we wish to be.

 




Religion: The Enemy of Animals

Jain images

Jain images

Are you familiar with the Jains?
Probably not.
The Jains* are a small religious sect in India, with some adherents around the world.
They have been in decline for over 1,000 years.
Of all the world’s religions, only Jainism advocates against harming animals.
If I were religiously inclined, I’d be a Jain.

There are some in the Animal Rights movement who point to Jainism as proof that a religious belief system can impact public policy for animals, citing advances in laws in India largely resulting from Jain influence.

As far as it goes, they may be correct, at least as far as India is concerned.
However, beyond India, Jains have almost no influence.

And Jainism has no built-in evangelism or methodology to expand. Almost every Jain was born into the faith. There are no Jain televangelists, no Jain revival meetings, no Jain Witnesses knocking on doors or handing out tracts.

Jainism is dying. And with it any hope for a converting the world to a religion which preaches Do No Harm.

JAINnakoda_jain_temple

Animal Rights cannot, and will not, be won through religion.

The Abrahamic faiths (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) are based on the concept of dominion over animals. All three rely on the barbaric teachings of Moses, on animal sacrifice, on the spilling of animals’ blood, on a genocidal maniac of a god who demanded animals (and even humans) be killed and incinerated because he enjoyed smelling their burning flesh.

There are some folks who buy into the idea that Jesus was vegan. If they can sell the idea, I think that is wonderful. I don’t care why people stop killing animals as long as they do.

But mainstream Christianity is as steeped in animal blood as are Judaism and Islam. And the concept of dominion has justified atrocities for thousands of years.

If religion were an answer to animal abuse, exploitation, and murder, only Jainism is the correct answer.
And it is inevitably becoming irrelevant.

The answer to animal abuse, exploitation, and murder is government.
Not any government.
Certainly not capitalist controlled government.
The answer is government that places compassion over profits and animals over businesses that exploit them.
Government that will ban animal slaughter.
Ban animal consumption.
Ban animal experiments and testing.
Ban animals in entertainment and as sport.

A government that will guard animals’ rights as zealously as it guards human rights.
A government that will end the ownership of animals, just as it ends ownership of people.

It is, granted, very far in the future, if at all, but it’s worth fighting for.

_________________

ABOUT JAINISM

Jainism is India’s sixth-largest religion and is practiced throughout the whole country.

As per census there are about 4,200,000 Jains in the 1.028 billion population of India, but actually there may be around 80 lakh, majorly living in Rajasthan and Northern India, however, the influence of Jainism is far greater on Indian population that these numbers suggests. Jains are to be found in 34 out of 35 states and union territories with Lakshdweep being the only union territory without Jains. The state of Jharkhand, with a population of 16,301 Jains also contains the holy pilgrimage centre of Shikharji.




Shame: New York City papers working to defeat needed ban on horse-drawn carriages

Heavy propaganda by the NYC newspapers against the ban has turned the tide of public opinion which initially favored the retirement of horse-drawn carriages from the streets of congested New York.
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The Daily News—a scurrilous rag owned by tycoon Mortimer Zuckerman—has led the attack, putting mayor de Blasio on the defensive and giving his enemies more ammunition. 

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tell him that you want a ban of horse-drawn carriages THIS YEAR. Ask him to move on this now. If he delays it for three years or if there is another accident, it will hurt him politically. Tell him that you voted for him because he promised to ban the trade – and even on the first day he took office, which we knew was an impossibility. Now he has put a time frame on it until the end of the year. Click Here. Please be respectful.

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We will keep our eyes on Pumpkin. As has happened in the past, once a horse spooks in traffic, he generally is not put back into service and is sold.

WHEN IS ENOUGH ENOUGH? ANOTHER CARRIAGE HORSE ACCIDENT IN NYC.

When is Enough Enough? Another Carriage Horse Accident in NYC –– One Green Planet – 6/10/14 – There has been yet another carriage horse accident in New York City. On June 9th, a Belgian draft named Pumpkin was waiting at the hack line at Central Park South when something spooked him and he bolted, charging into the park, dragging his driverless carriage – coming at people. A tourist jumped into the carriage trying to control him. His driver was on the sidewalk and obviously not paying attention – something we often see. Mets outfielder Matt den Dekker, who was in the area, tweeted “Almost got ran over by a horse carriage running wild through the city.” What would have happened if he had been trampled and injured or worse? Would it have been a game changer?READ MORE CLICK HERE.

COMPETENCY AND PUBLIC SAFETY IN NYC CARRIAGE TRADE: PART 1

COMPETENCY AND PUBLIC SAFETY IN NYC CARRIAGE TRADE: PART 1 – 6/11/14 – Horse-drawn carriages don’t belong in New York City, and it’s not surprising when accidents happen. So when a 6-year-old Belgian draft horse named Pumpkin spooked and ran wildly into Central Park, pulling an empty carriage before smashing into an open taxicab door, we tallied the accident and breathed a sigh of relief that there were no fatalities or serious injuries. Not yet, anyway. The carriage trade wasted no time in brushing off the accident, dismissing it as a fluke and characterizing the response as an example of “professionalism” and good horsemanship. Nothing could be further from the truth — this accident was a disaster waiting to happen and the competency of the driver should be questioned.READ MORE CLICK HERE

 

Horse Carriage Ban the Only Meaningful Way to Protect NYC’s Carriage Horses Saverio Colarusso, the horse-drawn carriage driver charged with criminal animal cruelty in New York, is due back in court on June 16. Regardless of whether he cuts a plea deal or takes his case to trial, the allegation that he knowingly drove an injured horse (named Blondie) speaks volumes about the suffering that New York’s carriage horses endure.READ MORE CLICK HERE.

WE ARE ADVERTISING IN METRO

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you may donate here. Please remember we are all volunteer and do not take salaries. Every penny you donate is put back into the organization. We are the organization that began the “ban” campaign in 2006 and we plan to continue our ad campaign until this inhumane, unsafe and abusive trade is stopped. We are hoping Mayor deBlasio takes positive action soon.Thanks to all of you who have donated to our campaign. It is much appreciated.

 

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WE TOOK OUR CAMPAIGN TO TIMES SQUARE

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Anti-Carriage-Horse Activists Take Message To Times Square from the article: “He [Pumpkin] was running into the crowds, and he could have killed somebody,” Elizabeth Forel of the Coalition to Ban Horse Drawn Carriages told Kosola. “He could have killed himself.” Forel said activists often hand information to tourists where the carriages line up at Central Park. “We thought this time it would be interesting to get away from the hack line,” Forel said. When asked about Mayor Bill de Blasio’s promise to ban carriage rides, Forel said: “I think he’s going to do it. I wish he would move more quickly.”

One hurt in second horse-drawn carriage accident – For the second time in just over 24 hours, a horse-drawn carriage crash shut down the Taylor-Southgate Bridge and sent one person to the hospital. As a safety precaution following Thursday’s accident, a company vehicle with flashing lights was trailing the carriage on the bridge, according to authorities. Police said a distracted driver rear-ended the trailing vehicle, causing it to slam into the carriage around 7:15 p.m. Police said the operator was thrown from the carriage on to the pavement. They were taken to University of Cincinnati Medical Center with unknown injuries. The horse, who police said is named Jimmy, continued to drag the damaged carriage down the bridge into Newport. “The horse just came walking up to the street by itself, going really slow. As soon as it got to the red light it just stopped by itself and a bystander got out and held on to him until the cops showed up,” said witness Jill Schuler. A company worker told FOX19 their horses have been making the same route for years, which is probably why he stopped at the light even without an operator. Officials caught up with the horse near Newport on the Levee. A similar accident involving the same carriage company shut down the Taylor-Southgate Bridge on Thursday.

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