When I was a kid growing up in Florida my mom would take me to the aquarium where I would watch the dolphins and sea lions perform. The place we went to was on the beach and the tank was connected to the Ocean by a long tunnel and a gate. The dolphins they trained would naturally come at feeding time which required them to perform and jump to get the fish. Once the show was over they would go back out to sea. The only dolphins they kept in the tank full time were ones that were sick or injured that they rescued. These were what my mom refereed to as the dysfunctional dolphins. They would always refuse to perform and just swim hopelessly at the bottom of the tank knowing that they would get fed no matter what.
To this day I have never visited another aquarium with dolphins in captivity that were as happy as the dolphins that could go back to sea every night. I have been to many aquariums over the years including those in Atlanta, Corpus Christi, Baltimore, Long Beach, and Santa Fe. Dolphins are small, and well they aren't big enough or hungry to come after people. But they are of similar intelligence to Killer Whales.
Seaworld is currently operating on a 1.75% net margin, is fighting several class action lawsuits which it is trying to consolidate into one case in Florida, and is still seeing a drop in attendance quarter to quarter which accounts for close to 62% of its revenue. All this after a documentary was released that causes public outcry about the treatment of whales and their trainers with a demand that they be released into the wild. A few years later, rather then listen to the people who aren't visiting your parks, and aren't driving the big chunk of revenue, you announce that you are going to spend a bunch of capex money and give the whales a few hundred feet more of tank space. So how are you changing the public perception when the root cause of the issue is not the size of the tank, but the fact they are kept in captivity?
They are keeping essentially an inbred killer whale that is capable of swimming hundreds of miles a day in a 300 ft tank that it can swim the entire length off in about five seconds. As a result of that it from time to time gets pissed off and munches on people. Perhaps they look to much like seals or the smell like the fish, maybe its being forced to do three shows a day. I really think Sea World needs to release the whales, spend the capex on rides and new attractions, and focus on increasing the habitat size of animals that are of a more manageable size and behavior.
On April 13, 2015, a purported class action was filed in the Superior Court of the State of California for the City and County of San Francisco against
SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment, Inc., captioned Marc Anderson, et. al., v. SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment, Inc., Case No. CGC-15-545292 (the "Anderson
Matter"). The putative class consists of all consumers within California who, within the past four years, purchased tickets to SeaWorld San Diego. On May 11,
2015, the plaintiffs filed a First Amended Class Action Complaint (the "Amended Complaint"). The Amended Complaint alleges causes of action under the
California False Advertising Law, California Unfair Competition Law and California Consumers Legal Remedies Act. Plaintiffs' claims are based on their
allegations that the Company misrepresented the physical living conditions and care and treatment of its killer whales, resulting in confusion or
misunderstanding among ticket purchasers, and omitted material facts regarding its killer whales with intent to deceive and mislead the plaintiff and
purported class members. The Amended Complaint seeks actual damages, equitable relief, attorneys' fees and costs. Based on Plaintiff's definition of the class,
the amount in controversy exceeds $5,000, but the liability exposure is speculative until the size of the class is determined (if certification is
granted at all). On May 14, 2015, the Company removed the case to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, Case No.
15:cv-2172-SC. The case is in the preliminary stages and a response to the Amended Complaint has not yet been filed. On May 19, 2015, the plaintiffs filed
a motion to remand. This motion is set for hearing on August 28, 2015.