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Exxon Mobil confirmed to The Associated Press that the Irving-based oil giant will drop its sponsorship of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. The move came after Exxon Mobil, which has been a race sponsor since 1978, received pressure from one of its shareholders and the race’s biggest critic, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/distroscale-public/vplayer-parallel/20201216_1412/ima_html5/index.htmlhttps://c5x8i7c7.ssl.hwcdn.net/vplayer-parallel/20201216_1412/ima_html5/index.htmlhttps://c5x8i7c7.ssl.hwcdn.net/vplayer-parallel/20201216_1412/videojs/show.html?controls=1&loop=30&autoplay=0&tracker=4e32cbcf-1b43-434b-b8ca-8cd5f24484f7&height=300&width=533&vurl=%2F%2Fd14c63magvk61v.cloudfront.net%2Fvideos%2Fdgv_dallasnews%2F20210125055515_600e5a5f8357f%2Fdgv_dallasnews_trending_articles_20210125055515_600e5a5f8357f_new.mp4&poster=%2F%2Fd14c63magvk61v.cloudfront.net%2Fvideos%2Fdgv_dallasnews%2F20210125055515_600e5a5f8357f%2Fdgv_dallasnews_trending_articles_20210125055515_600e5a5f8357f_new.jpgFeatured on Dallas News

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“After careful review of sponsorships in light of current economic conditions, we’ve decided to conclude our sponsorship of the Iditarod following the 2021 race,” Exxon Mobil spokesperson Ashley Alemayehu said in an email to the AP.
“The health and safety of the dogs, and everyone involved in the event, has always been an important consideration for us,” Alemayehu said.
The Iditarod called Exxon Mobil a “great partner” in the race as well as the Iditarod Education program, saying in a statement that, “After careful review of sponsorships in light of current economic conditions, they have decided to conclude their sponsorship of the Iditarod following the 2021 race.”
Messages seeking comment from Iditarod officials were not immediately returned.SPONSORED CONTENT
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The loss amounts to $250,000, PETA said, but Exxon Mobil could not immediately confirm the sponsorship amount. In 2009, Exxon Mobil committed to giving the Iditarod $1.25 million over the ensuing five years.
“We’re glad that they have recognized that it’s absolutely bad for business when corporations support abusive industries and events like the Iditarod,” said Colleen O’Brien, a vice president for the animal rights group.
PETA has lobbied Exxon Mobil to drop its sponsorship of the race since 2007. In December, the organization submitted a shareholders resolution to “end all sponsorship of activities in which animals are used and abused and killed,” O’Brien said. PETA owns 102 shares of the company’s stock.
Exxon Mobil executives met with PETA on a teleconference on Tuesday, in which they confirmed they would end sponsorship. O’Brien said PETA then withdrew the resolution and canceled Exxon Mobil-targeted ads it had planned to run on buses in Anchorage, in the Anchorage Daily News and the Texas edition of The Wall Street Journal leading up to the March 7 start of this year’s race.
PETA also called off planned protests for at least a dozen ExxonMobil locations around the country.
The animal rights group has been targeting national sponsors of the race to end what it sees as the abuse of dogs it says are forced to run the thousand-mile race.
The group claims more than 150 dogs have died since the race began in 1973. The Iditarod disputes the number but has not provided the AP with its count despite numerous requests over the years.
PETA last year took credit when Alaska Airlines and Chrysler, through an Anchorage dealership, dropped their sponsorships after PETA conducted protests at the airline’s corporate headquarters in Seattle and the carmaker’s in Detroit. At the time, neither company confirmed PETA’s protests played a role in their decisions.
Other national sponsors that have dropped out include Wells Fargo and Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey.
The loss of Exxon Mobil leaves only one national sponsor of the race, Millennium Hotels and Resorts through its Anchorage location, the Lakefront hotel. It also serves as the Iditarod’s headquarters during the race.
O’Brien said they will contact Millennium Hotels and Resorts and “urge them to sever their ties with the race before they’re targeted next. We’re not going to stop until dogs are no longer forced to race until they’re dead.”
A message sent through the Millennium website seeking comment was not immediately returned.
The race’s other sponsors are Alaska-based businesses or those with close ties to the state.
The Iditarod normally starts in Willow, Alaska, about 50 miles north of Anchorage, and takes mushers and their dogs nearly a thousand miles over rugged Alaska terrain to the finish line in Nome. However, this year’s race has been scaled back to about 860 miles and will start and end near Willow.
Twelve mushers, including defending champion Thomas Waerner of Norway, have dropped out of this year’s race, leaving 53 teams.
That’s among the three smallest fields in the last two decades, and all in the last three years. Last year, 57 teams started the race and 33 finished. In 2019, 52 teams began the race.
This ad will end in 1 secondsDogs rescued after being caught in animal traps in frigid stream
By: Michele Newell, WPXI-TV
Updated: January 13, 2021 – 10:33 PM
DONEGAL, Pa. — Daniel Bogey said if he hadn’t shown up, two dogs would likely be dead.
“Heard this awful howling and yelping, and I thought it was a pack of coyotes,” he said.
He said he made a last-minute decision to check one of his properties in Donegal when he came across two dogs stuck in animal traps in the middle of a frigid, fast-moving stream.Content Continues Below
“That water was freezing cold. You wouldn’t even want to stand in it. That dog was probably in that water for well over an hour,” Bogey said.
He immediately called state police troopers.
“We were able to get the dog out of the trap and at least get him on the other side of the creek,” Bogey said. “The state trooper actually was able to pick him up. He went in with his uniform. He didn’t care.”
It took nearly three hours to get the dogs to safety. They were able to put blankets over them to help them start warming up.
Bogey said he found multiple traps that weren’t supposed to be there because it is private property. He confronted the person who put them there.
“He’s doing good now. He had his first meal. So he will get better,” Bogey said of one of the dogs.
A friend is caring for one of the dogs. The other one walked off after being rescued.
CLICK HERE if you want to donate to help with medical expenses for the rescued dogs.
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