Bird deaths shut down downtown Austin
By Jim Vertuno
Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Police
shut down 10 blocks in downtown Austin for several hours Monday after 63 birds
were found dead in the street, but officials said preliminary tests found no threat
to people.
Workers in yellow hazardous-materials suits
tested for contaminants in a cordoned-off section near the state Capitol and
the governor's mansion before authorities finally gave the all-clear in the
afternoon.
Although officials could not immediately
determine whether poison or something else killed the birds, "there's no
threat to humans at this point,'' said Assistant City Manager Michael McDonald.
The dead grackles, sparrows and pigeons will
be tested.
Some experts said the most likely cause of
the die-off was a deliberate poisoning. "It happens quite frequently,''
said Greg Butcher, director of bird conservation at the National Audubon
Society in Washington.
Grackles are a crowlike
bird regarded as a major pest in Texas, with Austin sidewalks
sometimes covered in their droppings.
The dead birds were found overnight along Congress Avenue, a
major downtown thoroughfare. Police closed the route through downtown and two
side streets, and a staging area was set up near the Capitol, with dozens of
fire trucks, police cars and ambulances.
The Capitol opened on schedule, however. And
the governor was not asked to leave the mansion.
Dr. Adolfo Valadez,
medical director for the Austin and Travis County Health and Human Services
Division, said the birds will be tested for signs of poison or viral
infections. But he said officials do not believe bird flu is involved.
It could be days or weeks before a cause is
determined, he said.