![]() She serves on Wendy’s International’s Animal Welfare Council. Suzi is a board member of the Cheetah Conservation Fund and a board member of Ocean Connections. At AZA, she served as a member of their Animal Welfare Committee, was a Program Animal Liaison for their Felid Taxon Advisory Group, and a Public Relations Liaison for the Cheetah Species Survival Plan. Suzi has been an active member of ZAA for ten years and currently serves on the Welfare Committee. She also assisted with fundraising for Tanganyika Wildlife Park, Akron Zoo, Brookfield Zoo, Chattanooga Zoo, Louisville Zoo, Toledo Zoo, Lowry Park Zoo, Alexandria Zoo, Dallas Zoo, Fort Worth Zoo, Blank Park Zoo, all the Busch Gardens, and all the Sea World Parks, just to name a few. In her 40+ years, Suzi has done a great deal of fundraising, creating events in Columbus for the Cheetah Conservation Fund. The ways in which the cheetahs participated voluntarily in the process, and the birth of two healthy cubs is, to Suzi, a special highlight of her career. ![]() Suzi was the driving force behind the first successful In Vitro Fertilization Transfer of cheetahs, which happened in 2020. She also assisted in acquiring four harbor seals, and an additional three sea lions from here in the US and oversaw the transfer of them all to Columbus. She assisted the zoo in acquiring seven sea lions from Shanghai, China, and oversaw their care and travel from there to Florida, and to their new home in Ohio. ![]() Suzi provided input on the design of the exhibit. In 2016, Suzi worked toward the opening of a 32-million-dollar exhibit, Adventure Cove, which opened in 2020. She also oversaw the Animals Program Department at The Wilds in Eastern Ohio (a second zoological park that the Columbus Zoo owns). Suzi also managed the cheetah population, hyenas, aardvarks, warthogs and hornbills, as well as the Animal Programs team in the Heart of Africa region. ![]() She went on to assist in the design and implementation of the watering hole concept at the Columbus Zoo’s “Heart of Africa” region. She oversaw and launched the memorable and impactful animal encounters that happen there. In 2009, Suzi helped design a ground-breaking exhibit (Animal Encounters Village) that allows visitors up-close and personal animal encounters. She’s also shared information across media channels (tv, radio, podcasts, online and print articles, and books) and has been prominently featured on National Geographic’s “Secrets of the Zoo.” A versatile and engaging speaker, Suzi has spoken to visitors on zoo grounds, at conferences, at fundraising events, and has worked numerous times with members of Congress as an advocate for zoos, animal welfare, and conservation. Suzi’s team did over 3,000 programs a year, always discussing not only animals, but conservation as well.įor 35 years, Suzi appeared weekly on a major television networks’ local show, educating people about animals, conservation, and the important work that zoos do. In further outreach, she created an ambassador program for schools-including trips to rural schools where a large percentage of the student body had never been to a zoo. She designed and implemented programs for local events such as fairs, company picnics, Kiwanis and Lions clubs, and more. Suzi developed the Ambassador Animals program in Columbus and utilized her ambassadors to educate and inspire. In time, the AZA called upon her expertise to create best practices protocols for hand rearing cheetahs, clouded leopards, and penguins, among others. She assisted in hand rearing baby animals for a variety of zoological institutions, as needed, becoming an expert in raising neonates not only for Columbus, but for many ZAA and AZA facilities as well. Suzi created a high school zoo program through a local technical school and created and taught a high school “Zoo School.”Īs the Director of Animal Programs, Outreach, and Animal Encounters, Suzi managed more than 20 fulltime staff and many seasonal employees, and she oversaw a collection of over 135 animals. Over time, she created summer experiences, camp-in programs, special Saturday programs, outreach programs, and preschool programs. As the Educational Coordinator, she managed staff and oversaw all on-grounds shows. In the Education Department, Suzi developed and implemented education programming. Suzi began her career working in the Education Department and later played a key role in developing the Promotions Department, in time becoming the Vice President of Animal Programs. She attended Ohio University, earning a degree in Health and Human Sciences and Education before embarking on a 40+ year career at the Columbus Zoo. Growing up in Columbus, Ohio, Suzi Rapp knew at an early age where she wanted to work: in zoos.
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