4 Ways to Urge the University of Washington to Close Its Cruel Primate Research Center
The federally funded Washington National Primate Research Center (WaNPRC) at the University of Washington (UW) rakes in tens of millions of tax dollars but hasn’t been able to abide by even the most basic animal protection laws. Monkeys have died from strangulation, starvation, dehydration, veterinary error, and choking on their own vomit. Internal documents reveal that in one recent eight-month period, the primate center had to treat a staggering 332 traumatic injuries (such as broken limbs and teeth), more than 200 cases of gastrointestinal problems, 149 cases of significant weight loss, 19 cases of rectal prolapse, and a dozen implant abnormalities.

Monkeys are sentient beings who experience pain, suffering, joy, and fear, just as humans do. In nature, they live in large family groups, forming strong bonds with one another. They play, eat, explore, and socialize together. They’re also empathic, often risking their own lives to help others. They need to be protected, not experimented on.
Please urge UW to close down its cruel primate research center by taking these four easy actions.
1. Call UW and leave a message.
Call UW’s Board of Regents at 206-543-1633. Leave a message politely urging it to close down the WaNPRC. Feel free to use our talking points:
- Close down the cruel UW primate research center. Torturing living beings is wrong, and monkeys don’t exist to be experimented on.
- Redirect resources away from primate experiments and toward cutting-edge, human-relevant, non-animal research.
- Retire the primates to reputable sanctuaries and give them the kind of life that they so richly deserve.
2. Contact UW on Facebook and X.
UW needs to close down the WaNPRC. It knows that the center hasn’t contributed to treatments for humans and that its experiments have helped to drive species of monkeys toward extinction. Post a comment on Facebook and X, urging the school to shut down the primate research center.
3. Email the university.
Email university officials and urge them to do the right thing and transfer the animals to sanctuaries.
4. Share this video from inside UW.
Share this video with friends and family on Facebook:
Thank you for your compassion for animals.