Could Lolita the killer whale finally be leaving her cramped tank at Miami Seaquarium and moving back home to Puget Sound?Obstacles remain, including the logistics of transporting the ailing 57-year-old, 7,000-pound orca from coast to coast and preparing her to live in the wild after five decades in captivity. New management defends careIrsay will join Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava; Eduardo Albor, CEO of Seaquarium’s owner, The Dolphin Company; and Pritam Singh, the real estate investor and founder of the nonprofit Friends of Lolita, which has collaborated in the past with the Whale Sanctuary Project on proposals to move Lolita, always opposed by Seaquarium’s previous owners. USDA has issued multiple critical inspection reports targeting poor water and food quality, animal deaths and injuries (Lolita’s jaw was injured in a jump) and underfed dolphins at the park, which leases its property from Miami-Dade County