Jack seems to have turned a final corner and relaxed even more the last little while. He's been playing with his toys like crazy.
Friday, October 31, 2008
Booty Beauty, Jack Takes a leap forward & Happy Halloween!
Jack seems to have turned a final corner and relaxed even more the last little while. He's been playing with his toys like crazy.
Labels:
Buttercup
Thursday, October 30, 2008
A letter to Mayor Peter Kelly about bylaw A300
So I said that last week a few people met with Mayor Peter Kelly about bylaw A300. Today we sent off a letter to him because he said that the proper protocol was to send him a formal letter requesting him to do something and he'd forward it off to the correct departemnt and his staff would send back a report and he'd report back to him. So that is what we did - and here's the letter we sent -
Mayor Peter Kelly
1841 Argyle St.
PO Box 1749
Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3J 3A5
October 30, 2008
Re meeting of October 22, 2008 regarding bylaw A300
Dear Mr. Kelly:
We would like to thank you for meeting with us and our associates on the morning of October 22, 2008 with our concerns about bylaw A300 as it’s currently written regarding what constitutes a dangerous dog and the definition of “threatening”. As discussed in our meeting we are enclosing the changes that we feel are appropriate to Bylaw A300.
In a staff report published after the public hearings on bylaw A300 last September, your Municipal Solicitor had recommend the following about the section on the definition of “threatening” and dog attack:
i). the definitions of both “bite” and “threatens” be deleted leaving the courts to assess whether within common parlance the animal has bitten or threatened the victim;
ii) the words “without provocation” be removed from “attack” definition consistent with the Calgary Bylaw; and
iii) remove the reference to “chase” leaving the courts to decide whether a threat exists as a result of a chase event.
All of those sections were left in – and Animal Control Services were allowed to determine the level of punishment that dog owners would face – up to and including the destruction of the dog. We would like it if the solicitor's recommendations would be addressed again.
What we would like to see discussed about with bylaw A300
1. Remove all reference to the term “threatening” because as defined a “threatening appearance” carries the same weight as a full attack that causes injury. A dog’s appearance alone should never be the judge of whether they are dangerous,
2. Remove section 2 (a),(b),(c),(d) and replace it with legislation that only allows a Justice of the Court to order the euthanization of a seized dog,
3. Add a provision so that there is a strict time limit when seized dogs are impounded and a court date is imposed so that undue trauma is not inflicted on the dog or the dog owner;
4. Issuing muzzle orders, notice to microchip dogs, or fines for failing to register a dog shouldn’t be part of the bylaw – they should be part of the Animal Control Officer’s guidelines/regulations and they should be able to issue them like they do fines.
5. You can go to court to dispute a parking ticket – but under bylaw A300 curently – you cannot automatically go to court to dispute the destruction of your dog – we would like a change implemented that will allow an accused dog owner a court appearance without having to file suit, which is currently the only recourse.
6. Animal Control Officers should be able to apply to have a dog deemed dangerous or vicious – but they should not be able to deem them such themselves. It is our opinion that only a judge – who uses material supplied to him by a veterinarian, a behaviorist, and others – should make that decision.
We are attaching model bylaws and actual bylaws from other jurisdictions in Canada and from organizations like the Canadian Association of Pet Dog Trainers and the National Companion Animal Coalition. We are also attaching an addendum showing which sections of these attachments we think have good sections that would work for Bylaw A300.
It is our belief that currently Bylaw A300 as it’s written puts every dog in danger in the Halifax Regional Municipality that looks a certain way – any dog can “appear threatening” to someone who is afraid of dogs or has a low tolerance for dogs – and under the bylaw as it’s currently written – that can constitute an attack. So when the call to Animal Control is made – whoever has the better story – the complainant or the defendant – is who the Animal Control Officer is going to believe – because when a “threatening” charge is made – there doesn’t have to be any physical evidence. This is very dangerous waters to be treading.
We are only three (3) people who are writing this letter – but by the HRM’s own estimates – there are anywhere from 46,500 to 93,017 dogs – and 46% of households own dogs in the HRM – that is a significant population of taxpayers who’s voice should be heard, and they are all worried about this issue.
Thank you for your time.
Respectfully,
Linda Koekman
Joan Sinden
Marc Boutilier
We also sent some attachments, and I sent some explanations of the attachmemnts and this is what I sent:
Attachments to Letter To Mayor Peter Kelly regarding proposed changes to Bylaw A300
1. An Enlightened Approach to Companion Animal Control for Canadian Municipalities – from the National Companion Animal Coalition:
The section that we think is important is under Section E – dangerous dogs where it talks about establishing what a dangerous dog actually is and one of the things it suggests saying is - “a dog that has shown the disposition or tendency to be threatening or aggressive” – this is a much better definition than what the HRM currently uses in it’s dangerous dog definition: “threatens any human being or animal”
2. Regional District of Central Okanagan Bylaw No 366:
We like this bylaw because the wording makes it very obvious that it’s the owner who’s at fault, and not the dog when a violation occurs – such as in section 2 when it reads: “Dangerous Dog means any dog that has been the subject of an owner’s conviction of an offence against Section 17.3 or 17.4 of this bylaw”
3. Canadian Association of Pet Dog Trainers – Proposed Dangerous Dogs Act:
Has several sections in it that are very good.
Article 2 (section 121) Talks about the “Judicial process” and how Animal Control Officers can petition the court to have an animal declared potentially dangerous or vicious – Animal Control Officers cannot do that themselves as they currently can here in the HRM. (section 122) talks about how strict time limits have to be imposed on that judicial process so that – like what has happened here in the HRM – dogs don’t languish in the pound, egregious amounts of money and personnel aren’t wasted, and public relation disasters don’t happen when cases are tried in the public.
Article 3 gives a sliding scale of aggression – with a location relevance (ie whether the incident happened on the dog’s home property or in a public place), and a situation relevance – whether they attacked a small animal, up to killing a child.
Mayor Peter Kelly
1841 Argyle St.
PO Box 1749
Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3J 3A5
October 30, 2008
Re meeting of October 22, 2008 regarding bylaw A300
Dear Mr. Kelly:
We would like to thank you for meeting with us and our associates on the morning of October 22, 2008 with our concerns about bylaw A300 as it’s currently written regarding what constitutes a dangerous dog and the definition of “threatening”. As discussed in our meeting we are enclosing the changes that we feel are appropriate to Bylaw A300.
In a staff report published after the public hearings on bylaw A300 last September, your Municipal Solicitor had recommend the following about the section on the definition of “threatening” and dog attack:
i). the definitions of both “bite” and “threatens” be deleted leaving the courts to assess whether within common parlance the animal has bitten or threatened the victim;
ii) the words “without provocation” be removed from “attack” definition consistent with the Calgary Bylaw; and
iii) remove the reference to “chase” leaving the courts to decide whether a threat exists as a result of a chase event.
All of those sections were left in – and Animal Control Services were allowed to determine the level of punishment that dog owners would face – up to and including the destruction of the dog. We would like it if the solicitor's recommendations would be addressed again.
What we would like to see discussed about with bylaw A300
1. Remove all reference to the term “threatening” because as defined a “threatening appearance” carries the same weight as a full attack that causes injury. A dog’s appearance alone should never be the judge of whether they are dangerous,
2. Remove section 2 (a),(b),(c),(d) and replace it with legislation that only allows a Justice of the Court to order the euthanization of a seized dog,
3. Add a provision so that there is a strict time limit when seized dogs are impounded and a court date is imposed so that undue trauma is not inflicted on the dog or the dog owner;
4. Issuing muzzle orders, notice to microchip dogs, or fines for failing to register a dog shouldn’t be part of the bylaw – they should be part of the Animal Control Officer’s guidelines/regulations and they should be able to issue them like they do fines.
5. You can go to court to dispute a parking ticket – but under bylaw A300 curently – you cannot automatically go to court to dispute the destruction of your dog – we would like a change implemented that will allow an accused dog owner a court appearance without having to file suit, which is currently the only recourse.
6. Animal Control Officers should be able to apply to have a dog deemed dangerous or vicious – but they should not be able to deem them such themselves. It is our opinion that only a judge – who uses material supplied to him by a veterinarian, a behaviorist, and others – should make that decision.
We are attaching model bylaws and actual bylaws from other jurisdictions in Canada and from organizations like the Canadian Association of Pet Dog Trainers and the National Companion Animal Coalition. We are also attaching an addendum showing which sections of these attachments we think have good sections that would work for Bylaw A300.
It is our belief that currently Bylaw A300 as it’s written puts every dog in danger in the Halifax Regional Municipality that looks a certain way – any dog can “appear threatening” to someone who is afraid of dogs or has a low tolerance for dogs – and under the bylaw as it’s currently written – that can constitute an attack. So when the call to Animal Control is made – whoever has the better story – the complainant or the defendant – is who the Animal Control Officer is going to believe – because when a “threatening” charge is made – there doesn’t have to be any physical evidence. This is very dangerous waters to be treading.
We are only three (3) people who are writing this letter – but by the HRM’s own estimates – there are anywhere from 46,500 to 93,017 dogs – and 46% of households own dogs in the HRM – that is a significant population of taxpayers who’s voice should be heard, and they are all worried about this issue.
Thank you for your time.
Respectfully,
Linda Koekman
Joan Sinden
Marc Boutilier
We also sent some attachments, and I sent some explanations of the attachmemnts and this is what I sent:
Attachments to Letter To Mayor Peter Kelly regarding proposed changes to Bylaw A300
1. An Enlightened Approach to Companion Animal Control for Canadian Municipalities – from the National Companion Animal Coalition:
The section that we think is important is under Section E – dangerous dogs where it talks about establishing what a dangerous dog actually is and one of the things it suggests saying is - “a dog that has shown the disposition or tendency to be threatening or aggressive” – this is a much better definition than what the HRM currently uses in it’s dangerous dog definition: “threatens any human being or animal”
2. Regional District of Central Okanagan Bylaw No 366:
We like this bylaw because the wording makes it very obvious that it’s the owner who’s at fault, and not the dog when a violation occurs – such as in section 2 when it reads: “Dangerous Dog means any dog that has been the subject of an owner’s conviction of an offence against Section 17.3 or 17.4 of this bylaw”
3. Canadian Association of Pet Dog Trainers – Proposed Dangerous Dogs Act:
Has several sections in it that are very good.
Article 2 (section 121) Talks about the “Judicial process” and how Animal Control Officers can petition the court to have an animal declared potentially dangerous or vicious – Animal Control Officers cannot do that themselves as they currently can here in the HRM. (section 122) talks about how strict time limits have to be imposed on that judicial process so that – like what has happened here in the HRM – dogs don’t languish in the pound, egregious amounts of money and personnel aren’t wasted, and public relation disasters don’t happen when cases are tried in the public.
Article 3 gives a sliding scale of aggression – with a location relevance (ie whether the incident happened on the dog’s home property or in a public place), and a situation relevance – whether they attacked a small animal, up to killing a child.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Some Updates
So RG did some digging - and she/he is right - the Carlton Free Press - the only newspaper that was following the Chapman Kennel dog killers - is publishing their last paper today. This is bad news for people who wanted to see the stories that they were publishing about them being followed up. That sucks.
Some good news - one of the fringe benefits of having my Charlie Loves Halifax website and this blog is the fact that I know a TON of people - so sometimes when I talk about dogs from the Dartmouth shelter - they get spotted in their new homes and I get to hear about their fabulous new lives - and guess who we're getting to hear about? ELVIS!!!
I got an email from a friend of mine who is a groomer out at Tailwaggrrs in Bedford - and here is what she emailed me -
So it would seem that Elvis's wait wasn't all for nothing - he did end up finding the perfect home for him. That is just super.

The opinions are in - I wrote a post about a truck with dogs in the back cab that I saw - and it had a window made specifically so that the dogs could stick their heads out - and I couldn't decide whether or not it was a humane thing for the dogs - and the comments all came back as being a good idea and good for the dogs. So I'll go with the public and say that it is a good idea - although one person did make a good point in that the dog can stick their whole head out of the window and if someone came close the dog could bite anyone walking by - leaving the owner open to not keeping the dog (and the public) safe - if the dog was being teased or tortured and lashed out.

I make no secret about the fact that Nathan Winograd is my hero - and next May 2-3, 2009 there is going to be something called the "No Kill Conference" in Washington DC that is being put on by his own organization - the No Kill Advocacy Centre. I couldn't stand it any longer, so this week I bought a ticket to the event, worried that the conference was going to sell out and there'd be no way I could go. So now I've bought the ticket - now I've just got to figure out how I'm going to get from Halifax Nova Scotia to Washington DC for May 2nd, 2009. Is Washington DC very far away from Nova Scotia? I get lost going to Dartmouth. Can I drive there? I guess maybe I should mapquest it...
Some good news - one of the fringe benefits of having my Charlie Loves Halifax website and this blog is the fact that I know a TON of people - so sometimes when I talk about dogs from the Dartmouth shelter - they get spotted in their new homes and I get to hear about their fabulous new lives - and guess who we're getting to hear about? ELVIS!!!I got an email from a friend of mine who is a groomer out at Tailwaggrrs in Bedford - and here is what she emailed me -
I was just sitting here on this wonderful Sunday morning and I decided to check this email account (because this is where the Dog Watch letter arrives!) and noticed the little write up about Elvis the AMAZING Cocker Spaniel, and I just had to let you now about my meeting with the little guy. Last Saturday I had a busy day of grooming and he was my last apointment of the day. A lovely couple had adopted him only a few days previous and they decided he had a couple of days to adapt and it was time for an ultimate spa treatment! From the second I met Elvis it was apparent that his new owners thought the sun rised and set for Elvis alone!! And after meeting the little guy I started to believe it too. This guy has had a rough go of things in his past but that certainly hasn't dampered his spirit in the least. This little man would take every opportunity to give kisses that he could! I am not sure if you have had the chance to meet the handsome little man in person, or if you knew that he had found a wonderful forever home, but I had to let you in case that you hadn't.
It is because of dogs like Elvis (and Daisy, one could never forget Daisy!) that my job is the best job in the entire world!!!
So it would seem that Elvis's wait wasn't all for nothing - he did end up finding the perfect home for him. That is just super.

The opinions are in - I wrote a post about a truck with dogs in the back cab that I saw - and it had a window made specifically so that the dogs could stick their heads out - and I couldn't decide whether or not it was a humane thing for the dogs - and the comments all came back as being a good idea and good for the dogs. So I'll go with the public and say that it is a good idea - although one person did make a good point in that the dog can stick their whole head out of the window and if someone came close the dog could bite anyone walking by - leaving the owner open to not keeping the dog (and the public) safe - if the dog was being teased or tortured and lashed out.

I make no secret about the fact that Nathan Winograd is my hero - and next May 2-3, 2009 there is going to be something called the "No Kill Conference" in Washington DC that is being put on by his own organization - the No Kill Advocacy Centre. I couldn't stand it any longer, so this week I bought a ticket to the event, worried that the conference was going to sell out and there'd be no way I could go. So now I've bought the ticket - now I've just got to figure out how I'm going to get from Halifax Nova Scotia to Washington DC for May 2nd, 2009. Is Washington DC very far away from Nova Scotia? I get lost going to Dartmouth. Can I drive there? I guess maybe I should mapquest it...
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Halloween Pug Party and Bark & Fitz!






Saturday, October 25, 2008
Dogs in cabs of trucks part 2
Last summer I was behind a basset hound flailing around in the cab of a truck - today I was in the parking lot of Value Village, and I saw this truck - with an interesting thing in the back instead of a window in the cab of the truck - a whole made specifically so that the dogs could stick their heads out.
It doesn't seem to me as if this is really sufficient so that the dogs can get adequate ventilation for their bodies though?
I don't know - people who own siberian huskies seem to think they've got the answers to everything in this world and everyone else is wrong about everything when it comes to dogs and how they should be treated, so maybe I'm wrong - but I don't think this is particularly humane.

Friday, October 24, 2008
Some Cute Photos to end the day
The dogs all seemed to be in a really good mood, so it seemed like a good time to get the camera out
Daisy especially was on fire


Labels:
photos
Pit Bull Law in Ontario loses Appeal

We don't have any reason to travel to Ontario anymore - they've proven that they're a province full of idiots, or at least their government and judicial system is. Today the Ontario Court of Appeal came out with their report on what they were going to say about the ban on pit bulls that was instituted in - 2005 - and they decided to not only uphold it, but to also bring back all the stuff that was lost when the court case was originally decided last year. So it's bad news all around - especially what the judges said about pit bulls.
Here's what the Canadian Press reported the Judges said:
Ont.'s highest court says pit bulls are 'unpredictable' dogs, upholds ban
TORONTO — Pit bulls are dangerous and unpredictable dogs that have the potential to attack without warning, the Ontario Court of Appeal said Friday in a decision upholding the province's ban on the animals.
The Ontario government enacted the Dog Owners' Liability Act in 2005 to ban the breeding, sale and ownership of pit bulls after several incidents in which the dogs attacked people.
The Appeal Court ruled Friday that the ban on the breed does not violate any constitutional rights, as lawyers had argued.
The law survived a constitutional challenge in March 2007, though some changes were ordered. Superior Court Justice Thea Herman said a ban on "pit bull terriers" was unconstitutionally vague because it didn't refer to a specific type or breed of dog.
But the Appeal Court disagreed, restoring the law to the form in which it was enacted.
"The total ban on pit bulls is not 'arbitrary' or 'grossly disproportionate' in light of the evidence that pit bulls have a tendency to be unpredictable and that even apparently docile pit bulls may attack without warning or provocation," the judges said in their decision Friday.
"This evidence of unpredictability provided the legislature with a sufficient basis to conclude that the protection of public safety required no less drastic measures than a total ban on pit bulls."
Lawyer Clayton Ruby, who challenged the law, called it a "sad day" in Ontario.
"Kind, loving, gentle dogs are being killed across this province for no reason," he said in a statement.
"The provincial government should focus their efforts and resources on identifying truly dangerous dogs rather than apprehending and killing dogs that pose no threat at all."
Ruby said he is considering an appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.
Jean-anne Moors of Banned Aid, a coalition fighting the ban, said the group knew it was fighting an uphill battle against the government, but she is still "very disappointed."
"I have three so-called pit bull-type dogs who are all legal under the law," she said, meaning she owned the dogs before the law came into effect and they are muzzled when out in public.
Still, she said, "Everybody's looking at me as if I'm some kind of criminal when I walk down the streets with my dogs. They have no history of aggression."
Moors said the law sets a troubling precedent because it's not just a pit bull issue.
"If a government ... can make such an arbitrary decision that a dog is a bad and dangerous dog and seize it under certain circumstances and destroy it ... that's a matter of concern to anybody who has a dog - period."
Ontario Attorney General Chris Bentley said he was pleased the court upheld the legislation.
"We brought in the legislation because it was important to keep people safe, and our province will do whatever it takes to keep the people of Ontario safe," he said.
What I say to that last paragraph is - Attorney General Chris Bentley has given himself and all Ontarians a very false sense of security.
There is also the case of Rambo - a pit bull type dog who was kept in a cage from December until a couple weeks ago - when he was set free so he could come to shangri-la, also known as Nova Scotia - read the article all the way to the bottom - and you'll find some very true sentences.

Death Row Dog Set Free
October 8, 2008 03:15 PM - In the end, Gabriela Nowakowska had to put the interests of her dog Rambo ahead of her own.
"It was very difficult losing my dog," the 21-year-old Mississaugan said, referring to the fact that Rambo was picked up last Christmas Day and has been held in a cage at the Mississauga animal control centre ever since. "But now, Rambo is going to have a life and he's going to be free."
The dog, who has been held at the City's animal control centre on Central Pkwy. for the past nine months, is headed for a farm in Nova Scotia run by Ador-A-Bull Dog Rescue after a deal was struck in a Mississauga courtroom early this afternoon.
Nowakowska pleaded guilty to possessing an illegal dog and received a suspended sentence.
Rambo, who was examined by a veterinarian yesterday and found fit, will be transferred by the rescue group to the East Coast, where he will be trained with a number of other dogs and then could be adopted to a loving home.
"As long as the dog goes free, that's what I want," Nowakowksa told The News a few minutes after the ruling. "The only thing that's important to me is that he's still alive."
Justice of the Peace Karen Jensen commended Nowakowska, who works two minimum-wage part-time jobs as a waitress and at a deli counter, for her efforts on behalf of Rambo. "You've suffered the loss of your dog but you have made some gains ... for which you are to be commended."
Those gains include the change in City policy that now permits dogs like Rambo accused of being pit bulls to be sent to another province rather than automatically being put down.
The City's application to execute Rambo will be withdrawn Oct. 20 if all goes well.
"By then, he should be in a whole new province and everyone's happy," the Justice of the Peace said.
Nowakowska's lawyer, Anik Morrow, told the court that as time passed his client realized that nothing could be gained by going forward. "Her concern is ultimately the dog," she said.
Rambo is now much bigger and it would be difficult for his owner to care properly for him in her apartment, the lawyer said.
"We are now seeing the impact of the long-term incarceration of the dog," Morrow said, noting the animal has begun to groom himself frequently, which is often a sign of stress.
The City agreed to waive the pound fees for Rambo, who has been kept for the longest-time ever at the shelter. Those fees were estimated at $3,000.
Elaine Buckstein, the City's director of bylaw enforcement, commented that, "whether you agree with it or not, we have to enforce the law. The shelter staff did an excellent job of housing Rambo for eight months."
Ward 6 Councillor Carolyn Parrish, who championed Rambo's cause, was "delighted" at the outcome.
"We've learned from this that this law is very difficult to enforce and it breaks people's hearts," the councillor said. "Saying that something looks like something else is a very poor basis for a law."
Nowakowska was convicted of owning a dog that was "substantially similar" to breeds of dogs generally known as pit bulls.
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pit bulls
My Service dog is more special than your dog
On the news tonight there was a lady named Helen McFadyen and her service dog Opal. A couple months ago I found her blog, which she's called "Wise Advice
Wise Advice from Helen McFadyen aka LabLady" - which I assumed was her talking about her life as a blind person living with her service dog in Halifax. But what it is actually is one long rant about how everybody in the world is really horrible to her because she is blind and nothing in life is fair because she is blind, and no one makes any concessions to her because she is blind, and no one understands her because she's blind. I was rather blown away actually how one person could hold that much self-absorbtion. I would have felt bad if I wasn't so repulsed. So I didn't do my usual thing of letting other people know that I had found a local blog - I just clicked out of it, and let it go.
But tonight she was on CTV news actually saying - that HRM should provide her and her dog - and other people with service dogs with sole access to off-leash space. What she actually says in the below video is that - if there are "normal sighted dog owners" at the dog park - they MUST LEAVE - so that the blind person and their service dog - can have some off leash exercise - because she doesn't trust other people's dogs with her dog.
What has every other service dog and their owner been doing up until now? When I am at Point Pleasant Park - I have seen tons of service dogs there off leash with their owners having a hell of a time off leash - with no problems whatsoever.
She says it's because her dog cost $35,000 - well, do you know what? My dogs are PRICELESS. I don't know if I've heard quite so ridiculous a proposition in a long, long time. I really hope the City does not continue pretending to enable her quest, because if it does - I want MY OWN DOG PARK TOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Wise Advice from Helen McFadyen aka LabLady" - which I assumed was her talking about her life as a blind person living with her service dog in Halifax. But what it is actually is one long rant about how everybody in the world is really horrible to her because she is blind and nothing in life is fair because she is blind, and no one makes any concessions to her because she is blind, and no one understands her because she's blind. I was rather blown away actually how one person could hold that much self-absorbtion. I would have felt bad if I wasn't so repulsed. So I didn't do my usual thing of letting other people know that I had found a local blog - I just clicked out of it, and let it go.
But tonight she was on CTV news actually saying - that HRM should provide her and her dog - and other people with service dogs with sole access to off-leash space. What she actually says in the below video is that - if there are "normal sighted dog owners" at the dog park - they MUST LEAVE - so that the blind person and their service dog - can have some off leash exercise - because she doesn't trust other people's dogs with her dog.
What has every other service dog and their owner been doing up until now? When I am at Point Pleasant Park - I have seen tons of service dogs there off leash with their owners having a hell of a time off leash - with no problems whatsoever.
She says it's because her dog cost $35,000 - well, do you know what? My dogs are PRICELESS. I don't know if I've heard quite so ridiculous a proposition in a long, long time. I really hope the City does not continue pretending to enable her quest, because if it does - I want MY OWN DOG PARK TOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Videos
Thursday, October 23, 2008
SPCA starts over

Nova Scotia SPCA spokesman Sean Kelly says the animal-welfare agency wants to be more transparent and accountable
It’s back to square one for Nova Scotia’s SPCA, after the volunteer organization weathered an enduring storm of controversy and bad publicity, officials said Wednesday in Halifax.
Spokesman Sean Kelly said the animal-welfare agency, which has a new board of directors, wants to be more open with its membership and effective in helping provincial chapters.
The group has been plagued by infighting and criticized for its handling of a couple of high-profile animal-cruelty cases.
It revoked the membership of five people after the annual meeting in the spring; those members have been reinstated and received a public apology Wednesday.
Mr. Kelly and two colleagues told a news conference the SPCA wants to be more transparent and accountable. Part of the group’s redemption plan includes hiring more special constables to investigate cases and employing an executive director to manage the organization.
“All of that support is going to trickle down to us having more resources, more time, more money to move toward supporting the (SPCA’s) branches,” Mr. Kelly said.
Board secretary Mary Hill acknowledged fundraising efforts have been harmed by past negative publicity. She said the new board has a different outlook than the former, including encouraging constructive criticism, and has put policy statements on its website.
In the past, SPCA members have said they were muzzled by higher-ups in the agency who imposed “a gag order” on complainers. Squabbling in the ranks threatened the group’s ability to carry out its animal-protection duties.While the SPCA has its bylaws and form of governance, the organization falls under the Animal Cruelty Prevention Act, which is governed by the provincial Agriculture Department.
Compliance officer Petra Mauerhoff said the SPCA wants to improve as an organization and leave its former troubles behind.
“What it comes down to,” she said, “is we’re really starting in a way from scratch.”
Ms. Mauerhoff said the group has “very ambitious” rebuilding plans but stressed progress will appear slow.
“We don’t want to rush forward, fall on our face and then have to start again,” she said. “We want to do it right the first time.”
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NS SPCA
Yesterday's NS SPCA press conference
I always get sick after exciting things - so right after the press conference yesterday I basically came home and went to bed and didn't get up until now - almost 24 hours later, and I am still not feeling very well. My brain can't handle all the neuron activity that it takes to actually go and meet a mayor and then watch as a humane organization apologizes to you and your friends. So I'm glad that days like yesterday don't happen too often.
I thought that Sean Kelly and Mary Hill and Petra did super super well at the press conference though, I know how nervous that they probably were - and they came off as being really professional, well prepared - and the things they said were all fabulous.

They were so great that instead of using a free ticket to go to the Cause for a Paws on November 1st - I've called the Neptune Box office at 429-7070 and paid the $75.00 and purchased a ticket - so that the SPCA will get my money instead because I know how important it is that the Cause for a Paws is a success at this time in the very currently delicate history of the NS SPCA.

I hope that any of us who has an extra $75 hanging around (and I know that not a lot of us do, really) - will show the new Board that we agree that this is a now or never situation - and we are willing to support the work that they think is most important right now - and not everyone's own personal agendas - because that is what led this organization into near disaster. We have to have faith that because we know that they are in fact good people - they are doing the right things. And I am willing to support that.
We all want a positive future for the NS SPCA and all it's branches in Nova Scotia. And as Sean said - it's time to put the human politics behind - and the dog politics in the front. That sounds very good to me. I don't want to see all the work that Sean and Mary Hill have put into trying to turn around the organization not be recognized - so I am happy about the direction that they want to go - I hope that they are as good salesmen as they are board members - because their work has just started - and they have got a very difficult job to do, that's for sure.
Believe it or not, I'm a very positive person - and I want to be part of an organization that's doing good things - I am quite sure that yesterday's press conference was meant to be the starting point of showing the good things that have already happened, and now we're going to start to see some fruition of the plans they've already implemened - I personally can't believe that Sean Kelly, Mary Hill, and Kat Horne have been able to stand the barrage of constant criticsm in the last months - and still do the amount of good work that they've done - and I think they deserve a huge amount of credit for that. And now we can saddle up and ask them - how can we help you?
They were so great that instead of using a free ticket to go to the Cause for a Paws on November 1st - I've called the Neptune Box office at 429-7070 and paid the $75.00 and purchased a ticket - so that the SPCA will get my money instead because I know how important it is that the Cause for a Paws is a success at this time in the very currently delicate history of the NS SPCA.
I hope that any of us who has an extra $75 hanging around (and I know that not a lot of us do, really) - will show the new Board that we agree that this is a now or never situation - and we are willing to support the work that they think is most important right now - and not everyone's own personal agendas - because that is what led this organization into near disaster. We have to have faith that because we know that they are in fact good people - they are doing the right things. And I am willing to support that.
We all want a positive future for the NS SPCA and all it's branches in Nova Scotia. And as Sean said - it's time to put the human politics behind - and the dog politics in the front. That sounds very good to me. I don't want to see all the work that Sean and Mary Hill have put into trying to turn around the organization not be recognized - so I am happy about the direction that they want to go - I hope that they are as good salesmen as they are board members - because their work has just started - and they have got a very difficult job to do, that's for sure.
Believe it or not, I'm a very positive person - and I want to be part of an organization that's doing good things - I am quite sure that yesterday's press conference was meant to be the starting point of showing the good things that have already happened, and now we're going to start to see some fruition of the plans they've already implemened - I personally can't believe that Sean Kelly, Mary Hill, and Kat Horne have been able to stand the barrage of constant criticsm in the last months - and still do the amount of good work that they've done - and I think they deserve a huge amount of credit for that. And now we can saddle up and ask them - how can we help you?
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NS SPCA
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
NS SPCA Press Conference Today
Today the new PR board members of the NS SPCA had their first press conference - and I went with my little camera and taped it, you can watch it below.
After they read their apology to the members who had their memberships revoked (myself being one of them) and then specifically said about me that my dog Jack was legally adopted from Animal Rescue Coalitions - the camera work gets a bit shakier than usual - because I have to admit - I got teary eyed. I didn't think I would, but I guess the strain all these months of the goings on and the threats of the cruelty investigators coming and taking Jack away - and knowing now that they've officially acknowledged that they're not going to do that - really hit me at the press conference. It may also have been because I had 4 hours of sleep because I also had a meeting this morning with Mayor Peter Kelly about bylaw A300 and I was getting ready for that - but that's another post.
So anyway - here's the video of the press conference -
After they read their apology to the members who had their memberships revoked (myself being one of them) and then specifically said about me that my dog Jack was legally adopted from Animal Rescue Coalitions - the camera work gets a bit shakier than usual - because I have to admit - I got teary eyed. I didn't think I would, but I guess the strain all these months of the goings on and the threats of the cruelty investigators coming and taking Jack away - and knowing now that they've officially acknowledged that they're not going to do that - really hit me at the press conference. It may also have been because I had 4 hours of sleep because I also had a meeting this morning with Mayor Peter Kelly about bylaw A300 and I was getting ready for that - but that's another post.
So anyway - here's the video of the press conference -
Labels:
NS SPCA
Monday, October 20, 2008
Zeus Update!
Yea! I got an update from Zeus's owner tonight! Here is what he said: He is doing great!!! he really is a special guy. We ve really been able to bond the last few months and he has come full circle when it comes to obediance.
He still is ot great with other dogs but follows direction when we are near another K9
I admit he is getting alittle spoiled but he deserves it and we are making up for lost time. In a few short weeks he has moved from having his doggie bed , to getting his spot on the couch to now sleeping on the bed. he has a funny way of guilting me with his eyes, even now he sits beside me whining to go home.Isn't that awesome? I love the photoshopped photo too - that is just too cute. Zeus the bon-vivant business man. That is just super. Who would have thought that was his true calling, eh?
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zeus
"animal ownership is doomed if Obama becomes our next president"
What do you think about the title of this blog post. Is that ridiculous, or what? Well that topic was sent in an email to me today by a Yahoo group called "BSL Updates".
It was written by John Yates - of the American Sporting Dog Alliance - the same group that is against any kind of legislation that would help put puppy mills or puppy mill brokers out of business because it might potentially infringe on the freedoms of hunters or hobbyists. I'm going to paste the email below because it is so absolutely outrageous it is quite unbelievable and funny.
And it is seemingly endorsed by other right wing animal rights activists - who have said of Barack Obama - "HSUS endorses Obama..........hmmmm...BTW he is FOR GUARDIANSHIP and not ownership folks."
So in other words they are saying "DON'T VOTE FOR OBAMA".
When did this world turn upside down and the Democrats down in the United States become an extremist party that's going to end the world as we know it?
Here's a quote from the letter:
John Yates is saying all of this as if it's a BAD THING!!! Can you believe this horse shit?
I think what this letter exposes is the paranoia, craziness, and wish to exploit animals that organizations like the American Sport Dog Alliance, the American Dog Owners Association, the National Animal Interest Alliance, the Centre for Consumer Freedom - want you to think is actually concern for your rights as a dog owner. It's all bullshit - it's all about protecting the right to make money for puppy mills, and the right to shoot animals for hunters. It's hooey.
Here's the email from John Yate that was sent out today:
Date: Mon, Oct 20, 2008 at 4:33 PM
Subject: [BSL-UPDATES] Fw: Obama And Dog Owners
To: update
To Dog Owners Who Support Obama
Is Your Freedom To Own Dogs The Most Important Issue?
by JOHN YATES
American Sporting Dog Alliance
http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org
asda@csonline.net
The 2008 presidential election has become emotionally charged for dog owners, resulting in a virtual brick wall that divides supporters of Democrat Barack Obama from those of Republican John McCain. The two candidates present a stark contrast in both style and substance.
As the campaign draws to a close, neither side seems willing to listen to the other.
We are asking Obama supporters to hear us out, but want to be up front from the beginning. The American Sporting Dog Alliance is opposed to Obama’s candidacy because of his close relationship with the Humane Society of the United States and his political alliances with several key animal rights movement supporters in Congress. We also think he has been dishonest about his views regarding hunting and firearms, and these are issues of major importance to many of our members.
The American Sporting Dog Alliance sees this election as a watershed for animal owners. We think that its outcome will determine the future of the private ownership of animals in America.
We are convinced that animal ownership is doomed if Obama becomes our next president.
Some people may ask if this is really important in comparison with the candidates’ views on foreign policy, the economy and social issues. The truth is that animal issues have played no role in this election for mainstream voters, because the news media, political pundits and politicians have not identified them as important.
But they are important to us.
We also believe that these issues should be important to everyone, because the way Obama would implement the animal rights agenda is a perfect microcosm of his views on the future of America. Those views accurately predict Obama’s approach to foreign policy, the economy and social issues.
Throughout American history, animal ownership has been regarded as a personal choice. Each individual has had the freedom to own animals or not, to eat them or not, to enjoy them or not, and to hunt or not to hunt.
It has been freedom based on the idea of “live and let live.” You do your thing, and I’ll do mine.
The principle was to create a society that is based on the maximum possible amount of freedom for each American to live the way that he or she chooses.
America was founded on the simple yet radical principle that the purpose of human life was to be happy. The Declaration of Independence used the words “pursuit of happiness” as a vital aspect of freedom. What makes a person happy was seen as each person’s private choice. Government was seen to exist only as a way to ensure the greatest opportunity to make and pursue personal choices.
“Happiness” was not mentioned specifically in the Constitution or Bill of Rights, because it was seen as a given. Those documents attempted to create a government that provided the greatest possible opportunity to pursue choices in one’s life, and to protect Americans from both foreign and domestic threats to our freedom to make personal choices and live our lives accordingly.
All of the complex protections of due process, voting rights, civil rights, checks and balances on political power, and redress to the courts boil down to exactly that: Protecting our freedom to make and live by personal choices.
Our relationship with animals is one of the choices each of us has had the freedom to make and live by. It was part of our American identity, and still is for most of us.
It was all about the freedom of the individual.
In the Twentieth Century, however, a new philosophy swept over much of the planet: Collectivism. It boils down to a belief that “social good” is more important than the individual. It defines benefit to society as a higher value than benefit to the individual.
It was a philosophy of sacrifice, maintaining that each person should be willing to sacrifice him or herself to “the greater good,” which was defined by the collective. In real life, the collective usually translates into government and those who have the power to influence it.
This philosophy was at the heart of Marxist/Leninist thought, and it also was the underpinning of Nazi ideology. In both cases, the collective – that is, government – became the sole arbiter of how people must live. Government existed under the pretext that its job was to define and promote the common good. This was seen as the highest value – not freedom!
Collectivism actually is a very old idea that reached its greatest influence during the Medieval Period of European history, when the concept of individual freedom was viewed as heretical. During the Dark Ages, the purpose of human life was to serve and glorify the monarchy and the church. A belief in basic human rights and individualism often led to being burned at the stake.
In light of this historical background, the American emphasis on personal freedom was truly revolutionary. It’s core belief is that the job of government is to protect freedom so that people could live the way they choose. Many people mistakenly believe that this was meant only to protect people from religious and political oppression.
In fact, it was meant to protect the individual from any kind of oppression that threatens the individual pursuit of happiness and fulfillment. The right to own and enjoy property was a major issue for the founding fathers, as this is basic to the freedom to pursue happiness.
Obama represents the modern reincarnation of collectivist thought, and his views and alliances on animal rights issues illustrate this clearly.
The endorsement of Obama’s candidacy by the radical Humane Society of the United States should send up a hailstorm of red flags for anyone who values individual freedom. The HSUS ideology embraces collectivism in its purest form.
Without exception, every political position advocated by HSUS boils down to a belief that individuals have an obligation to society to sacrifice individual freedom in order to achieve the “common good” – as defined by HSUS. Every HSUS position tells animal owners that they must sacrifice their own freedom in order to pay for the sins of a few people who treat animals callously.
For example, everyone knows that there are a few bad “puppy mills” in America that should not be allowed to exist. All of us would agree with that statement, including owners of commercial breeding kennels.
But HSUS argues that these few bad kennels make every breeder of dogs suspect, and that this requires “Big Brother” to look over his or her shoulder in order to protect dogs from exploitation. It is like saying that we shouldn’t enjoy our supper because people are starving in Ethiopia, or that all parents should be licensed and inspected because a few of them abuse their children.
The fallacy of this argument is easy to see. All of its premises are utterly illogical.
It assumes that government is somehow morally superior to individuals, and that government can be trusted more than people. Read any history book for an hour and the flaws of this argument become apparent. Throughout history, government has been the greatest oppressor of people, animals and the Earth itself – by far! I doubt if Al Capone harmed as many people as the average corrupt restaurant inspector in Chicago.
It assumes that the answer to bad government is more government. HSUS and Obama believe that current laws are not being enforced. Their answer is to create new laws, which is a laughable example of intellectual absurdity. The answer to bad government is to make it work better, not to create new laws and bureaucracies whose only purpose is to burden and oppress good people.
It assumes that exploitation of animals is the norm, rather than the rare exception. Anyone who raises dogs knows that this is absurd. The lives of dogs have never been better at any time in human history. They are beloved members of millions of American families, most breeders dedicate their entire lives to their animals, and thousands of dedicated rescue people save the lives of millions of dogs that are doomed to suffering and death in government-run animal shelters.
Would you want the fate of your dog to rest in the hands of any government-run animal shelter in America?
And yet, HSUS and Obama see government as the answer.
Obama’s well-documented belief that government is the answer to America’s problems is at the heart of our objection to his candidacy.
For example, every improvement in the lives of dogs in America is solely because individual people have made personal and ethical choices that benefit their animals.
No improvement of any kind can be attributed to the actions of government.
Each political victory by HSUS and its allies in government has resulted in terrible suffering for animals. For example, the HSUS-backed ban on domestic horse slaughter has led to tens of thousands of horses being trucked to Mexico, where they are slaughtered under the most inhumane conditions imaginable. Every mandatory spay/neuter ordinance has led to the terrible deaths of thousands of abandoned pets at the hands of government-run animal control programs.
Compassion for animals is one of the highest human virtues. It happens only through the dedication of individuals. Compassion and government are mutually exclusive concepts.
The HSUS endorsement of Obama is but the tip of the iceberg.
Consider that his primary political mentor, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, has been the major proponent of anti-dog-owner animal rights legislation in Congress. Durbin is the sponsor of the current “PUPS” legislation that would extend the heavy arm of federal bureaucracy into most kennels in America, and also was the author of the failed amendment to the Pet Animal Welfare Act that was attached to the 2008 Farm Bill.
Obama’s main allies in Congress read like a “Who’s Who” of radical animal rights activism: defeated Sen. Rick Santorum (author of the failed PAWS legislation three years ago), Sen. Diane Feinstein, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, Sen. Ted Kennedy and several others. Obama’s running mate, Sen. Joe Biden, consistently gets 100% HSUS ratings.
The Obama ticket is an animal rights dream team.
Please remember, too, that political endorsements and support come with a price tag. We believe that price tag includes:
Support for federal animal rights legislation to restrict dog ownership and virtually eliminate the breeding of companion animals. A federal spay/neuter mandate is likely, as are prohibitions about using dogs for hunting, herding or in competitive events. These are all parts of the HSUS agenda.
Support for the camouflaged but very real HSUS agenda of forcing America into becoming a vegetarian society. This would be done by increasing federal regulation of farming, ranching and slaughterhouses with the goal of making meat, milk and eggs too expensive for most people to afford.
The gradual elimination of hunting, both by outlawing specific kinds of hunting and also by changing policy to eliminate hunting as a tool in wildlife management.
Naming HSUS-sanctioned people to be the new Secretary of Agriculture and Secretary of the Interior, and also filling many administrative and leadership vacancies in both Departments with HSUS-anointed personnel.
Creating a federal task force to study and recommend legislation on animal issues that is heavily weighted toward HSUS.
Nominating pro-HSUS judges to fill vacancies on the Supreme Court, federal appeals courts and federal district courts. Even if judicial nominees don’t have a track record on animal issues, it is likely that most of the nominees will strongly support the concept of federal intervention on social issues, and strong opposition to the concept of private property and the rights of individuals.
And, based on Obama’s track record as an Illinois state senator and his endorsement by gun control groups this year, many restrictions on the right to own firearms are likely. This also is a major goal of HSUS.
When it comes to political paybacks, to the victor go the spoils.
The HSUS Legislative Fund’s Board of Directors has voted unanimously to endorse Obama. This is the first time ever that HSUS has endorsed a candidate for president, and this says a lot about the importance of Obama to HSUS.
This endorsement didn’t happen out of the blue. Our review of the HSUS questionnaire submitted by Obama shows clearly that he actively sought the endorsement. He wanted it. He went after it. Obama stated his total acceptance of every HSUS position on dozens of different pieces of animal rights legislation. He did not disagree with any of them.
As dog owners, we cannot ethically support any candidate who is in 100-percent agreement with HSUS.
Here is how the HSUS announcement describes Obama:
Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) has been a solid supporter of animal protection at both the state and federal levels. As an Illinois state senator, he backed at least a dozen animal protection laws, including those to strengthen the penalties for animal cruelty, to help animal shelters, to promote spaying and neutering, and to ban the slaughter of horses for human consumption. In the U.S. Senate, he has consistently co-sponsored multiple bills to combat animal fighting and horse slaughter, and has supported efforts to increase funding for adequate enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act, Humane Methods of Slaughter Act, and federal laws to combat animal fighting and puppy mills.
“In his response to the HSLF questionnaire, he pledged support for nearly every animal protection bill currently pending in Congress, and said he will work with executive agencies such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of the Interior to make their policies more humane….”
That statement is a nightmare come true for dog owners, farmers and hunters. It also is a nightmare for any American who believes in the sanctity of individual freedom.
An Obama victory, especially by the wide margin now shown in the polls, would place collectivists in firm control of both houses of Congress and the White House. Obama and HSUS would be able to get almost any law they want.
What all of those laws will mean is that government will not respect your freedom to make and live by your personal choices. You will be required to sacrifice your life to the collectivist ideal of “total animal liberation.”
That means the elimination of almost all breeding of dogs. That means tight restrictions on the ownership of dogs. That means laws making it impossible to raise food animals, or for most people to be able to afford to buy animal products. It means the destruction of hunting and gun ownership.
It will all happen in the name of the “common good,” as defined by HSUS and Obama.
The animal rights agenda is a totalitarian philosophy to force you to sacrifice your life to achieve the political goals of HSUS. Obama quite clearly has signed on to that agenda, and his signature is written in your blood.
Like most totalitarians, HSUS favors only “top down” leadership. For example, they know it is hopeless to try to convince Americans not to eat meat or to raise dogs. They don’t even bother to try. Instead, HSUS pushes for laws aimed at making it impossible for Americans to afford to eat meat or raise dogs.
The strategy is to gradually remove meat and dogs from the lives of a large majority of Americans, until the day when those things don’t matter any more. At that time, they will be politically able to achieve their long-range goal of the complete elimination of animal ownership in America.
Obama is a key part of that strategy, because of his willingness to support “do-gooder” animal rights legislation, even though very few Americans are asking for those laws. The animal rights movement is not a popular uprising of political sentiment. Instead, it is an elitist movement that reflects the view of only a small but politically well connected percentage of the population.
Through his support of HSUS, Obama has shown clearly that he is an elitist who is willing to impose the extreme views of a small minority on America to achieve a collectivist goal. If he will do it about dogs, he will do it about any social or political issue.
Freedom is his enemy. Personal choice is his enemy.
Collectivism is all about using governmental power to force people to conform.
In that light, we are especially concerned with the power Obama will have to nominate Supreme Court justices, and other federal appeals court and district judges.
The constitutional system of checks and balances sees the courts as the citizens’ final avenue of redress when their rights are infringed upon by the legislative and executive branches of government. The courts are meant to be a check of that power.
For dog owners, the courts are our last line of defense against bad laws that take away our rights to own and enjoy animals.
Obama will nominate the kind of judges who will be inclined to limit individual liberty in order to achieve collectivist social goals. They will believe that individuals must sacrifice personal freedom in order to create someone else’s idea of a better world. They will see the right to own and enjoy personal property as something evil.
This year’s Supreme Court case about firearms rights illustrates this viewpoint. In this case, gun control advocates tried to claim that individual rights do not exist. Instead, they attempted to say that there are only “collective rights” of the American people as a whole – as they define them.
This was the actual argument used by Obama’s allies to try to say that the Second Amendment does not apply to you and me, but only to an undefined “us.”
Obama has claimed that he is not opposed to firearms ownership and hunting. We believe he is not telling the truth, and is really saying that he is not opposed to his definition of acceptable firearms ownership and hunting.
His track record as an Illinois state senator shows this clearly, and we are indebted to Illinois State Rifle Association Executive Director Richard Pearson for making this important information available to the voters. He was the ISRA’s chief lobbyist during the years when Obama was a state senator in Illinois.
Here are excerpts from Pearson’s account of Obama:
“I lobbied Barack Obama extensively while he was an Illinois State Senator. As a result of that experience, I know Obama's attitudes toward guns and gun owners better than anyone. The truth be told, in all my years in the Capitol I have never met a legislator who harbors more contempt for the law-abiding firearm owner than does Barack Obama.”
“Although Obama claims to be an advocate for the 2nd Amendment, his voting record in the Illinois Senate paints a very different picture. While a state senator, Obama voted for a bill that would ban nearly every hunting rifle, shotgun and target rifle owned by Illinois citizens. That same bill would authorize the state police to raid homes of gun owners to forcibly confiscate banned guns. Obama supported a bill that would shut down law-abiding firearm manufacturers including Springfield Armory, Armalite, Rock River Arms and Les Baer. Obama also voted for a bill that would prohibit law-abiding citizens from purchasing more than one gun per month.”
“Without a doubt, Barack Obama has proven himself to be an enemy of the law abiding firearm owner. At the same time, Obama has proven himself to be a friend to the hardened criminal. While a state senator, Obama voted 4 times against legislation that would allow a homeowner to use a firearm in defense of home and family.”
“Does Barack Obama still sound to you like a "friend" of the law-abiding gun owner?”
“And speaking of friends, you can always tell a person by the company they keep. Obama counts among his friends the Rev. Michael Pfleger - a renegade Chicago priest who has openly called for the murder of gun shop owners and pro-gun legislators. Then there is his buddy Richard Daley, the mayor of Chicago who has declared that if it were up to him, nobody would be allowed to own a gun. And let's not forget Obama's pal George Soros - the guy who has pumped millions of dollars into the UN's international effort to disarm law-abiding citizens.”
“Obama has shown that he is more than willing to use other people's money to fund his campaign to take your guns away from you. While a board member of the leftist Joyce Foundation, Barack Obama wrote checks for tens of millions of dollars to extremist gun control organizations such as the Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence and the Violence Policy Center.”
Firearms issues are important to many of our members, and probably half of them are hunters. We also recognize that many dog owners do not own guns or want to own them.
However, we believe Second Amendment issues are important to all Americans. If a politician is willing to destroy even one of our freedoms, then none of them are safe. To compromise one part of the Bill of Rights is to endanger all of them.
Firearms issues also are important in understanding the collectivist mindset. Because an infinitesimally small percentage of firearms owners are criminals, collectivists believe that the other 99.99-percent should sacrifice themselves for the “common good.”
The call to sacrifice extends even unto freedom itself.
We cannot support any political candidate who has demonstrated a willingness to sacrifice any of our basic American rights. Obama has shown that willingness and, we believe, fully embraces collectivist calls for the sacrifice of the rights of innocent individuals in order to achieve his social goals.
It is a mindset that would willingly destroy the lives and livelihoods of millions of American farmers, dog professionals, hunters, dog owners, hobbyists and the tens of thousands of people whose jobs depend on them, in order to impose Obama’s vision of a “New World Order” on America.
We believe Obama would destroy those people without batting an eyelash. He would see himself as the righteous defender of animals, but doesn’t want to see the truth.
The people who own animals are the people who defend and protect them.
Animal rights groups like HSUS want to destroy them: as gently and gradually as practical, perhaps, but destroy them nonetheless.
Please do not vote for Barrack Obama.
For your dogs’ sake. For your sake. For everyone’s sake.
Just say no to Obama.
The American Sporting Dog Alliance represents owners, breeders and professionals who work with breeds of dogs that are used for hunting. We welcome people who work with other breeds, too, as legislative issues affect all of us. We are a grassroots movement working to protect the rights of dog owners, and to assure that the traditional relationships between dogs and humans maintains its rightful place in American society and life.
The American Sporting Dog Alliance also needs your help so that we can continue to work to protect the rights of dog owners. Your membership, participation and support are truly essential to the success of our mission. We are funded solely by the donations of our members, and maintain strict independence.
Please visit us on the web at http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org. Our email is ASDA@csonline.net. Complete directions to join by mail or online are found at the bottom left of each page.
http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org
Subscribe: BSL-UPDATES-subscribe@onelist.com
It was written by John Yates - of the American Sporting Dog Alliance - the same group that is against any kind of legislation that would help put puppy mills or puppy mill brokers out of business because it might potentially infringe on the freedoms of hunters or hobbyists. I'm going to paste the email below because it is so absolutely outrageous it is quite unbelievable and funny.
And it is seemingly endorsed by other right wing animal rights activists - who have said of Barack Obama - "HSUS endorses Obama..........hmmmm...BTW he is FOR GUARDIANSHIP and not ownership folks."
So in other words they are saying "DON'T VOTE FOR OBAMA".
When did this world turn upside down and the Democrats down in the United States become an extremist party that's going to end the world as we know it?
Here's a quote from the letter:
Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) has been a solid supporter of animal protection at both the state and federal levels. As an Illinois state senator, he backed at least a dozen animal protection laws, including those to strengthen the penalties for animal cruelty, to help animal shelters, to promote spaying and neutering, and to ban the slaughter of horses for human consumption. In the U.S. Senate, he has consistently co-sponsored multiple bills to combat animal fighting and horse slaughter, and has supported efforts to increase funding for adequate enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act, Humane Methods of Slaughter Act, and federal laws to combat animal fighting and puppy mills.
“In his response to the HSLF questionnaire, he pledged support for nearly every animal protection bill currently pending in Congress, and said he will work with executive agencies such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of the Interior to make their policies more humane….”
That statement is a nightmare come true for dog owners, farmers and hunters. It also is a nightmare for any American who believes in the sanctity of individual freedom.
John Yates is saying all of this as if it's a BAD THING!!! Can you believe this horse shit?
I think what this letter exposes is the paranoia, craziness, and wish to exploit animals that organizations like the American Sport Dog Alliance, the American Dog Owners Association, the National Animal Interest Alliance, the Centre for Consumer Freedom - want you to think is actually concern for your rights as a dog owner. It's all bullshit - it's all about protecting the right to make money for puppy mills, and the right to shoot animals for hunters. It's hooey.
Here's the email from John Yate that was sent out today:
Date: Mon, Oct 20, 2008 at 4:33 PM
Subject: [BSL-UPDATES] Fw: Obama And Dog Owners
To: update
To Dog Owners Who Support Obama
Is Your Freedom To Own Dogs The Most Important Issue?
by JOHN YATES
American Sporting Dog Alliance
http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org
asda@csonline.net
The 2008 presidential election has become emotionally charged for dog owners, resulting in a virtual brick wall that divides supporters of Democrat Barack Obama from those of Republican John McCain. The two candidates present a stark contrast in both style and substance.
As the campaign draws to a close, neither side seems willing to listen to the other.
We are asking Obama supporters to hear us out, but want to be up front from the beginning. The American Sporting Dog Alliance is opposed to Obama’s candidacy because of his close relationship with the Humane Society of the United States and his political alliances with several key animal rights movement supporters in Congress. We also think he has been dishonest about his views regarding hunting and firearms, and these are issues of major importance to many of our members.
The American Sporting Dog Alliance sees this election as a watershed for animal owners. We think that its outcome will determine the future of the private ownership of animals in America.
We are convinced that animal ownership is doomed if Obama becomes our next president.
Some people may ask if this is really important in comparison with the candidates’ views on foreign policy, the economy and social issues. The truth is that animal issues have played no role in this election for mainstream voters, because the news media, political pundits and politicians have not identified them as important.
But they are important to us.
We also believe that these issues should be important to everyone, because the way Obama would implement the animal rights agenda is a perfect microcosm of his views on the future of America. Those views accurately predict Obama’s approach to foreign policy, the economy and social issues.
Throughout American history, animal ownership has been regarded as a personal choice. Each individual has had the freedom to own animals or not, to eat them or not, to enjoy them or not, and to hunt or not to hunt.
It has been freedom based on the idea of “live and let live.” You do your thing, and I’ll do mine.
The principle was to create a society that is based on the maximum possible amount of freedom for each American to live the way that he or she chooses.
America was founded on the simple yet radical principle that the purpose of human life was to be happy. The Declaration of Independence used the words “pursuit of happiness” as a vital aspect of freedom. What makes a person happy was seen as each person’s private choice. Government was seen to exist only as a way to ensure the greatest opportunity to make and pursue personal choices.
“Happiness” was not mentioned specifically in the Constitution or Bill of Rights, because it was seen as a given. Those documents attempted to create a government that provided the greatest possible opportunity to pursue choices in one’s life, and to protect Americans from both foreign and domestic threats to our freedom to make personal choices and live our lives accordingly.
All of the complex protections of due process, voting rights, civil rights, checks and balances on political power, and redress to the courts boil down to exactly that: Protecting our freedom to make and live by personal choices.
Our relationship with animals is one of the choices each of us has had the freedom to make and live by. It was part of our American identity, and still is for most of us.
It was all about the freedom of the individual.
In the Twentieth Century, however, a new philosophy swept over much of the planet: Collectivism. It boils down to a belief that “social good” is more important than the individual. It defines benefit to society as a higher value than benefit to the individual.
It was a philosophy of sacrifice, maintaining that each person should be willing to sacrifice him or herself to “the greater good,” which was defined by the collective. In real life, the collective usually translates into government and those who have the power to influence it.
This philosophy was at the heart of Marxist/Leninist thought, and it also was the underpinning of Nazi ideology. In both cases, the collective – that is, government – became the sole arbiter of how people must live. Government existed under the pretext that its job was to define and promote the common good. This was seen as the highest value – not freedom!
Collectivism actually is a very old idea that reached its greatest influence during the Medieval Period of European history, when the concept of individual freedom was viewed as heretical. During the Dark Ages, the purpose of human life was to serve and glorify the monarchy and the church. A belief in basic human rights and individualism often led to being burned at the stake.
In light of this historical background, the American emphasis on personal freedom was truly revolutionary. It’s core belief is that the job of government is to protect freedom so that people could live the way they choose. Many people mistakenly believe that this was meant only to protect people from religious and political oppression.
In fact, it was meant to protect the individual from any kind of oppression that threatens the individual pursuit of happiness and fulfillment. The right to own and enjoy property was a major issue for the founding fathers, as this is basic to the freedom to pursue happiness.
Obama represents the modern reincarnation of collectivist thought, and his views and alliances on animal rights issues illustrate this clearly.
The endorsement of Obama’s candidacy by the radical Humane Society of the United States should send up a hailstorm of red flags for anyone who values individual freedom. The HSUS ideology embraces collectivism in its purest form.
Without exception, every political position advocated by HSUS boils down to a belief that individuals have an obligation to society to sacrifice individual freedom in order to achieve the “common good” – as defined by HSUS. Every HSUS position tells animal owners that they must sacrifice their own freedom in order to pay for the sins of a few people who treat animals callously.
For example, everyone knows that there are a few bad “puppy mills” in America that should not be allowed to exist. All of us would agree with that statement, including owners of commercial breeding kennels.
But HSUS argues that these few bad kennels make every breeder of dogs suspect, and that this requires “Big Brother” to look over his or her shoulder in order to protect dogs from exploitation. It is like saying that we shouldn’t enjoy our supper because people are starving in Ethiopia, or that all parents should be licensed and inspected because a few of them abuse their children.
The fallacy of this argument is easy to see. All of its premises are utterly illogical.
It assumes that government is somehow morally superior to individuals, and that government can be trusted more than people. Read any history book for an hour and the flaws of this argument become apparent. Throughout history, government has been the greatest oppressor of people, animals and the Earth itself – by far! I doubt if Al Capone harmed as many people as the average corrupt restaurant inspector in Chicago.
It assumes that the answer to bad government is more government. HSUS and Obama believe that current laws are not being enforced. Their answer is to create new laws, which is a laughable example of intellectual absurdity. The answer to bad government is to make it work better, not to create new laws and bureaucracies whose only purpose is to burden and oppress good people.
It assumes that exploitation of animals is the norm, rather than the rare exception. Anyone who raises dogs knows that this is absurd. The lives of dogs have never been better at any time in human history. They are beloved members of millions of American families, most breeders dedicate their entire lives to their animals, and thousands of dedicated rescue people save the lives of millions of dogs that are doomed to suffering and death in government-run animal shelters.
Would you want the fate of your dog to rest in the hands of any government-run animal shelter in America?
And yet, HSUS and Obama see government as the answer.
Obama’s well-documented belief that government is the answer to America’s problems is at the heart of our objection to his candidacy.
For example, every improvement in the lives of dogs in America is solely because individual people have made personal and ethical choices that benefit their animals.
No improvement of any kind can be attributed to the actions of government.
Each political victory by HSUS and its allies in government has resulted in terrible suffering for animals. For example, the HSUS-backed ban on domestic horse slaughter has led to tens of thousands of horses being trucked to Mexico, where they are slaughtered under the most inhumane conditions imaginable. Every mandatory spay/neuter ordinance has led to the terrible deaths of thousands of abandoned pets at the hands of government-run animal control programs.
Compassion for animals is one of the highest human virtues. It happens only through the dedication of individuals. Compassion and government are mutually exclusive concepts.
The HSUS endorsement of Obama is but the tip of the iceberg.
Consider that his primary political mentor, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, has been the major proponent of anti-dog-owner animal rights legislation in Congress. Durbin is the sponsor of the current “PUPS” legislation that would extend the heavy arm of federal bureaucracy into most kennels in America, and also was the author of the failed amendment to the Pet Animal Welfare Act that was attached to the 2008 Farm Bill.
Obama’s main allies in Congress read like a “Who’s Who” of radical animal rights activism: defeated Sen. Rick Santorum (author of the failed PAWS legislation three years ago), Sen. Diane Feinstein, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, Sen. Ted Kennedy and several others. Obama’s running mate, Sen. Joe Biden, consistently gets 100% HSUS ratings.
The Obama ticket is an animal rights dream team.
Please remember, too, that political endorsements and support come with a price tag. We believe that price tag includes:
Support for federal animal rights legislation to restrict dog ownership and virtually eliminate the breeding of companion animals. A federal spay/neuter mandate is likely, as are prohibitions about using dogs for hunting, herding or in competitive events. These are all parts of the HSUS agenda.
Support for the camouflaged but very real HSUS agenda of forcing America into becoming a vegetarian society. This would be done by increasing federal regulation of farming, ranching and slaughterhouses with the goal of making meat, milk and eggs too expensive for most people to afford.
The gradual elimination of hunting, both by outlawing specific kinds of hunting and also by changing policy to eliminate hunting as a tool in wildlife management.
Naming HSUS-sanctioned people to be the new Secretary of Agriculture and Secretary of the Interior, and also filling many administrative and leadership vacancies in both Departments with HSUS-anointed personnel.
Creating a federal task force to study and recommend legislation on animal issues that is heavily weighted toward HSUS.
Nominating pro-HSUS judges to fill vacancies on the Supreme Court, federal appeals courts and federal district courts. Even if judicial nominees don’t have a track record on animal issues, it is likely that most of the nominees will strongly support the concept of federal intervention on social issues, and strong opposition to the concept of private property and the rights of individuals.
And, based on Obama’s track record as an Illinois state senator and his endorsement by gun control groups this year, many restrictions on the right to own firearms are likely. This also is a major goal of HSUS.
When it comes to political paybacks, to the victor go the spoils.
The HSUS Legislative Fund’s Board of Directors has voted unanimously to endorse Obama. This is the first time ever that HSUS has endorsed a candidate for president, and this says a lot about the importance of Obama to HSUS.
This endorsement didn’t happen out of the blue. Our review of the HSUS questionnaire submitted by Obama shows clearly that he actively sought the endorsement. He wanted it. He went after it. Obama stated his total acceptance of every HSUS position on dozens of different pieces of animal rights legislation. He did not disagree with any of them.
As dog owners, we cannot ethically support any candidate who is in 100-percent agreement with HSUS.
Here is how the HSUS announcement describes Obama:
Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) has been a solid supporter of animal protection at both the state and federal levels. As an Illinois state senator, he backed at least a dozen animal protection laws, including those to strengthen the penalties for animal cruelty, to help animal shelters, to promote spaying and neutering, and to ban the slaughter of horses for human consumption. In the U.S. Senate, he has consistently co-sponsored multiple bills to combat animal fighting and horse slaughter, and has supported efforts to increase funding for adequate enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act, Humane Methods of Slaughter Act, and federal laws to combat animal fighting and puppy mills.
“In his response to the HSLF questionnaire, he pledged support for nearly every animal protection bill currently pending in Congress, and said he will work with executive agencies such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of the Interior to make their policies more humane….”
That statement is a nightmare come true for dog owners, farmers and hunters. It also is a nightmare for any American who believes in the sanctity of individual freedom.
An Obama victory, especially by the wide margin now shown in the polls, would place collectivists in firm control of both houses of Congress and the White House. Obama and HSUS would be able to get almost any law they want.
What all of those laws will mean is that government will not respect your freedom to make and live by your personal choices. You will be required to sacrifice your life to the collectivist ideal of “total animal liberation.”
That means the elimination of almost all breeding of dogs. That means tight restrictions on the ownership of dogs. That means laws making it impossible to raise food animals, or for most people to be able to afford to buy animal products. It means the destruction of hunting and gun ownership.
It will all happen in the name of the “common good,” as defined by HSUS and Obama.
The animal rights agenda is a totalitarian philosophy to force you to sacrifice your life to achieve the political goals of HSUS. Obama quite clearly has signed on to that agenda, and his signature is written in your blood.
Like most totalitarians, HSUS favors only “top down” leadership. For example, they know it is hopeless to try to convince Americans not to eat meat or to raise dogs. They don’t even bother to try. Instead, HSUS pushes for laws aimed at making it impossible for Americans to afford to eat meat or raise dogs.
The strategy is to gradually remove meat and dogs from the lives of a large majority of Americans, until the day when those things don’t matter any more. At that time, they will be politically able to achieve their long-range goal of the complete elimination of animal ownership in America.
Obama is a key part of that strategy, because of his willingness to support “do-gooder” animal rights legislation, even though very few Americans are asking for those laws. The animal rights movement is not a popular uprising of political sentiment. Instead, it is an elitist movement that reflects the view of only a small but politically well connected percentage of the population.
Through his support of HSUS, Obama has shown clearly that he is an elitist who is willing to impose the extreme views of a small minority on America to achieve a collectivist goal. If he will do it about dogs, he will do it about any social or political issue.
Freedom is his enemy. Personal choice is his enemy.
Collectivism is all about using governmental power to force people to conform.
In that light, we are especially concerned with the power Obama will have to nominate Supreme Court justices, and other federal appeals court and district judges.
The constitutional system of checks and balances sees the courts as the citizens’ final avenue of redress when their rights are infringed upon by the legislative and executive branches of government. The courts are meant to be a check of that power.
For dog owners, the courts are our last line of defense against bad laws that take away our rights to own and enjoy animals.
Obama will nominate the kind of judges who will be inclined to limit individual liberty in order to achieve collectivist social goals. They will believe that individuals must sacrifice personal freedom in order to create someone else’s idea of a better world. They will see the right to own and enjoy personal property as something evil.
This year’s Supreme Court case about firearms rights illustrates this viewpoint. In this case, gun control advocates tried to claim that individual rights do not exist. Instead, they attempted to say that there are only “collective rights” of the American people as a whole – as they define them.
This was the actual argument used by Obama’s allies to try to say that the Second Amendment does not apply to you and me, but only to an undefined “us.”
Obama has claimed that he is not opposed to firearms ownership and hunting. We believe he is not telling the truth, and is really saying that he is not opposed to his definition of acceptable firearms ownership and hunting.
His track record as an Illinois state senator shows this clearly, and we are indebted to Illinois State Rifle Association Executive Director Richard Pearson for making this important information available to the voters. He was the ISRA’s chief lobbyist during the years when Obama was a state senator in Illinois.
Here are excerpts from Pearson’s account of Obama:
“I lobbied Barack Obama extensively while he was an Illinois State Senator. As a result of that experience, I know Obama's attitudes toward guns and gun owners better than anyone. The truth be told, in all my years in the Capitol I have never met a legislator who harbors more contempt for the law-abiding firearm owner than does Barack Obama.”
“Although Obama claims to be an advocate for the 2nd Amendment, his voting record in the Illinois Senate paints a very different picture. While a state senator, Obama voted for a bill that would ban nearly every hunting rifle, shotgun and target rifle owned by Illinois citizens. That same bill would authorize the state police to raid homes of gun owners to forcibly confiscate banned guns. Obama supported a bill that would shut down law-abiding firearm manufacturers including Springfield Armory, Armalite, Rock River Arms and Les Baer. Obama also voted for a bill that would prohibit law-abiding citizens from purchasing more than one gun per month.”
“Without a doubt, Barack Obama has proven himself to be an enemy of the law abiding firearm owner. At the same time, Obama has proven himself to be a friend to the hardened criminal. While a state senator, Obama voted 4 times against legislation that would allow a homeowner to use a firearm in defense of home and family.”
“Does Barack Obama still sound to you like a "friend" of the law-abiding gun owner?”
“And speaking of friends, you can always tell a person by the company they keep. Obama counts among his friends the Rev. Michael Pfleger - a renegade Chicago priest who has openly called for the murder of gun shop owners and pro-gun legislators. Then there is his buddy Richard Daley, the mayor of Chicago who has declared that if it were up to him, nobody would be allowed to own a gun. And let's not forget Obama's pal George Soros - the guy who has pumped millions of dollars into the UN's international effort to disarm law-abiding citizens.”
“Obama has shown that he is more than willing to use other people's money to fund his campaign to take your guns away from you. While a board member of the leftist Joyce Foundation, Barack Obama wrote checks for tens of millions of dollars to extremist gun control organizations such as the Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence and the Violence Policy Center.”
Firearms issues are important to many of our members, and probably half of them are hunters. We also recognize that many dog owners do not own guns or want to own them.
However, we believe Second Amendment issues are important to all Americans. If a politician is willing to destroy even one of our freedoms, then none of them are safe. To compromise one part of the Bill of Rights is to endanger all of them.
Firearms issues also are important in understanding the collectivist mindset. Because an infinitesimally small percentage of firearms owners are criminals, collectivists believe that the other 99.99-percent should sacrifice themselves for the “common good.”
The call to sacrifice extends even unto freedom itself.
We cannot support any political candidate who has demonstrated a willingness to sacrifice any of our basic American rights. Obama has shown that willingness and, we believe, fully embraces collectivist calls for the sacrifice of the rights of innocent individuals in order to achieve his social goals.
It is a mindset that would willingly destroy the lives and livelihoods of millions of American farmers, dog professionals, hunters, dog owners, hobbyists and the tens of thousands of people whose jobs depend on them, in order to impose Obama’s vision of a “New World Order” on America.
We believe Obama would destroy those people without batting an eyelash. He would see himself as the righteous defender of animals, but doesn’t want to see the truth.
The people who own animals are the people who defend and protect them.
Animal rights groups like HSUS want to destroy them: as gently and gradually as practical, perhaps, but destroy them nonetheless.
Please do not vote for Barrack Obama.
For your dogs’ sake. For your sake. For everyone’s sake.
Just say no to Obama.
The American Sporting Dog Alliance represents owners, breeders and professionals who work with breeds of dogs that are used for hunting. We welcome people who work with other breeds, too, as legislative issues affect all of us. We are a grassroots movement working to protect the rights of dog owners, and to assure that the traditional relationships between dogs and humans maintains its rightful place in American society and life.
The American Sporting Dog Alliance also needs your help so that we can continue to work to protect the rights of dog owners. Your membership, participation and support are truly essential to the success of our mission. We are funded solely by the donations of our members, and maintain strict independence.
Please visit us on the web at http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org. Our email is ASDA@csonline.net. Complete directions to join by mail or online are found at the bottom left of each page.
http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org
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Sunday, October 19, 2008
Wrapping up come stuff - plus oxen!
So today we went out to the Maritime Fall Fair Exhibition out at Exhibition Park to watch the oxen pull.
I fell in love with this guy. He is owned by a Wendell Wagner from New Germany.
He didn't win unfortunately, but I think his oxen had the most personality of them all.
They were definitely the most photogenic! One thing I learned today is that oxen - and probably all cow types - can pick their nose with their tongues! Yea!So that's my report from the Exhibition!
Friday, October 17, 2008
An Amazing Caged Pig Video
The way that farmed pigs are treated is horrible in some places - I'm not sure how they're treated here in Nova Scotia - I know that all chickens are free range, so I hope that pigs are also treated with at least a smidge of dignity - but this video is amazing in the way that it anthropomorphizes the pig enough so that you can really feel just sick for this poor animal. It is a work of art.
Tomorrow is HRM's Civic Election
So tomorrow we're going to be voting for our HRM City Councilor's - for those of us who have special interests when we go to talk to our local elected officials - it's important to know where they stand on certain issues.
Some of the candidates have been very forthcoming on their views, and others haven't felt the need to let their potential constituents know where they stand about companion animals issues - which is really too bad, because if they are elected - they are going to be dealing with animal issues on a regular basis, because our pets are very important to us - and when something is going wrong - we want our Council person to handle it!
And for some reason - we seem to have voted in a lot of dog haters/non dog savvy people in the last time - so it would be nice to vote in this time at least a few people who know something about dog ownership this time. That would be nice.
In that spirit - I sent out a questionnaire to all 59 candidates - and a few of them answered back.
Generally - Everyone thinks that Halifax is dog friendly, and almost everyone thinks that in the last 4 years Regional Council has spent too much time on animal issues! No one wants to put millions of dollars into a brand new animal shelter, but everyone thinks that dog owners are a very important demographic in our community. They are very concerned about where licencing money for Animal Control and fines are going - and want it to go back into Animal Control coffers - and if there's money left over that it go to animal issues. I got a few impassioned paragraphs from some candidates - so there are some politicians out there who feel pretty strongly about animal issues - so that is a GREAT thing as far as I'm concerned!
If you didn't read my last newsletter, this is what I noted about the comments from respondents -
Almost 40% of the candidates responded to our request for the questionnaire that was sent out – which is actually pretty good – seeing as how it was sent out from someone who they had totally no idea who it was from, and a lot of them didn’t like the questions being asked of them – and really didn’t understand why the questions were being asked, and I’m sure – didn’t even take them seriously. And a couple of the people who DID respond – told us that!
But that was also something we were looking at – how dismissive were the candidates at answering dog owner’s questions? Who DIDN’T want to answer the questions? Because that was important too, as far as I was concerned – and there were a couple people who stood out there too.
I’m sure that some incumbents didn’t answer the questionnaire because they feel fairly certain that their constituents already know how they feel and have previously acted on dog issues – so they didn’t need to fill out any questionnaire like this – which is too bad, because we don’t have anything to compare to their competitors who did complete the questionnaires.
Quite a few candidates had issues with sports fields being used as off-leash areas – maybe they are hearing that from their constituents? But that’s an interesting tidbit that the questionnaire brought up that hadn’t occurred to me before – it seems logical that large flat green spaces speckled throughout the Municipality would be great places for dogs during certain pre-determined times of the day for multi-use areas – if a poop and scoop law was being enforced by the relevant authorities.
One really comical comment I got was in relation to my question about in-home doggy day cares – “I have never heard of the idea! Very interesting. This is similar to in home day care for children? How are they currently run and is there licensing involved etc. I do not know if I would call it essential in the classic sense but look what happened with the hurricanes in the U.S.A… Pets are people's family.”
Isn’t that a hoot? I guess it shows how we as dog owners take the things we use every day for granted and just assume that non-dog owners understand our language and facilities! My use of the term “essential” really riled up the candidates too! Some of them really took umbrage with the term. Those of us who actually use in-home doggy day cares and have the more – how should we say it “socially special” type dogs who can’t handle the institutional type doggy day cares really DO consider in-home doggy day cares “essential” to the quality of our lives and our dogs’ lives – which is what I was inferring – just like a human parent with a special needs child considers special services for their child “essential” – even though not every child needs that service. But I think I might have gone a bit too “deep” with that question! But the question DID get seven yeses!
Comments made by some of the respondents:
John Stoddard, candidate for district 22 – in response to the question: do you think that bylaw A300 puts dogs in danger in the HRM? “Yes and No. It depends on how much the letter of the law is enforced. Like most things coming out of council the language needs to be clearer. I think everyone agrees that owners need to be responsible and that dangerous animals need to be controlled but we can go too far in our diligence to make HRM livable to all. Yes, I think the following part of the law needs to be rewritten.” (which is referring to the dangerous dogs section).
Jennifer Watts, who’s a candidate in District 14, had some great comments at the end of her submission. She said –
“As someone who is not a dog owner I have learned a great deal from talking to people on the doorstep who are dog owners about their concerns. I have grown to appreciate the importance of the dog owner community as a valuable social networking and community builder in our neighbourhoods. Dog owners provide a regular check on parks in our neighbourhoods, they clean up garbage from our parks and walkways (not just cleaning up after their pets), provide security and presence in areas that often do not have high traffic (especially early in the morning and later in the evenings), and they often tend to discuss the neighbourhood and issues pertaining to it which builds a sense of ownership and commitment to neighbourhood betterment. In several conversations with dog owners I have heard about the lack of clarity of where owners can let their pets off leash - I would work to find a neighbourhood solution; for example, a rotational schedule of different parks on different days for set periods of time. I think it is important to move from a position of viewing dog owners and their dog’s needs from a restrictive viewpoint to one that acknowledges the legitimate need for space and consistency and also the valuable contribution that dog owners play in maintaining and promoting an active neighbourhood identity.”
Andrea Hilchie-Pye – also a candidate for District 14, when answering the question about what the mandate of council should be for the next four years, and whether it should keep its focus completely away from animal issues – said: “Yes and no. Our city is faced with significant challenges which we need to address (affordable housing, homelessness population, ensuring our communities are safe, improving our transportation infrastructure, etc). These must be paramount in how council spends its energy.”
Mary Wile, incumbent for District 10 - said something interesting regarding the trap neuter and return programs – she thought that they were a good idea and should be sponsored by the city – but they should be funded through the licensing of cats.
Krista Snow, incumbent for District 2 had a really good idea regarding getting extra income for Animal Services. She said: “I have brought to Council a number of times that we should be hiring or contracting people to enforce the taxation by-law for dogs that is in place now. That alone would accumulate a huge sum of money that would go towards programs to benefit animals.” Now THAT is a great idea, I think. Spend a little money, to make a lot of money – and then the dogs are licensed, so that if they decide to go for a “walk-about” – they can get a free ride home – because Animal Control knows where they live, thus creating a win-win for the owner – the FIRST time, anyway.
Doug Poulton from District 23 said – “I'm a dog lover as well, and they add so much to a person’s life. Responsible dog lovers, should take offense to the way some dogs are treated and cared for by some individuals and something should happen to them. I do sympathize with the people who complain about the messes our friends leave behind and do think it is the responsibility of the owner to clean up after them. I couldn't get at your questionnaire on my computer so I hope this will tell you where I'm coming from. Living in the rural area of H.R.M. gives us the security that our well being is protected by a loved one, who only asks for love and attention in return. Hope this answers your concern from my perspective”
Andrew Younger – who was acclaimed in his district – was very generous with his time on the questionnaire, he gave really detailed answers. There’s probably been no other regional councilor in the last 4 years who’s championed the dog cause more than him – so it’d make sense that he’d have the most to say. You can check out his answers on the pdf file - I’m sure his notes will answer questions that a lot of people will have about some of the issues that they’ve been asking as prospective
Councilors have been coming to their doors.
You can view all the answers of the candidates who responded, and the names of those that didn't - at http://dogkisser.ca/questionnaire_answers.pdf
Some of the candidates have been very forthcoming on their views, and others haven't felt the need to let their potential constituents know where they stand about companion animals issues - which is really too bad, because if they are elected - they are going to be dealing with animal issues on a regular basis, because our pets are very important to us - and when something is going wrong - we want our Council person to handle it!
And for some reason - we seem to have voted in a lot of dog haters/non dog savvy people in the last time - so it would be nice to vote in this time at least a few people who know something about dog ownership this time. That would be nice.
In that spirit - I sent out a questionnaire to all 59 candidates - and a few of them answered back.
Generally - Everyone thinks that Halifax is dog friendly, and almost everyone thinks that in the last 4 years Regional Council has spent too much time on animal issues! No one wants to put millions of dollars into a brand new animal shelter, but everyone thinks that dog owners are a very important demographic in our community. They are very concerned about where licencing money for Animal Control and fines are going - and want it to go back into Animal Control coffers - and if there's money left over that it go to animal issues. I got a few impassioned paragraphs from some candidates - so there are some politicians out there who feel pretty strongly about animal issues - so that is a GREAT thing as far as I'm concerned!
If you didn't read my last newsletter, this is what I noted about the comments from respondents -
Almost 40% of the candidates responded to our request for the questionnaire that was sent out – which is actually pretty good – seeing as how it was sent out from someone who they had totally no idea who it was from, and a lot of them didn’t like the questions being asked of them – and really didn’t understand why the questions were being asked, and I’m sure – didn’t even take them seriously. And a couple of the people who DID respond – told us that!
But that was also something we were looking at – how dismissive were the candidates at answering dog owner’s questions? Who DIDN’T want to answer the questions? Because that was important too, as far as I was concerned – and there were a couple people who stood out there too.
I’m sure that some incumbents didn’t answer the questionnaire because they feel fairly certain that their constituents already know how they feel and have previously acted on dog issues – so they didn’t need to fill out any questionnaire like this – which is too bad, because we don’t have anything to compare to their competitors who did complete the questionnaires.
Quite a few candidates had issues with sports fields being used as off-leash areas – maybe they are hearing that from their constituents? But that’s an interesting tidbit that the questionnaire brought up that hadn’t occurred to me before – it seems logical that large flat green spaces speckled throughout the Municipality would be great places for dogs during certain pre-determined times of the day for multi-use areas – if a poop and scoop law was being enforced by the relevant authorities.
One really comical comment I got was in relation to my question about in-home doggy day cares – “I have never heard of the idea! Very interesting. This is similar to in home day care for children? How are they currently run and is there licensing involved etc. I do not know if I would call it essential in the classic sense but look what happened with the hurricanes in the U.S.A… Pets are people's family.”
Isn’t that a hoot? I guess it shows how we as dog owners take the things we use every day for granted and just assume that non-dog owners understand our language and facilities! My use of the term “essential” really riled up the candidates too! Some of them really took umbrage with the term. Those of us who actually use in-home doggy day cares and have the more – how should we say it “socially special” type dogs who can’t handle the institutional type doggy day cares really DO consider in-home doggy day cares “essential” to the quality of our lives and our dogs’ lives – which is what I was inferring – just like a human parent with a special needs child considers special services for their child “essential” – even though not every child needs that service. But I think I might have gone a bit too “deep” with that question! But the question DID get seven yeses!
Comments made by some of the respondents:
John Stoddard, candidate for district 22 – in response to the question: do you think that bylaw A300 puts dogs in danger in the HRM? “Yes and No. It depends on how much the letter of the law is enforced. Like most things coming out of council the language needs to be clearer. I think everyone agrees that owners need to be responsible and that dangerous animals need to be controlled but we can go too far in our diligence to make HRM livable to all. Yes, I think the following part of the law needs to be rewritten.” (which is referring to the dangerous dogs section).
Jennifer Watts, who’s a candidate in District 14, had some great comments at the end of her submission. She said –
“As someone who is not a dog owner I have learned a great deal from talking to people on the doorstep who are dog owners about their concerns. I have grown to appreciate the importance of the dog owner community as a valuable social networking and community builder in our neighbourhoods. Dog owners provide a regular check on parks in our neighbourhoods, they clean up garbage from our parks and walkways (not just cleaning up after their pets), provide security and presence in areas that often do not have high traffic (especially early in the morning and later in the evenings), and they often tend to discuss the neighbourhood and issues pertaining to it which builds a sense of ownership and commitment to neighbourhood betterment. In several conversations with dog owners I have heard about the lack of clarity of where owners can let their pets off leash - I would work to find a neighbourhood solution; for example, a rotational schedule of different parks on different days for set periods of time. I think it is important to move from a position of viewing dog owners and their dog’s needs from a restrictive viewpoint to one that acknowledges the legitimate need for space and consistency and also the valuable contribution that dog owners play in maintaining and promoting an active neighbourhood identity.”
Andrea Hilchie-Pye – also a candidate for District 14, when answering the question about what the mandate of council should be for the next four years, and whether it should keep its focus completely away from animal issues – said: “Yes and no. Our city is faced with significant challenges which we need to address (affordable housing, homelessness population, ensuring our communities are safe, improving our transportation infrastructure, etc). These must be paramount in how council spends its energy.”
Mary Wile, incumbent for District 10 - said something interesting regarding the trap neuter and return programs – she thought that they were a good idea and should be sponsored by the city – but they should be funded through the licensing of cats.
Krista Snow, incumbent for District 2 had a really good idea regarding getting extra income for Animal Services. She said: “I have brought to Council a number of times that we should be hiring or contracting people to enforce the taxation by-law for dogs that is in place now. That alone would accumulate a huge sum of money that would go towards programs to benefit animals.” Now THAT is a great idea, I think. Spend a little money, to make a lot of money – and then the dogs are licensed, so that if they decide to go for a “walk-about” – they can get a free ride home – because Animal Control knows where they live, thus creating a win-win for the owner – the FIRST time, anyway.
Doug Poulton from District 23 said – “I'm a dog lover as well, and they add so much to a person’s life. Responsible dog lovers, should take offense to the way some dogs are treated and cared for by some individuals and something should happen to them. I do sympathize with the people who complain about the messes our friends leave behind and do think it is the responsibility of the owner to clean up after them. I couldn't get at your questionnaire on my computer so I hope this will tell you where I'm coming from. Living in the rural area of H.R.M. gives us the security that our well being is protected by a loved one, who only asks for love and attention in return. Hope this answers your concern from my perspective”
Andrew Younger – who was acclaimed in his district – was very generous with his time on the questionnaire, he gave really detailed answers. There’s probably been no other regional councilor in the last 4 years who’s championed the dog cause more than him – so it’d make sense that he’d have the most to say. You can check out his answers on the pdf file - I’m sure his notes will answer questions that a lot of people will have about some of the issues that they’ve been asking as prospective
Councilors have been coming to their doors.
You can view all the answers of the candidates who responded, and the names of those that didn't - at http://dogkisser.ca/questionnaire_answers.pdf
Thursday, October 16, 2008
An article about my newsletter in the Community Herald today!
Pat Lee interviewed me last week for the Community Herald section of the Chronicle Herald - and it was published today. She interviewed me for the newsletter I've been sending out - and specifically the questionnaire I sent out to the HRM Regional Council Candidates that I published last weekend - Pat did a good job on the interview I think - I wish I would have done a good job in the photo! The dogs looked good though. Thanks Pat!!
Pet activist Joan Sinden hangs out with her four adopted pooches Jack, Daisy, Charlie and Buttercup at her Spryfield home. Sinden, a regular blogger on animal rights issues, sent a questionnaire to all municipal candidates to get their views on pet-related issues before the election.
Pet rights advocate urges candidates to go on record
Sinden asks council candidates to publicize views on pet owner rights
By PAT LEE Staff Reporter
SPRYFIELD — An animal rights advocate wants to know where wannabe councillors stand when it comes to the rights of pets and their owners.
Joan Sinden, a longtime blogger on pet politics and the antics of her own pets, has drawn up a questionnaire and sent it to all 59 candidates in the upcoming municipal election, wanting to know their thoughts on everything from off-leash policies to their stance on Bylaw A-300 (responsible pet ownership).
"I want to give dog owners some insight into what the candidates think about different dog issues, and they can go to the polls with some knowledge of what those running in their neighbourhood think about companion animal issues," she said.
Sinden, who has four dogs adopted from shelters or rescue groups and a cat, has often written about her opposition to the bylaw, particularly the section that deals with dogs accused of being dangerous and the city’s ability to seize them.
"And if they take your dog, they can kill it with no recourse," she said.
The city is also still reviewing its off-leash parks pilot project and has not revealed changes to come, if any, after a series of public meetings earlier in the year.
Sinden will reveal the results of her questionnaire in her recently launched newsletter called Dog Watch Nova Scotia (found at dogkisser.blogspot.com).
A companion to her Me and My Dogs blog, the newsletter keeps track of ongoing court cases — such as the Celtic Pets case in Cape Breton, or that of Gail Benoit and partner Dana Bailey of the Digby area who are accused of selling dying puppies.
It also contains other pet-related news she feels is being overlooked by conventional media outlets.
"Things were happening that the media wasn’t covering, and that was annoying me," she said. "So I wanted to have a vehicle where I could get things out to people that I thought were important."
Sinden said there needs to be more attention paid to puppy mills and dog brokers in order to educate the public about the dangers of buying animals from these sources.
"It struck me that there’s got to be some way to get this information out to people if the media isn’t covering the story," said Sinden, who lives in Spryfield.
For a number of years, Sinden has also maintained a website called Charlie Loves Halifax ( www.charlieloveshalifax.ca), named after one of her dogs, which offers information on pet-friendly places and services in the Halifax area.
( plee@herald.ca)
Pet activist Joan Sinden hangs out with her four adopted pooches Jack, Daisy, Charlie and Buttercup at her Spryfield home. Sinden, a regular blogger on animal rights issues, sent a questionnaire to all municipal candidates to get their views on pet-related issues before the election.Pet rights advocate urges candidates to go on record
Sinden asks council candidates to publicize views on pet owner rights
By PAT LEE Staff Reporter
SPRYFIELD — An animal rights advocate wants to know where wannabe councillors stand when it comes to the rights of pets and their owners.
Joan Sinden, a longtime blogger on pet politics and the antics of her own pets, has drawn up a questionnaire and sent it to all 59 candidates in the upcoming municipal election, wanting to know their thoughts on everything from off-leash policies to their stance on Bylaw A-300 (responsible pet ownership).
"I want to give dog owners some insight into what the candidates think about different dog issues, and they can go to the polls with some knowledge of what those running in their neighbourhood think about companion animal issues," she said.
Sinden, who has four dogs adopted from shelters or rescue groups and a cat, has often written about her opposition to the bylaw, particularly the section that deals with dogs accused of being dangerous and the city’s ability to seize them.
"And if they take your dog, they can kill it with no recourse," she said.
The city is also still reviewing its off-leash parks pilot project and has not revealed changes to come, if any, after a series of public meetings earlier in the year.
Sinden will reveal the results of her questionnaire in her recently launched newsletter called Dog Watch Nova Scotia (found at dogkisser.blogspot.com).
A companion to her Me and My Dogs blog, the newsletter keeps track of ongoing court cases — such as the Celtic Pets case in Cape Breton, or that of Gail Benoit and partner Dana Bailey of the Digby area who are accused of selling dying puppies.
It also contains other pet-related news she feels is being overlooked by conventional media outlets.
"Things were happening that the media wasn’t covering, and that was annoying me," she said. "So I wanted to have a vehicle where I could get things out to people that I thought were important."
Sinden said there needs to be more attention paid to puppy mills and dog brokers in order to educate the public about the dangers of buying animals from these sources.
"It struck me that there’s got to be some way to get this information out to people if the media isn’t covering the story," said Sinden, who lives in Spryfield.
For a number of years, Sinden has also maintained a website called Charlie Loves Halifax ( www.charlieloveshalifax.ca), named after one of her dogs, which offers information on pet-friendly places and services in the Halifax area.
( plee@herald.ca)
Labels:
articles,
Buttercup,
bylaw A300,
Celtic Pets
Great news - Elvis has been adopted!

I just got an email from a friend of mine - Janet, the lady who does the super website the "Nova Scotia Homeless Pets Project" - had word that Elvis - the senior cocker spaniel, who I understand was one of the original Celtic Pets dogs - has been adopted!
He's been looking for a home for so long - since February - and someone has finally found their perfect pet in him. Janet has had him in her homeless pet website and on her blog - and in my newsletter that I put out last week - I highlighted him too. In my write up I said he's been "been waiting for – very patiently until YOU’VE come along." I also said - "he’s had a very hard knock life and deserves a soft bed in a warm home that understands that his ears need special attention and his
eyes are sore, and he just wants to live out his days with the amazing unconditional love that he should have been getting his whole life". Which is true. I hope it made a difference for him. He looks like he just wants to be able to lay down and REST. That doesn't sound like it's too much to ask for from someone out there, does it?
And I'm so glad that he's found it. Good for Elvis - and good for the people willing to give it to him.
Labels:
Celtic Pets,
NS SPCA
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Chapman Kennels kills 175 dogs and no one cares
The news article that I posted on the weekend about the court case that Chapman kennels had against the Benoits and the Benoits had against Chapman Kennels and ended with the sentence - "Chapman said they’ve had to sell the remaining dogs at reduced prices, or give them away, and euthanized about 175 of them" - has really shook me.
They killed 175 of their dogs and no one seems to have noticed or cared. No news organization has picked up on that fact, no Humane Organization has picked up on it and spoken out, no one has said anything or made any statement.
How did they kill that many dogs all at once? Did they find a vet willing to kill that many dogs all at once? Or did they do it themselves? How did they do it?
2 Amish farmers in Pennsylvania caused national outrage this summer when they shot and killed 80 of their dogs after receiving notification that they had to get them veterinary care for flea bites - they killed them rather than get them help. How was that any different than what the Chapman's have done? Why is there any less outrage?
I think that what has happened up there is awful - the Chapman's murdered 175 of their dogs - and they've gotten away with it. And they're blaming it on the public and everybody but themselves and the puppy mill they were running - they said they had 425 dogs on their farm. That is disgusting.
They killed 175 of their dogs and no one seems to have noticed or cared. No news organization has picked up on that fact, no Humane Organization has picked up on it and spoken out, no one has said anything or made any statement.
How did they kill that many dogs all at once? Did they find a vet willing to kill that many dogs all at once? Or did they do it themselves? How did they do it?
2 Amish farmers in Pennsylvania caused national outrage this summer when they shot and killed 80 of their dogs after receiving notification that they had to get them veterinary care for flea bites - they killed them rather than get them help. How was that any different than what the Chapman's have done? Why is there any less outrage?
I think that what has happened up there is awful - the Chapman's murdered 175 of their dogs - and they've gotten away with it. And they're blaming it on the public and everybody but themselves and the puppy mill they were running - they said they had 425 dogs on their farm. That is disgusting.
Monday, October 13, 2008
Jackie being the cutest little dog
Jack decided that he wanted to take one of his toys to bed with us tonight.
He doesn't like stuffed animals - he only likes squeaky toys - and boy - does he like to guard them! You can't tell in these shots that he's growling at me because my camera is getting too close to his elephant!
But he is just TOO cute when he's playing with his squeaky toys - all of the sudden you'll hear behind you, "squeak, squeak" - and it's Jack with his toy. After a shitty life - isn't it nice to still be able to want to squeak toys?
I think it's a beautiful thing - We have now been in bed for 35 minutes - and Jack is STILL squeaking that toy and making sure that no one gets in the bedroom to come near that green elephant. He's having a hell of a time.
Labels:
Jack
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Hot off the press - the Benoit's lose against Chapmans Kennel
I found this posted on Kijiji - it was posted on Friday October 10, 2008:
Suit against Kilburn kennel dismissed by the judge
Puppies died:
by ANTHONY COOPER
A lawsuit, filed by a pair of Nova Scotia puppy-sellers against a Kilburn dog kennel after the majority of 27 puppies they bought from the kennel died shortly after purchase, has been dismissed.
Gail Benoit and Dana Bailey, who operate Puppies R Us out of Digby County, Nova Scotia, sued Chapman Kennels for $6,000, alleging that Harry and Esther (Noemi) Chapman negligently sold them 27 puppies of various breeds, of which all but five died almost immediately.
Chapman Kennels— which according to court documents is a large kennel licensed by the Dept. of Environment, with customers including a national chain retailer of small dogs—countersued Benoit and Bailey for $6,000 in Small Claims Court in Woodstock, claiming the duo tarnished the company’s reputation in the Nova Scotia media.
The puppy deaths created a buzz in the Nova Scotia press after a Bible Hill woman’s Dachshund pup “Cinni” died within hours of purchasing it from Benoit in a parking lot.
Benoit and Bailey allege that the highly contagious parvovirus caused the deaths of the puppies, but adjudicator Graeme Shaw wrote in his decision that no scientific or other evidence was offered to support that claim.
Nova Scotia media have reported that at least three of the puppies, which died after being sold to various buyers, had the virus according to the Nova Scotia SPCA.
In court documents, Benoit and Bailey claimed they purchased the 27 puppies on July 9, 2008 for $3,750 and were told “most of the puppies had been weaned.”
Esther Chapman countered that Benoit was told that none of the puppies had been weaned, but Benoit still insisted on taking them, saying she wanted “very young” puppies which would be attractive for resale.
Chapman said Benoit told her that she and Bailey were experienced puppy brokers and would nurse the puppies with formula and pabulum if necessary.
Benoit and Bailey had also claimed that Chapman Kennels refused to sign a receipt, but the Chapmans produced a receipt for $3,690 during the hearing.
The adjudicator dismissed Bailey and Benoit’s claim, citing a lack of evidence to support their claims.
The Chapman’s counterclaim that Bailey and Benoit damaged their reputations in comments to the media was also dismissed. The adjudicator wrote that he viewed CTV News footage presented as evidence, but found nothing “actionable” in the comments.
The Chapmans, meanwhile, have pleaded not guilty to and face trial Nov. 28 in Grand Falls court on a Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act charge of failing to provide adequate care to several puppies.
Harry Chapman told the FreePress that his wife, who runs the kennel, feels her treatment by Benoit in the media was unfair. “She didn’t feel she should receive that negative publicity, in matters where a lady neglected to look after the dogs herself. This lady didn’t have any idea of what she was doing. She told us she had 20 years experience.”
Chapman said the kennel has been in business since 2003 and has sold about 150 dogs with no previous complaints. He says the puppies sold to Benoit could have contracted parvovirus while in Benoit’s care. “If she put them in cages with other animals… She’s the one with the parvovirus, not us.”
Chapman said his wife regrets selling the puppies to Benoit now, but felt she had little choice. After the SPCA seized some puppies and laid a charge against them, their market dried up. The kennel is currently closed.
“The company that my wife sold the dogs to weren’t going to buy puppies. She had around 425 dogs here and no market for them.”
Chapman said they’ve had to sell the remaining dogs at reduced prices, or give them away, and euthanized about 175 of them.
Suit against Kilburn kennel dismissed by the judge
Puppies died:
by ANTHONY COOPER
A lawsuit, filed by a pair of Nova Scotia puppy-sellers against a Kilburn dog kennel after the majority of 27 puppies they bought from the kennel died shortly after purchase, has been dismissed.
Gail Benoit and Dana Bailey, who operate Puppies R Us out of Digby County, Nova Scotia, sued Chapman Kennels for $6,000, alleging that Harry and Esther (Noemi) Chapman negligently sold them 27 puppies of various breeds, of which all but five died almost immediately.
Chapman Kennels— which according to court documents is a large kennel licensed by the Dept. of Environment, with customers including a national chain retailer of small dogs—countersued Benoit and Bailey for $6,000 in Small Claims Court in Woodstock, claiming the duo tarnished the company’s reputation in the Nova Scotia media.
The puppy deaths created a buzz in the Nova Scotia press after a Bible Hill woman’s Dachshund pup “Cinni” died within hours of purchasing it from Benoit in a parking lot.
Benoit and Bailey allege that the highly contagious parvovirus caused the deaths of the puppies, but adjudicator Graeme Shaw wrote in his decision that no scientific or other evidence was offered to support that claim.
Nova Scotia media have reported that at least three of the puppies, which died after being sold to various buyers, had the virus according to the Nova Scotia SPCA.
In court documents, Benoit and Bailey claimed they purchased the 27 puppies on July 9, 2008 for $3,750 and were told “most of the puppies had been weaned.”
Esther Chapman countered that Benoit was told that none of the puppies had been weaned, but Benoit still insisted on taking them, saying she wanted “very young” puppies which would be attractive for resale.
Chapman said Benoit told her that she and Bailey were experienced puppy brokers and would nurse the puppies with formula and pabulum if necessary.
Benoit and Bailey had also claimed that Chapman Kennels refused to sign a receipt, but the Chapmans produced a receipt for $3,690 during the hearing.
The adjudicator dismissed Bailey and Benoit’s claim, citing a lack of evidence to support their claims.
The Chapman’s counterclaim that Bailey and Benoit damaged their reputations in comments to the media was also dismissed. The adjudicator wrote that he viewed CTV News footage presented as evidence, but found nothing “actionable” in the comments.
The Chapmans, meanwhile, have pleaded not guilty to and face trial Nov. 28 in Grand Falls court on a Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act charge of failing to provide adequate care to several puppies.
Harry Chapman told the FreePress that his wife, who runs the kennel, feels her treatment by Benoit in the media was unfair. “She didn’t feel she should receive that negative publicity, in matters where a lady neglected to look after the dogs herself. This lady didn’t have any idea of what she was doing. She told us she had 20 years experience.”
Chapman said the kennel has been in business since 2003 and has sold about 150 dogs with no previous complaints. He says the puppies sold to Benoit could have contracted parvovirus while in Benoit’s care. “If she put them in cages with other animals… She’s the one with the parvovirus, not us.”
Chapman said his wife regrets selling the puppies to Benoit now, but felt she had little choice. After the SPCA seized some puppies and laid a charge against them, their market dried up. The kennel is currently closed.
“The company that my wife sold the dogs to weren’t going to buy puppies. She had around 425 dogs here and no market for them.”
Chapman said they’ve had to sell the remaining dogs at reduced prices, or give them away, and euthanized about 175 of them.
Quebec, Puppy mills, and what's to do
I got an article emailed to me tonight about what the Canadian Humane Society is trying to do about the awful puppy mill situation in Quebec - there's recently been 2 huge raids in that province that has really shown that there is horrible stuff going on in that province - and there is a line in the article that pinged something in my brain about an argument I was having with someone recently.
The Canadian Kennel Club has a relationship with PIJAC - the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council - they call themselves the "voice of the Canadian Pet Industry" - but what they are is a lobbying organization for pet stores across Canada - and you know what pet stores sell, don't you? Puppies from puppy mills!!!!
The recent "RDOG Week" put on by the Canadian Kennel club was sponsored in part by PIJAC - and I had a real problem with that. Shortly before the RDOG Week PIJAC had a big trade show in Toronto - and they had suppliers and vendors come from everywhere to peddle their wares at this trade show - and can you guess who had a HUGE booth there? hhmm... guess who - the HUNTE Corporation - one of the United States largest sellers of farmed puppies.
So I have a real problem with the Canadian Kennel Club taking any kind of renumeration or services in kind from an organization that deals with puppy mills and farmers of puppies, don't you? I think any sane person would. I wrote to the local president of the chapter of the CKC and they wrote back:
The only reason why PIJAC would want to have anything to do with organizations like the CKC and CVMA is to give them an air of legitamicy - the only reason why PIJAC exists is to make money for their clients - nothing more, and nothing less. There is no philanthropy there, and to believe otherwise is foolish.
Anyway - so that whole thing went through my head when I read the below article - because it's basically talking about the same thing - and how Quebec is suffering - because of attitudes like the one above...
(The SPCA that is dealing with all these seized animals is at - http://www.spcamontreal.com/intro.php?lg=en
Animal welfare workers call on Quebec to do more to stop puppy mills
MONTREAL — Animal rights activists say two recent puppy mill busts in Quebec illustrate a far greater problem than previously imagined and highlight the need for more government action.
With that in mind, the Canadian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is heading to Quebec City on Friday hoping to secure more powers from the agriculture minister as well as funding to help tackle what some are calling a burgeoning, unchecked problem.
In the span of a week earlier this month, animal welfare officials raided two mills operating in rural areas north of Montreal, saving some 275 animals.
"The fact that we performed two major puppy mill raids in less than a week certainly signifies the severity of the problem in Quebec," said Rebecca Aldworth, director of animal programs at Humane Society International Canada.
"Quebec is considered by many animal rights activists to be the puppy mill capital of North America and this situation exists because we have fairly weak provincial laws and they cannot be enforced by the SPCA."
There's a hope that some of the horrific images broadcast in recent weeks will prompt people to push the Quebec government for change.
Welfare workers say the clandestine facilities housed dogs living in close quarters, in some cases next to the rotting carcasses of other dogs that had died. Some dogs were having trouble walking while others had matted fur and open sores all over their bodies.
"The animals were living in this, covered in feces and fleas and there was very little food and water available to the dogs," Aldworth said. "Many of the dogs were skin and bones - over 90 per cent of the dogs were emaciated."
Unlike in much of the rest of the country, animal welfare enforcement in Quebec does not exclusively lie with the SPCA. The chief complaint among some activists is that the non-profit organization set up to do the job is more interested in helping mill owners set up shop legally.
But the group mandated by the provincial government to oversee animal welfare in Quebec says the situation isn't as bad as portrayed and the numbers being spouted by animal activists don't add up.
"When they say there are 2,000 puppy mills but they are all clandestine you have to wonder how they can say there are that many, how do they know?" said Veronique Langlois, executive-director of Anima-Quebec.
"Are we the capital in Quebec? No, it's false."
Langlois says calling Quebec the "puppy mill capital" may have been appropriate a decade ago when activists were attempting to rally public support, but the situation has since changed.
"For certain people, they say if there are 50 or 60 or 100 animals in cages, that's a puppy mill," Langlois said. "Or if the owner is making money, it's a puppy mill.
"But breeding is not illegal. But certainly there are certain criteria for keeping animals. We prefer to use the term ethical or unethical breeding."
That's why the SPCA's Alanna Devine says her organization's two inspectors need the same powers as Anima-Quebec inspectors. The two groups have divergent views on the issue.
"In my opinion anyone who is breeding a large number of dogs of all different breeds and profiting from it as their main source of income is not properly treating the animals," says Devine, acting director the SPCA.
"Being a dog owner and having spoken to breeders, it is actually impossible to turn a profit from breeding dogs because if you're doing it properly the cost of caring from them and caring for the puppies is so astronomical."
Aldworth said the groups on Anima-Quebec's board include the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, which represents pet stores and large-scale breeders.
"It's like putting the fox in charge of the henhouse when it comes to puppy mills," Aldworth said.
Aldworth says Quebecers need to pressure their local politicians to do more and that the proper authority should be the SPCA because it is a non-profit organization that does not represent the pet trade.
Pet stores are where the majority of puppy mill dogs end up, activists argue.
The Canadian Federation of Humane Societies says not having a provincial society with the authority to act has caused a lot of cruelty cases to fall through the cracks.
"They (Anima-Quebec) have done some good things, but they have five inspectors and Ontario has close to 300," said Shelagh MacDonald, program director with the organization.
"So as you can see, it's not even on the same page."
Langlois says Anima-Quebec is doing its job and wants to work with anyone interested in promoting the well-being of animals.
She says the organization has doubled its budget to $400,000 and acknowledges that fundraising is necessary. In the past year, the group has finally started to see some cases being prosecuted also.
"I don't know of any non-profit organization that'll tell you 'No, I don't need any more people'," says Langlois.
"But I'm looking at what has been done since the creation of Anima and what we've done since 2005 and that's how you have to look at it."
The Canadian Kennel Club has a relationship with PIJAC - the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council - they call themselves the "voice of the Canadian Pet Industry" - but what they are is a lobbying organization for pet stores across Canada - and you know what pet stores sell, don't you? Puppies from puppy mills!!!!
The recent "RDOG Week" put on by the Canadian Kennel club was sponsored in part by PIJAC - and I had a real problem with that. Shortly before the RDOG Week PIJAC had a big trade show in Toronto - and they had suppliers and vendors come from everywhere to peddle their wares at this trade show - and can you guess who had a HUGE booth there? hhmm... guess who - the HUNTE Corporation - one of the United States largest sellers of farmed puppies.
So I have a real problem with the Canadian Kennel Club taking any kind of renumeration or services in kind from an organization that deals with puppy mills and farmers of puppies, don't you? I think any sane person would. I wrote to the local president of the chapter of the CKC and they wrote back:
The PIJAC connection is complicated. They aren't a partner of CKC but we are both on a national committee that also includes the CVMA and the Humane Society. I appreciate your comment and your real concern and you are right that their position can be very different from ours. Still they have been supportive of. Our efforts in battling BSL nd we have been working on them on their position on selling dogs as commodities. It is a long and often challenging road trying to educate people in dog businesses but we have made some inroads with PIJAC and continue to try to get our viewpoint embedded. Not a perfect situation but at least they are at the table and listening to us and to the vets and shelters.
The only reason why PIJAC would want to have anything to do with organizations like the CKC and CVMA is to give them an air of legitamicy - the only reason why PIJAC exists is to make money for their clients - nothing more, and nothing less. There is no philanthropy there, and to believe otherwise is foolish.
Anyway - so that whole thing went through my head when I read the below article - because it's basically talking about the same thing - and how Quebec is suffering - because of attitudes like the one above...
(The SPCA that is dealing with all these seized animals is at - http://www.spcamontreal.com/intro.php?lg=en
Animal welfare workers call on Quebec to do more to stop puppy mills
MONTREAL — Animal rights activists say two recent puppy mill busts in Quebec illustrate a far greater problem than previously imagined and highlight the need for more government action.
With that in mind, the Canadian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is heading to Quebec City on Friday hoping to secure more powers from the agriculture minister as well as funding to help tackle what some are calling a burgeoning, unchecked problem.
In the span of a week earlier this month, animal welfare officials raided two mills operating in rural areas north of Montreal, saving some 275 animals.
"The fact that we performed two major puppy mill raids in less than a week certainly signifies the severity of the problem in Quebec," said Rebecca Aldworth, director of animal programs at Humane Society International Canada.
"Quebec is considered by many animal rights activists to be the puppy mill capital of North America and this situation exists because we have fairly weak provincial laws and they cannot be enforced by the SPCA."
There's a hope that some of the horrific images broadcast in recent weeks will prompt people to push the Quebec government for change.
Welfare workers say the clandestine facilities housed dogs living in close quarters, in some cases next to the rotting carcasses of other dogs that had died. Some dogs were having trouble walking while others had matted fur and open sores all over their bodies.
"The animals were living in this, covered in feces and fleas and there was very little food and water available to the dogs," Aldworth said. "Many of the dogs were skin and bones - over 90 per cent of the dogs were emaciated."
Unlike in much of the rest of the country, animal welfare enforcement in Quebec does not exclusively lie with the SPCA. The chief complaint among some activists is that the non-profit organization set up to do the job is more interested in helping mill owners set up shop legally.
But the group mandated by the provincial government to oversee animal welfare in Quebec says the situation isn't as bad as portrayed and the numbers being spouted by animal activists don't add up.
"When they say there are 2,000 puppy mills but they are all clandestine you have to wonder how they can say there are that many, how do they know?" said Veronique Langlois, executive-director of Anima-Quebec.
"Are we the capital in Quebec? No, it's false."
Langlois says calling Quebec the "puppy mill capital" may have been appropriate a decade ago when activists were attempting to rally public support, but the situation has since changed.
"For certain people, they say if there are 50 or 60 or 100 animals in cages, that's a puppy mill," Langlois said. "Or if the owner is making money, it's a puppy mill.
"But breeding is not illegal. But certainly there are certain criteria for keeping animals. We prefer to use the term ethical or unethical breeding."
That's why the SPCA's Alanna Devine says her organization's two inspectors need the same powers as Anima-Quebec inspectors. The two groups have divergent views on the issue.
"In my opinion anyone who is breeding a large number of dogs of all different breeds and profiting from it as their main source of income is not properly treating the animals," says Devine, acting director the SPCA.
"Being a dog owner and having spoken to breeders, it is actually impossible to turn a profit from breeding dogs because if you're doing it properly the cost of caring from them and caring for the puppies is so astronomical."
Aldworth said the groups on Anima-Quebec's board include the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, which represents pet stores and large-scale breeders.
"It's like putting the fox in charge of the henhouse when it comes to puppy mills," Aldworth said.
Aldworth says Quebecers need to pressure their local politicians to do more and that the proper authority should be the SPCA because it is a non-profit organization that does not represent the pet trade.
Pet stores are where the majority of puppy mill dogs end up, activists argue.
The Canadian Federation of Humane Societies says not having a provincial society with the authority to act has caused a lot of cruelty cases to fall through the cracks.
"They (Anima-Quebec) have done some good things, but they have five inspectors and Ontario has close to 300," said Shelagh MacDonald, program director with the organization.
"So as you can see, it's not even on the same page."
Langlois says Anima-Quebec is doing its job and wants to work with anyone interested in promoting the well-being of animals.
She says the organization has doubled its budget to $400,000 and acknowledges that fundraising is necessary. In the past year, the group has finally started to see some cases being prosecuted also.
"I don't know of any non-profit organization that'll tell you 'No, I don't need any more people'," says Langlois.
"But I'm looking at what has been done since the creation of Anima and what we've done since 2005 and that's how you have to look at it."
Halifax Harbour and the Queens of the Clicker Leash
Labels:
Buttercup
Friday, October 10, 2008
Issue #3 of Dog Watch Nova Scotia is up
I am just about to mail out issue #3 of Dog Watch Nova Scotia - this issue is all about the questionnaires I sent out to the candidates for next week's HRM Election. I got back some interesting answers, and the're documented in the newsletter. I hope people find the survey results interesting!You can download it at http://dogkisser.ca/dwns_2008_1010.pdf or http://dogkisser.ca/dwns_past_issues.html
A spreadsheet with all the candidates who answered the survey is also available for download there - or you can download it at http://dogkisser.ca/candidates_questionnaires.pdf
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
I am SO Happy!
I just had the comment left on my previous post - "OK, time for the moles to go see Jesus. I'm tired of seeing their dead little faces every time I check the site *LOL* " - so I think it's been a bit too long since I wrote something!! haha!But today (for me) - I have great news to post.
Charlie's littermate (and sister) who's been over at the Dartmouth SPCA shelter has been adopted! I was over there today and found out that a successful application was put in on her - so I am super happy that she's going to be going home to a wonderful family soon.
I went in there today and there was a "NLA" on her photo - and there were "NLA"s on several photos - and I asked the receptionist what that meant - and she said "it means they are no longer available" - it means they have got successful applications on them and they've been adopted - "we've had a great week for adoptions".And I have to wonder - in the last week - they've really been using their Petfinder site - I wonder if that has anything to do with their increase in adoption luck. And if it has - I really hope they continue to post more and more of the dogs they have at the shelter so that they give the dogs and cats there the great exposure that Petfinder really does give them - it was only one week that a 10 year old mixed breed, shy, diminuitive, dog like Sarah was on Petfinder - and she found an awesome home. I am SO happy!
I left my contact information in hopes that her new owners will contact me so that we can stay in touch - I have kept in contact with so many other littermates - it would be amazing to stay in contact with her too. I hope they do contact me. She is just so beautiful. They are SO lucky.
And it seems like the NS SPCA is on an upward spiral - that is wonderful too!
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Star Nosed Mole
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Today on our walk in the woods Buttercup found this dead animal that she was trying to roll on, and I was like "whoa - what in the hell is this?" - I've of course never seen anything like this before. It looked like a mole to me from watching cartoons and stuff - but I've never seen a mouth like this - it looks like a bristle nose pleco to me! They certainly don't make any moles in cartoons that look like this! It wouldn't be soft and fuzzy for sure!
So I came home and googled "mole" and found out what it is - it's a "star nosed mole" - and the weird thing is - Buttercup found TWO of them in different sections of the woods. We never see them once in our life - and suddenly we find 2 of them dead in one day. That was weird.
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I didn't have my nice cameras with me - only my camera phone, so I didn't get any clear photos - and the one thing I was trying to get a clear shot of - his mouth, is the fuzziest thing because I was trying to get close up to that - but of course my phone doesn't have like a macro function, and my vision isn't good enough to be able to tell what kind of photos I'm taking when I'm taking them. So these ass-crap photos will have to do to explain our adventure today.
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A nice shot of Charlie and Buttercup though - being very good while I'm taking photo after photo of the dead star nosed mole.
Labels:
Buttercup
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Buttercup went to meet Jesus today!
Here's a prayer from St. Francis for animals:
Prayer of Saint Francis for Animals
God Our Heavenly Father,
You created the world
to serve humanity's needs
and to lead them to You.
By our own fault
we have lost the beautiful relationship
which we once had with all your creation.
Help us to see
that by restoring our relationship with You
we will also restore it
with all Your creation.
Give us the grace
to see all animals as gifts from You
and to treat them with respect
for they are Your creation.
We pray for all animals
who are suffering as a result of our neglect.
May the order You originally established
be once again restored to the whole world
through the intercession of the Glorious Virgin Mary,
the prayers of Saint Francis
and the merits of Your Son,
Our Lord Jesus Christ
Who lives and reigns with You
now and forever. Amen.
Labels:
Buttercup,
Past Dog Events
Thursday, October 2, 2008
A bunch of upcoming dog events
There's a bunch of upcoming dog events that need to be posted - so I'm going to do them all at once -
This coming Saturday is Saint Francis of Assisi day I hear - and several churches are having blessing of the Animal ceremonies outside their churches - a coworker told me there's a church near where she lives that's having one, and then she never got back to me - but I know for sure that the Catholic Church on the corner of Oxford and Jubilee Road is having a service outside their church at 12pm on Saturday for any animal you want to bring with you - and they even say on their marquee that non-catholic pets are welcome! haha! Isn't that swell of them!
Francesca Rogier is going to have a candlelight vigil outside the Metro Dartmouth SPCA at Scarfe Court in Dartmouth on Saturday night at 7pm for the dogs inside the shelter for the Feast for St. Francis of Assisi - you can find out more information on her blog at freebrindi.blogspot.com
On Sunday October 5th Lab Rescue of Nova Scotia is hosting a halloween party for all dogs who want to come at Seaview Park in Halifax from 12-3 pm. They're going to have fun stuff to do and prizes to give away, and it sounds like it's going to be a fun time for all - and Seaview Park is an official off leash park - so it'll be an offleash fun time for all! Yea! They'll be doing microchipping for $30 with proceeds going to lab rescue - so if you've been thinking about having this done for your dog - you should get it done then - no muss, no fuss!
There's going to be an event protesting Gail Benoit! But it's going to be down in Digby where she lives - I get lost going to Dartmouth - so I don't know if I'll go - but I hope a lot of people show up to it, because that's where she actually lives - so it'll be good if a ton of people show up - there is actually a Facebook group now that has 1,688 members that's a protest group against Gail Benoit at http://www.new.facebook.com/group.php?gid=20025043745
Date: Saturday, October 11th, 2008 @ 1pm
Location: Digby, Nova Scotia (Waterfront by Cannons & flagpole)
Whos Invited: Everyone who truly believes that Benoits actions should be stopped!
A public protest will be held on Saturday, October 11th @ 1pm. Gail Benoit is going to trial on October 24th, 2008 on two counts of animal abuse. Strangely enough Gail Benoit is still selling sick puppies.
This coming Saturday is Saint Francis of Assisi day I hear - and several churches are having blessing of the Animal ceremonies outside their churches - a coworker told me there's a church near where she lives that's having one, and then she never got back to me - but I know for sure that the Catholic Church on the corner of Oxford and Jubilee Road is having a service outside their church at 12pm on Saturday for any animal you want to bring with you - and they even say on their marquee that non-catholic pets are welcome! haha! Isn't that swell of them!
Francesca Rogier is going to have a candlelight vigil outside the Metro Dartmouth SPCA at Scarfe Court in Dartmouth on Saturday night at 7pm for the dogs inside the shelter for the Feast for St. Francis of Assisi - you can find out more information on her blog at freebrindi.blogspot.com
On Sunday October 5th Lab Rescue of Nova Scotia is hosting a halloween party for all dogs who want to come at Seaview Park in Halifax from 12-3 pm. They're going to have fun stuff to do and prizes to give away, and it sounds like it's going to be a fun time for all - and Seaview Park is an official off leash park - so it'll be an offleash fun time for all! Yea! They'll be doing microchipping for $30 with proceeds going to lab rescue - so if you've been thinking about having this done for your dog - you should get it done then - no muss, no fuss!
There's going to be an event protesting Gail Benoit! But it's going to be down in Digby where she lives - I get lost going to Dartmouth - so I don't know if I'll go - but I hope a lot of people show up to it, because that's where she actually lives - so it'll be good if a ton of people show up - there is actually a Facebook group now that has 1,688 members that's a protest group against Gail Benoit at http://www.new.facebook.com/group.php?gid=20025043745
Date: Saturday, October 11th, 2008 @ 1pm
Location: Digby, Nova Scotia (Waterfront by Cannons & flagpole)
Whos Invited: Everyone who truly believes that Benoits actions should be stopped!
A public protest will be held on Saturday, October 11th @ 1pm. Gail Benoit is going to trial on October 24th, 2008 on two counts of animal abuse. Strangely enough Gail Benoit is still selling sick puppies.
Labels:
Seaview
Charlie's sister is at the Dartmouth SPCA
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I said last night I was convinced that Charlie's littermate had been at Animal Control and had then moved over the the SPCA. I was right, but I was wrong about the fact that it had been the dog who was the shepherd collie mix on Petfinder without the photo. She's been in the back rooms all this time.
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It was September 6th that I saw her on the Animal Control website - I don't know how long they keep the dogs - but today is October 2nd, and today was the first day she's been available for adoption.
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There's no doubt she's a littermate. She's a mirror photo of all the other littermates. She's tiny - really skinny - about the same size as Leonard for all you who know Charlie's brothers and sisters - almost 1/2 the size of Charlie. But she's beautiful. They've named her Sarah.

She's completely withdrawn though - she didn't even want to leave her kennel when the shelter worker went to take her out of her cage so I could take her out, and she didn't acknowledge me once when I had her out, and I had her out for a good 20-30 minutes. No eye contact at all.

I worry that is going to make her hard to adopt. I hope someone is going to take a chance on her.
But I'm sure she's as perfect as her brothers and sister's Charlie, Leonard, Solie, Conrad, Zorro, Philip, Beethoven, and the unnamed female that was at the SPCA when Charlie and Solie were there. So much for back yard breeders being good places to get a puppy - almost all of the litter Charlie came from has filtered through the SPCA at one point in their life.
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
The NS SPCA has The "Perfect Dog"
For the love of dog - will someone please just shut down the NS SPCA? I mean, how much longer can this kangaroo court continue?
My friend over at Granny's Journal - who works night and day on her website "NS Homeless Pet Project" to try and let people know where every homeless and abandoned animal is in Nova Scotia - through alerting us to Petfinder listings and website postings has been banging her head up against the wall talking about how different NS SPCA shelters just don't feel like it's worth it to use the Petfinder website to list their animals available for adoption. It's pathetic.
And then in the last couple of days the Dartmouth Metro SPCA shelter puts up a posting on their Petfinder website called "the perfect dog" - Granny made a posting about it on her blog and she said -
What IS the perfect dog according to the Dartmouth SPCA shelter you ask?

It is a MEDIUM SIZE, YOUNG GOLDEN RETRIEVER MIX dog. So where does that leave all the older, bigger, pittie types, the german shepherd types, the ones who aren't quite so PERFECT?
This afternoon the Dartmouth SPCA shelter's Petfinder site had FOUR dogs listed - and NINE cats listed. So I took a drive over the to shelter to see how many animals they had actually up for adoption. And guess what I found? The largest shelter in Nova Scotia only had FOUR DOGS AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION!!
When I walked in the door 2 ladies were right there and they asked me - what I was there for today - and I said I was interested in looking at their list of dogs available for adoption - and they said that today they only had 4 dogs available for adoption! Can you believe that?
I said - didn't they have a list of dogs that they had out in foster homes that I could look at that were available for adoption? And they said - they had lots of dogs out in foster homes - but that NONE OF THEM WERE AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION!!!! Certainly I don't know if this is true - but I had heard that the Dartmouth shelter has over 70 dogs out in foster - I could not believe that none of them are available for adoption!
They did say that I should check back tomorrow because some dogs were temperament tested today, so they might be available for adoption by tomorrow.
I can tell you that there were way more than 4 dogs barking coming from behind the door at the shelter.
And tonight - there are now only THREE dogs listed on the Petfinder site.
And also on the "perfect dog" groove - I asked about a dog that I had seen on the Animal Control website a month ago, which had then disappeared off that website. When dogs go into Animal control - after 3 days they usually go over to the Dartmouth SPCA - because they are the contracted shelter keeper for the HRM - so if the dog's owner wasn't found - the dog most probably came over to the Dartmouth SPCA. I am convinced this dog is a littermate of Charlie's - it was a 10 year old female unspayed collie mix - and a couple weeks after it disappeared off the Animal Control website - a posting appeared on the SPCA's Petfinder site - of a "shepherd collie" mix - but with no photo attached to it. So today I asked about that dog - and the girls said "oh yes - we remember that dog! We sent that dog down to SHAID - - we find the BIGGER DOGS DO BETTER DOWN IN THE COUNTRY. So I guess the Dartmouth SPCA has started shipping out all their NOT PERFECT dogs to other shelters now? Is that what's happening?
But what started this whole angry business was an email conversation between a bunch of friends today because one of them had gone online to the NS SPCA's website and read the Board of Director's minutes from September 15th, 2008 - that talked about the proposed shelter committee that's going to be formed to look after the Dartmouth shelter - and guess what? Pamela Keddy has been invited to join it! Yea! Isn't that fabulous?
The minutes are at http://spcans.ca/library/BOD_Minutes/PublicMinutes_2008Sep15.pdf and this is what they say about this lovely committee that's going to be struck to oversee the Dartmouth shelter -
So it looks like the inestimable Pamela Keddy is going to be getting back her fiefdom at the Dartmouth SPCA shelter, doesn't it? The more things change, the more they say the same. If anybody had the illusion that things were actually changing at the NS SPCA for the good - I think this pretty much shows - and in a very public way - that things have not changed one little bit.
My friend over at Granny's Journal - who works night and day on her website "NS Homeless Pet Project" to try and let people know where every homeless and abandoned animal is in Nova Scotia - through alerting us to Petfinder listings and website postings has been banging her head up against the wall talking about how different NS SPCA shelters just don't feel like it's worth it to use the Petfinder website to list their animals available for adoption. It's pathetic.
And then in the last couple of days the Dartmouth Metro SPCA shelter puts up a posting on their Petfinder website called "the perfect dog" - Granny made a posting about it on her blog and she said -
"Seriously? Am I talking to the walls when i discuss what an effective adoption/ ergo lifesaving tool that petfinder listings are? So tonight, instead of loading new listings onto the Metro Shelter page, they have 1 dog listed for the NS SPCA Metro Shelter, 1 dog listed as a courtesy post for a breed rescue and this other hilarious piece of first class foolishness. In case you are wondering, they have 11 cats listed..... It would be the same as the pet project just listing links to the rescues, or better yet, just having a front door with a map of the province with little red flags where the shelters are. Would there be so very many visitors to the site if I did that? Of course not Is this funny little notice going to draw adopters in to the Metro Shelter? Will people come in from around the province, or even 'away' on the off chance they might find what they are looking for? Or will they simply scroll down and fall in love with one of the forty two other dogs that ARE listed on petfinder?"
What IS the perfect dog according to the Dartmouth SPCA shelter you ask?

It is a MEDIUM SIZE, YOUNG GOLDEN RETRIEVER MIX dog. So where does that leave all the older, bigger, pittie types, the german shepherd types, the ones who aren't quite so PERFECT?
This afternoon the Dartmouth SPCA shelter's Petfinder site had FOUR dogs listed - and NINE cats listed. So I took a drive over the to shelter to see how many animals they had actually up for adoption. And guess what I found? The largest shelter in Nova Scotia only had FOUR DOGS AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION!!
When I walked in the door 2 ladies were right there and they asked me - what I was there for today - and I said I was interested in looking at their list of dogs available for adoption - and they said that today they only had 4 dogs available for adoption! Can you believe that?
I said - didn't they have a list of dogs that they had out in foster homes that I could look at that were available for adoption? And they said - they had lots of dogs out in foster homes - but that NONE OF THEM WERE AVAILABLE FOR ADOPTION!!!! Certainly I don't know if this is true - but I had heard that the Dartmouth shelter has over 70 dogs out in foster - I could not believe that none of them are available for adoption!
They did say that I should check back tomorrow because some dogs were temperament tested today, so they might be available for adoption by tomorrow.
I can tell you that there were way more than 4 dogs barking coming from behind the door at the shelter.
And tonight - there are now only THREE dogs listed on the Petfinder site.
And also on the "perfect dog" groove - I asked about a dog that I had seen on the Animal Control website a month ago, which had then disappeared off that website. When dogs go into Animal control - after 3 days they usually go over to the Dartmouth SPCA - because they are the contracted shelter keeper for the HRM - so if the dog's owner wasn't found - the dog most probably came over to the Dartmouth SPCA. I am convinced this dog is a littermate of Charlie's - it was a 10 year old female unspayed collie mix - and a couple weeks after it disappeared off the Animal Control website - a posting appeared on the SPCA's Petfinder site - of a "shepherd collie" mix - but with no photo attached to it. So today I asked about that dog - and the girls said "oh yes - we remember that dog! We sent that dog down to SHAID - - we find the BIGGER DOGS DO BETTER DOWN IN THE COUNTRY. So I guess the Dartmouth SPCA has started shipping out all their NOT PERFECT dogs to other shelters now? Is that what's happening? But what started this whole angry business was an email conversation between a bunch of friends today because one of them had gone online to the NS SPCA's website and read the Board of Director's minutes from September 15th, 2008 - that talked about the proposed shelter committee that's going to be formed to look after the Dartmouth shelter - and guess what? Pamela Keddy has been invited to join it! Yea! Isn't that fabulous?
The minutes are at http://spcans.ca/library/BOD_Minutes/PublicMinutes_2008Sep15.pdf and this is what they say about this lovely committee that's going to be struck to oversee the Dartmouth shelter -
"Kip Grasse provided background information on recent events at the Metro Shelter, particularly the strain that had been created by the Celtic Pets seizure in February and the resignation of the Shelter Manager, which was later withdrawn. Kip briefed the Board on the process for establishing a Shelter Management Committee/Team and read the names of individuals who would be invited to apply.
Objection was raised by several Board members to Pamela Keddy being asked to participate given the strained relationship between her and the current Board and the desire for the committee to make progressive changes and improvements to shelter operations and improve credibility.
Motion by Carol Doucet to not solicit an invitation to Pamela Keddy to join the Shelter Management Team, unless such an invitation had already been issued.
Motion carried by majority vote.Two objections, one abstention.
Following the motion, Kip contacted the Shelter Manager, who indicated that the invitations to join the committee had already been sent out. The Board suggested that a notice be posted on the website to seek additional applicants for the committee. Further, it was determined that the Board would review all applicants and hold a special Board meeting on Monday, October 6, to discuss and approve committee members. Mary Hill indicated she will distribute all applications to the Board for review prior to the meeting.
A lengthy discussion took place regarding the mandate of the committee and the timelines for establishing the Metro Shelter as an independent branch with its own Board of Directors. The consensus of the Board as indicated by a show of hands was that the Management Committee should focus on operational issues. It was noted that timelines for the Metro Shelter transitioning to branch status need to be determined by the Board. It was suggested that the mandate of the committee will be to develop policies and procedures for the Metro Shelter, provide guidance to the Shelter Manager, and report to the Board with any recommendations pertaining to shelter operations."
So it looks like the inestimable Pamela Keddy is going to be getting back her fiefdom at the Dartmouth SPCA shelter, doesn't it? The more things change, the more they say the same. If anybody had the illusion that things were actually changing at the NS SPCA for the good - I think this pretty much shows - and in a very public way - that things have not changed one little bit.
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