Wednesday, February 15, 2012

PET Projects looking for help with Survey

PET Projects down in Shelburne are working hard to get anti-tethering legislation onto the agenda at their municipal level as well as the provincial level. I think that's fabulous.

They've set up a survey at http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/LCFZ893 that they want people to go and fill out to give hard statistics to the bureaucrats they're talking to - so take a minute and go fill out the survey.

There was also an article about them in today's Chronicle Herald - I think if anybody can get movement on this issue - it'll be ladies and gentlemen of PET Projects - so it's exciting to watch it happen.


Group seeks legal help for dogs at end of their tether

Some Nova Scotia dogs need protection from psychological abuse, say animal welfare groups seeking amendments to the Animal Protection Act.

They want an anti-tethering regulation that would make it a crime to keep a dog at the end of a rope or in an enclosure for lengthy periods of time, after dark and during weather extremes.

There’s no clear legislation requiring an animal to be untied at the end of the day and brought indoors, said Debbie Harvey of Shelburne.

"It’s not illegal to chain a dog continuously in Nova Scotia," said Harvey, a member of Pet Projects, a Shelburne County organization trying to introduce anti-tethering regulations at the municipal level.

Shelburne municipal council recently updated its 13-year-old dog bylaw without specifically addressing tethering issues.

But Pet Projects has been asked by council for more input about anti-tethering, said Harvey.

"We want change in the laws and legislation," she said.

In the Annapolis Valley, animal welfare advocates met this month with Kings West MLA Leo Glavine to ask him to consider their position.

"We’re looking at the Animal Protection Act and . . . possible ways for amendments to be made," said Scott Saunders.

"We’re at the very preliminary stages of this. As it stands right now, if a dog has food and water and shelter, that suffices.

"But we’ve got dogs that are spending their entire lives strapped out to a tree or to a doorstep. I think that’s really emotionally and psychologically damaging to that animal."

Dog behaviour expert Silvia Jay said dogs that have been tethered for extended periods of time often lack proper social skills.

They’re like misfits who have not learned how to behave properly around others.

"They also develop something that we call restraint frustration. It’s an anxiety," Jay said from her home near Truro.

Dogs are frustrated because a tether prevents them from doing what they want to do. That frustration, sooner or later, will switch over to aggression, she said.

A dog in an outdoor enclosure is in a similar situation. Dogs that are tied outside but exposed to a lot of stimulation can never rest, and that can create barking and lunging, Jay said.

"It’s really important to a dog that he belongs so that he has . . . social acceptance with the group he lives with. That’s crucial."

Jay wrote a book, Dump Dog, about her rescue of a feral dog and the animal’s journey from being wild to becoming a companion dog. Jay’s website, voice4dogs.com, has more information.

1 comment:

  1. Really Good Blog ..................... and you talking real sense too. Great!

    ReplyDelete