Animal Advocates Watchdog

Nick Read: Vancouver Sun:Pet store breaks its humane-sale promise: Nov 18/97

Pet store breaks its humane-sale promise

Vancouver Sun, Nov 18/97
By Nicholas Read

Petcetera stocks wild-caught animals; it said it wouldn't. Shame on the SPCA for its affiliation with this firm.

In theory it's a good idea. Petcetera, a new Vancouver pet-supply store, has rescued SPCA dogs and cats for adoption. The procedure and rates are the same as they are at the SPCA with the money going toward the SPCA and spaying or neutering the animal.

Bur there's a problem. Petcetera also sells exotic animals for profit, animals that shouldn't be kept in captivity because they can't be looked after properly.

The Greater Vancouver SPCA, while not endorsing the practice, says it has no problem with it. It has been assured, says Doug Hooper, that the animal breeders are reputable and no animals will come to harm.

Petcetera told Hooper that all its animals are bred humanely in the Lower Mainland and its staff are knowledgeable enough in exotic-animal care to ensure that none goes to an inappropriate home.

Yet, when I visited the store last week, sales assistant Anthony Snell told a customer that the store's fat-tail geckos, red head agamas, a kind of lizard, and bull snakes, were caught in the wild, a process which can result in 100 animals dying for every one that survives.

Snell said that availability of captive-bred animals, depends on suppliers. If they don't have what the store wants, they have to go to the wild.

Another sales assistant told me she had no idea how to look after a black-tailed prairie dog, a hedgehog or a sugar glider, a type of flying squirrel; the three were bred somewhere in the U.S. She didn't know where or under what circumstances. She also said the animals were unfamiliar to the staff.

None of these animals should be for sale, says Rob Laidlaw, executive director of Zoocheck Canada, an organization that deals exclusively with the welfare of exotic animals in captivity. People don't know how to look after them.

That includes the Greater Vancouver SPCA. When I met Hooper and some of his staff, they didn't even know what some of the animals on Petcetera's sales list were, let alone how to look after them.

Yet they continued to say there was no problem because the public hadn't complained.

That's because the public doesn't know enough to complain. It's up to the SPCA to tell them.

A hundred years ago it was acceptable to beat a dog in pubic and work a horse to death on the street. Now it isn't.

But public opinion didn't change on its own; it had to be led by organizations like the SPCA. In the case of exotic animals, a trade that kills tens of thousands of animals each year, the Greater Vancouver SPCA has abrogated that responsibility. It isn't shaping public opinion; it's using it to defend something indefensible.

Petcetera promises to establish an animal-welfare fund that could be worth $1-million in a few years. Vice-president Dan Urbani says he hopes the SPCA will benefit from it.

Hooper promises there is no question of the SPCA compromising its integrity for money.

It is compromising its integrity, however. Its turning a blind eye to a brutal animal-trade and by doing so, is encouraging the public to do the same.

It makes you wonder what SPCA stands for, the Society for the Perpetuation of Community Apathy?

Messages In This Thread

A pet-shuffling bus will reduce the pet-overpopulation problem? Who are Craig Daniell's handlers? They need to be fired.
Transporting Animals from A to B does not solve over-population.
I was told to take Petcetra off the list by the then Acting Branch Manager
Petcetera wants to increase the number of stores that sell helpless caged creatures
Re: Petcetera
The BCSPCA seems to have no intention of addressing the real cause of pet overpopulation
The mandate of the BCSPCA and the business plan of a highly successful and expanding pet shop
AAS has the Nick Read columns that describe the deal that the Vancouver SPCA cut with Petcetera
The original Petcetera/BC SPCA contract was signed by Brimacombe and Urbani March 1999.
Petcetera will not sell dogs or cats: This is the deal Petcetera cut with the SPCA
Craig Daniell seems to have changed his tune
Re: The original Petcetera/BC SPCA contract was signed by Brimacombe and Urbani March 1999. *LINK* *PIC*
Nick Read, Vancouver Sun: SPCA wrong to associate with new pet store; Nov 4/97
Nick Read: Vancouver Sun:Pet store breaks its humane-sale promise: Nov 18/97
We agree with all but...

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