And don't say the SPCA has to kill. What it has to do is spay and neuter, spay and neuter, spay and neuter. It has to stop the production, not kill the excess. This is a simple concept. Yet the Williams Lake SPCA, the very branch you defend, told me in an email this January that it had sold a dog named Erin, unspayed, into a new home where she had pups, and then was brought back to the SPCA, to be sold again. Until the SPCA leads by example, how can you say it should not be criticized?