Animal Advocates Watchdog

PLEASE write a letter to the Globe and Mail and to MPs

This is so very important..... please write a 200 words or less letter to the editor of the Globe and Mail (a national paper) addressing the issue of giving provincial SPCAs more power by strengthening the federal animal cruelty laws. In Ontario almost 100% of the charges the OSPCA lays are under the Federal Criminal Code. Attached is information to help you.

Letters to the Editor should be sent to letters@globeandmail.com.
Make sure you include name, address and daytime phone number. Please copy me in on your letter too
Thank-you,
Sunny Reuter
reuter@primus.ca

P.S. After you have emailed your letter to the Globe and Mail it is of vital importance to send a copy (regular mail & email) to these four Federal politicians. Remember, you don’t need a stamp to send a letter to your MP on Parliament Hill!

Hon. John Bryden, Senator, New Brunswick
Bill S-213
Centre Block
Room 463-S
Senate of Canada
Ottawa, ON
K1A 0A4
Tel: (613) 947-7305
Fax: (613) 947-7307
Email: damphh@sen.parl.gc.ca

Mark Holland, M.P., Ajax-Pickering
Bill C373
474 West Block
House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
Tel: 613-995-8042
Fax: 613-996-1289
Email: hollam@parl.gc.ca

Vic Toews, M.P., Provencher (Read Vic's quote)
President of the Treasury Board
Suite 306, Justice Building House of Commons
Ottawa. Ont. K1A 0A6
Ph:(613) 992-3128
Fx:(613) 995-1049
E-mail: Toews.V@parl.gc.ca

The Honourable Percy E. Downe, Senator Prince Edward Island (Read email to Senator Downe)
The Senate of Canada
Room 702, Victoria Building
140 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A4
Tel: (613) 943-8107
Toll free: 1-800-267-7362
E-mail: pdowne@sen.parl.gc.ca

Messages In This Thread

Liberals scrap over animal-cruelty bills
PLEASE write a letter to the Globe and Mail and to MPs
Unquestionably - strong, enforceable animal cruelty legislation is necessary – BUT WHO GETS THE POWER?
Granting unsupervised police powers to a chronically underfunded private charity...
Province: Cops must accept civilian oversight
Police openness fosters public trust, while secrecy can foster fear and suspicion
Civilian probes would boost confidence in police

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