Animal Advocates Watchdog

AAS's 1999 presentation, feel free to use
In Response To: Take action against pet stores ()

ADDRESS TO MAYORS AND COUNCIL RE PET STORE REGULATIONS- 1999

Good evening Mayor and Councillors, my name is Judy Stone, and I’m the President of Animal Advocates Society of B.C.

These photos taken by Animal Advocates Society are of puppies silently suffering in the misery of pet stores in the lower mainland. The cages look just like what they are – prison cells, but violent criminals are treated more humanely than these silently suffering innocents are. The metal grates, the cramped space, the isolation, are here to see. There are no blankets, not even a piece of cardboard to protect the puppies’ tender skin and feet from the metal grating. Walking is painful, so they remain huddled in their corners, for days and weeks and months of incomprehensible loneliness. These pictures show just how widespread is the assumption that the bottom line justifies misery. These breaches of common, humane treatment of animals have been reported to us for several years in every municipality in the lower mainland. We know of other animal welfare groups who have been complaining to the SPCA for twenty years. We hope you will provide protection for these helpless animals who are just merchandise to pet store owners.

North Vancouver District’s bylaw eliminated the cruel metal racks, but the other abuses, lack of socializing, exercise and healthy play were not addressed. We ask that you improve on the North Vancouver District legislation.

We would truly like to see pups be kept in a common play and sleeping area. Puppies get along with each other, and it would vastly help their healthy socialization, and their physical health too, as wrestling and playing helps their bones and muscles develop properly, and chewing on each other helps their teeth and jaws form properly. Play also teaches them social skills necessary for them to have long, happy, lives, and not be eventually rejected and euthanised because of behaviour problems. We frequently hear of pups purchased from these stores who are so neurotic and untrainable and unhealthy that their owners “get rid” of them or have them put down.

Animal behaviourist and veterinarian, Dr Ian Dunbar of the Department of Psychology, the University of California, Berkley writes “The large amount of time that is spent playing, is of utmost importance in the physical and behavioural maturation of the dog”.

And the famous Monks of New Skeet ask of pet stores: “how humane is it to have a puppy on display...isolated from its mothers and littermates, in a separate cage, lacking adequate exercise and handling."

As for the objection that the pups may contract diseases from each other: since the diseases are air-born, or transferred on staff’s and customer’s hands; and the pups are supposed to be certified healthy anyway, and to have had their vaccines, we see this as just a justification to run a business more cheaply and can’t accept this as a valid objection.

There is no physical reason to justify the extreme cruelty of keeping puppies in isolation. Dogs are by nature the most gregarious creatures in the world. Their physical and mental well-being requires the company of other dogs. Yet they are taken from their mothers and siblings at a tender age and put in tortuous cages, which have been designed for quick (and therefore cheap) cleaning of urine and feces, and where they sometimes stay for many months. We have witnessed a six-month old dog in a cage so small that it had to stand with its feet in its food and water bowls, its head perpetually bowed. We’ve been told that a pet store had a Sharpei for sale for over a thousand dollars, for so long that it outgrew it’s cage, and when a distressed woman offered $750 just to get it out of there, she was refused. Most of these stores are staffed with teenagers, with no training, like the store in Burnaby, where a three- week old kitten, too young to even lap milk was found by one of our supporters, with maggot infested sores around its neck. She bought it and saved it of course. That’s what animal lovers do.

We would also like to see the history of the pups for sale made readily available to the public. We can’t think of a single other instance where the origination of goods for sale is so shrouded in secrecy. It’s not legal to refuse to divulge where a car is manufactured, or even a sweater. The secrecy exists because the animal trade is essentially a trade in misery, habitat degradation, and species decimation. Because it sells helpless rodents and reptiles to often spend their lives in dirty lonely cages until death releases them. Because it sells rabbits and mice and rats to be fed to snakes. And because, that irony of ironies, it sells birds, our symbol of freedom, in cages, to die of neglect by the millions. We’d also like to know what happens to unsold animals. We’ve been told they may be sold for research. And we have documented evidence of small rodents being tortured and killed by some staff, people who are attracted to a business that provides them almost unlimited scope for their sadistic tendencies, because there are no cruelty investigations being done by the society that is supposed to prevent cruelty.

We have all heard of the horrors of mid-west American puppy-mills, (show photos) where dogs spend their whole breeding lives in filthy, foetid cages, malnourished and miserably lonely, until they die, worn out by repeated breedings. That’s where most of these pups come from, complete with shameful American Kennel Club papers. We have been told by witnesses, that when pups arrive in crates at customs, some have been found dead. They die of dehydration and heat prostration, but also from disease and injury. But all that’s factored into the huge prices.

Pet store owners may pay the American puppy-mill breeder as little as $300 for a pup that they are trying to sell for as much as $1500. The high price is why the pups are forced to endure such long periods of miserable, lonely isolation. Pet store owners, in contradiction to their insistence that they treat their merchandise humanely, are reluctant to infringe on their bottom line by spending money to treat these helpless pups with common kindness. We hope you will speak for the citizens of your municipality, and that you will also speak for these innocent creatures who cannot speak for themselves.

Thank you for allowing me to speak.

Messages In This Thread

Take action against pet stores
AAS's 1999 presentation, feel free to use
District of North Van pet store regulation bylaw
District of North Van pet store regulation bylaw
I will present DNV bylaw to Maple Ridge

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