Animal Advocates Watchdog

What is the SPCA doing about the Psychological Abuse of yard dogs?
In Response To: #2. Enforcement of the PCA Act ()

What is the SPCA doing about the Psychological Abuse of yard dogs?

There are yard dogs and chained dogs everywhere all over the Province of BC and their lives are barely an existence. In early 2002 the BC SPCA announced it was making changes to stop this.

The New Animal Welfare Guidelines were going to be enforced and all of us in Animal Welfare were ecstatically hoping life would improve for backyard and chained dogs.

Another year has gone by and I cannot recall a single seizure based on Psychological Abuse. Maybe next year?

Scarlet was the only dog that was seized based on a warrant that included Psychological Abuse that we know of, but Scarlet's owners were never charged with anything so Psychological Abuse was never tested in a court, which is the only way that anything will change for psychologically abused animals. And Scarlet mysteriously died while in the SPCA's "care". There was no autopsy or vet's report on the cause of death even though AAS asked for them.

SPCA Successfully Cites ‘Psychological Abuse’ in Seizure

For Immediate Release - February 27, 2002: The BC SPCA has successfully cited psychological abuse as a factor in the seizure of an 11-month-old Rottweiler. The Victoria Branch SPCA successfully obtained a warrant to seize the dog on Feb. 22 based on new Animal Care Guidelines passed by the BC SPCA Board of Governors on Jan. 26, 2002.

“This is a significant step forward for animals in all BC communities,” said Lorie Chortyk, Director of Community Relations for the BC SPCA. “Until recently the focus of investigations around the province has been on physical cruelty and neglect. The new guidelines reflect our understanding that animals are sentient beings with emotions and strong social needs.” She said that since the enforcement guidelines were approved in January SPCA officials have applied the new standards in several investigations. “In this particular case we have successfully used emotional abuse as a key factor in our ability to obtain a warrant.”

On Feb. 20 the SPCA responded to a complaint about a young Rottweiler chained in a backyard in the Victoria region. “We found a dog tethered to a crate that was too small to provide adequate shelter, living in her own excrement, with virtually no human companionship or exercise,” said Maureen Accleton, acting manager of the Victoria Shelter. “It was a miserable existence.” Accleton said the SPCA’s first step, as required by law, was to issue instructions to the dog’s owner to improve the animal’s circumstances. “When we returned on Feb. 22 no effort had been made to help the animal and we made a decision to pursue the case based in part on the emotional cruelty inflicted by her confinement and isolation.”

The SPCA will present its evidence within the next few weeks to Crown Counsel, the body that decides whether or not to lay formal charges under the BC Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act. The seized Rottweiler remains in the custody of the SPCA, where she is receiving assessment from a local veterinarian to determine her physical and psychological health.

Chortyk said the case marks a major change in animal cruelty enforcement. “Whatever happens in this case we want people who neglect their pets, both physically and emotionally, to know that we are significantly raising the bar on how animals are treated in this province,” she said. “The feedback we have received from the public supports this change, and we are determined to purse more cases of emotional and psychological abuse under our new guidelines.”

She said the sections of the SPCA’s Animal Care Guidelines relating to emotional distress are based on academic research in the field of animal behaviour. “We know, for example, that dogs are pack animals -- they need regular social interaction or they will become extremely anxious and depressed. To deprive a dog of companionship is as cruel as withholding food or water.” In addition to the new enforcement guidelines for dogs and cats, the SPCA is currently developing species-specific guidelines for a number of other animals.

Chortyk said training is currently under way with BC SPCA Special Provincial Constables around the province to assist them in applying the new standards when investigating complaints of animal cruelty and neglect.

The SPCA’s Animal Care Guidelines follow the Five Freedoms – an approach used by other animal welfare organizations around the world. The guidelines state that all animals must receive care that enables them to experience:

Freedom from thirst, hunger, and malnutrition;
Freedom from discomfort;
Freedom from pain, injury, and disease;
Freedom from distress; and
Freedom to express behaviours that promote well being.
http://www.google.ca/search?q=cache:BAMC92JBM7QJ:www.bcspca.com/media/PsychologicalAbuseFeb2002_Press.htm+Community+Consultation+BC+SPCA&hl=en

Messages In This Thread

The BC SPCA's Community Consultation Report: A Three-Year Check
Community Consultation Report Index
#1. Executive Summary
Perhaps I'll Just Send This Executive Summary to the SPCA's Lawyers as My Defense
Dog breeders being "raided" by an SPCA that won't tell the breeders what is and is not against the law
Does the BC SPCA value these suggestions or have they too been thrown away in the trash along with other feedback
#2. Enforcement of the PCA Act
What is the SPCA doing about the Psychological Abuse of yard dogs?
The SPCA's Tethering Report: March 2003
"Bonnie" *PIC*
It's Really All About What Works For the SPCA, Not the Animals
#3. Animal Shelters
The SPCA is still selling product, not adopting lives
#4. Volunteerism
This was the state of affairs in 2003, and this is still going on
#5. Pet Overpopulation
Today, there is no SPCA spay/neuter clinic in Victoria
#6. Education
#7. Animal Control
#8. Feral Cats
#9. Agricultural Animals
#10. Wildlife
#11. Animals in Entertainment
#12. Exotic Species
#13. First Nations
If Big Heart Rescue can make a difference in the lives of First Nations pet companions
#14. Accountability
Re: #14. Accountability; Nothing has improved
#16. Advocacy
#17. Human/Animal Bond
The Humane Society in Mission has had the same program with Ferndale Institution

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