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Editorial: 'NO KILL? - So Where Do They Go?' |
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‘No Kill?’ – So Where
Do They Go?
This commentary is not about pet shop pets.
It’s not about impulse buys and it’s not about backyard breeders.
This story is about a rather interesting concept called ‘No Kill Shelters’.
An estimated 200,000 dogs and cats are killed each year in Australia.
With more and more people surrendering domestic pets due to financial reasons
or because they are downsizing their living arrangements by moving into
apartments, this problem will only get worse – much worse before it gets better.
Those 200,000 animals on the surface represent a lack of homes for them to go
to or people willing to take them on.
We’re referring to the ‘pounds’ here or groups like RSPCA and AWL (Animal
Welfare League). Rescue groups in this country as far as we are aware don’t
have the authority to kill animals – yet. Although RSPCA & AWL volunteers
tell us they don't euthanase healthy 'temperament tested' animals.
So called ‘No Kill’ shelters (and they are growing in this country) will take
in every animal (in theory) and either find permanent homes for them, foster
them out on a temporary long-term basis or keep them at the shelter to live out
their days.
Our thinking is that in 5 years time if the figures stayed the same and we went
the ‘No Kill’ road, there would (in theory) be about 1Million dogs and cats
‘waiting’ for homes here in Australia.
We’re wondering who will feed them, take care of their veterinary requirements,
exercise them, environmentally enrich them and ensure they don’t become cage
bound… ?
Most of all – who will pay for all this? There is already a drought of funds
for the current load of rescue work and with increasing cost of living across
the board, fundraising is only going to get tougher.
HAS THIS MAN FOUND THE ANSWER?
One man in the USA
– Nathan Winograd believes he’s found the answer.
Nathan’s theories are too complex to explain here but make very interesting
reading.
http://nathanwinograd.blogspot.com/
But are Nathan’s theories ‘utopian’?
He basically says animal shelters and groups in the USA similar to our RSPCA and AWL are doing an
appalling job at re-homing all these dumped and surrendered animals and that is
why so many have to be killed each year.
He may well be right!
Nathan also believes that in the USA there are more homes ready to
take animals in than there are animals surrendered.
Would Australia’s
culture in the 21st century support that theory?
Many immigrants to this country come from cultures that don’t always see dogs
and cats as ‘pets’. In fact some are downright scared of them and others are
appalled we could even have them in our homes. But I guess there is just as much
'multiculturalism' in the USA head for head!
Nathan and his supporters say 'if a home can't be found, what's wrong with a
dog living in a sanctuary with a bunch of other dogs' - which is wonderful
in theory - but who pays for this and have canine behavioural experts been
consulted to see if this would work in practice?. Again land is expensive so
'who pays' ?
But we’re still left wondering why - if Nathan Winograd says there ARE enough
homes for all the animals that are currently being killed (in the USA and
presumably his theory could be applied here) – no-one seems to be able to
answer the question ‘why are they being dumped and/or surrendered in the first
place?’
We’ve touched on this recently in our 'Who
Created Death Row' commentary but some people seem to have taken
our thoughts the wrong way saying we are blaming rescue groups for making it
too easy to dump an animal. (we didn't say that but that's what they have read
into our editorial!! - oh well ....)
Look - we too are appalled at the alarming ‘kill’ figures here (and in the USA).
We too want an end to backyard breeders and accidental litters
We too want compulsory desexing for non-breeding domestic pets
We too want to close down pet shops that do the wrong thing
We too want to stop unregulated newspaper and internet sales of animals
We too want a regulated system for the sale and purchase of
any animal
But most of all we want more education programs about pets being ‘for life’.
And we want this information ‘rammed down the throat’ of every child in this
country from the age they can understand basic concepts until they leave
school.
Then we want it reinforced for anyone who wants to own a pet by making it
compulsory to register BEFORE buying an animal (even if you already have one
and want another) and attend (in person or on-line) a structured course that
requires at least a day’s attendance in animal husbandry, behaviour, basics of
nutrition, grooming, environmental enrichment and more, that results in a full
understanding of the responsibilities and long term costs and ramifications of
pet ownership.
We need to change the collective mind-set of the pet owning public so that
people start to feel like part of the solution rather than being part of the
problem.
Of course we are not saying these thoughts are the only solution to the current
problem of ‘over-kill’ but coupled with other initiatives, it might go a long
way to solving the horrendous issue of why people dump animals in the first
place.
I'd be interested in your thoughts via our forum...
Brian Pickering
Producer/Co-host
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