(Listening to the two songs as you encounter them will add depth and help to enrich your villain-bashing experience.)
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada Beverly McLachlan (or Chief Jester Beaverless McBootlickin of the Hangin' Kangaroo Court of Canida, as one wag was calling her) did the absolute best thing possible she could have done for the case to lance McGuinty's piece of diseased malevolence known as the 'pit bull' ban.
I knew Bev was our last stop because we couldn't take Dolton 'Cucumber Head' McGuilty to the Hague. She didn't let us down.
She dismissed the case with no findng of fact or weighing of evidence. It was, whatever, we're ready to close for the summer, I'm kind of tired, let's just end this one now and cut these crazy old dog ladies a break. There will be other cases to come up with lower stakes in the fall - ie, if you lose they aren't going to kidnap and kill your family members.
In so doing, she:
1. Saved us possibly at least another year and a half hanging around at the mandatory level 1 - the court system - and having to raise another quarter million dollars.
2. Didn't comment on or uphold anything. Our case, which was that the law was vague so people weren't sure if they were affected and that way more people would be affected than should be because they couldn't tighten up the definition of what they were trying to ban wasn't mentioned at all.
It was nah, not now, maybe later. Dismissed, somebody pay the bill on the way out.
The case wasn't about boo hoo poor doggies, or my 'pit bull' is friendly or anything like that at all. It was about those two points mentioned above and some interesting related stuff. It was a constitutional case, see.
So all you whackadoodle overly emotonal rescue skanks can cry and whine but you do not understand this issue and you are not the people we're going to call on to join the resistance, OK? Do your thing it's valuable work, you're helping dogs. If you want to understand our thing get yourselves a thesaurus, a dictionary and stop paying attention to the braying carrion-eaters in the media and animal lib camps. When you ask us a question, listen to the answer and don't filter it through your own bullshit. If you don't understand, ask again we'll explain it again.
We WANT people to get this.
OK.
It didn't make a fig of a difference which way the SCC ruled. Had they said, this thing is a toxic biohazard and McGutless and Brytler are going into the stocks, it still wouldn't have meant diddley in the real world.
The law could have stood for a decade. They could have just rewritten the sticky bits. They could have ignored the whole thing. They could have made it universal for ALL dogs (not that they would have had the guts, which is how this crap got started in the first place) and how's that for an endgame? Consider yourselves very lucky.
Are you hearts and flowers ill-equipped dunces getting this?
Bev saved us a year-and a half more of playing the waiting game in the courts and having to raise more huge amounts of money to get to level two - the fun time when we can do demonstrations and other civil rights actions. We had to get here anyway, even if the law had been struck down. The judge who had guts and totally understood the issues, Madame Justice Thea Herman of the Superior Court of Justice, could have tossed out a little bit more, speeded up her ruling and maybe even clipped us another year but otherwise she totally came through for the constitution. I think Court of Appeal just decided to help us get to the SCC as quickly as possible and handed out that bizarre ruling and dput it back together to save time up there.
Thank you Madam Chief Justice McLachlan and Madame Justice Thea Herman. You were the key players who didn't let us down.
Now the fun starts - cheap, entertaining and what I've been waiting five years for as of Aug 9. [I'm enjoying all the cloak and dagger stuff my readers are associating with August 9 but I'm not a cruel person. It's mentioned elsewhere at Caveat as my personal anniversary, August 9, 2004, when I realized these maniacs were serious and jumped in and started fighting. We all have one. My friend's is August 28, 2004, the day the guy we never heard from again was being, and I quote Bryant directly, "eaten from the ground up" by a couple of 'pit bulls' he'd actually bred himself and had out for a walk. When's yours? Mark it on your calendar and celebrate with a fun, inexpensive civil action. That's what I'll be doing)
"BURN, BABY, BURN" said Sumbuddy.
Looks like I'm going to be hanging on to McGrotty's ear for a bit longer and I wouldn't mind changing position.
I'll talk to the ref once I figure out who the ref is.
Stay tuned, folks, The laffs are going to come on now.
Oh and McGutly and BrownNoser: Any time you guys want to back down let us know and we can all shake hands and go home, no hard feelings, winner takes all. You know how this pit bullshit works. We won't back down because we CAN'T back down - we're the good guys, the champs. The only way we can is if you guys can make us do it and it doesn't look like that's going to happen. So, basically this is a stalemate under the rules until you make a move or the ref makes a call - but we don't have a ref.
Now that we're at level two (finished with the courts), we're just going to hold the line for awhile and take some well deserved R & R. Then we're going to come at you hot and hard and we're gonna keep coming until we move you. Either way, it's game over, we just couldn't protest or move you until we were finally advanced out of level 1, out of deference to the court.
And by the way, a handful of us fought our way uphill with rubber swords and one hand tied behind our backs agqinst an infernal juggernaut that controls the media, police, courts, transportation, health, food and drugs, information and everything else and we won.
You must have had a good reason to be so afraid of us, because even with everything stacked in your favour you thought you had to play a dirty game to beat us. Maybe you were right or maybe that's the only kind of game you know how to play. We won every pointless motion you brought to try to run us out of time and money at 50 grand a pop, including the one where you were trying to turn a collie into a 'pit bull'.
We proved that the legislation, vetted by a [supposed] professor of constitutional law was unconstitutional right out of the gate at the first court round.
As always, the yapping curs in the news outlets didn't think that was newsworthy enough to fact-check because it was something that was good for our side. Bryant told media that the law was upheld except for a bit of redundant language, ie, that it didn't happen. We had to tell people ourselves that Section 19 (the gitmo-style witness clause) had been struck in its entirety and 'pit bull terrier' was gone along with some other wording and show them the backup decision. I sent it to the Sun, who had quoted Bryant, and they didn't even give me a call to get the scoop, never mind correct the record. Funny, people believe campfire tales in the newspapers at the drop of a hat without bothering to think them through.
And, we did this without cheating, running Who's on First routines in the courtroom or lying straight into the TV cameras and we paid for it by building enough public support so we could beg a million dollars off the streets to cover the costs. We're paid in full right now. I didn't see you mofos selling t-shirts at Woofstock, let's put it that way. You thought you were being clever hanging around our booth pretending to be supporters, trying to fish out our super-secret strategy. Our super-secret strategy was that we didn't have one - we played it straight all the way. The hardest part of dealing with you junior espionage types was keeping a straight face when we were talking to you.
Remember, by now we'd hung with you guys more than we had with our own friends and family - we rode down in the elevator with some you after Remedy just to see if we could make you sweat. The fact that you thought we didn't recognize you and funnier still, that you didn't recognize us was too sweet to resist.
So there'd be a lull, which doesn't happen often at Woofstock - these days people down there are throwing money at me and Lori so fast you'd think we were a couple of gay lookalike Japanese stripper-girls at a politician's stag - it's the only reason we go at all. We hate Woofstock.
We'd swing into 'educational mode' and start our little game of cat-and-mouse and maybe that would be it. We'd be insulting the crap out of you right to your faces and trying not to crack up. One time one of the three-man lawyer team defending the ban in court (and it happened with others but this was the best) was skulking at our booth. Lori called him by name right away because we were tired and didn't want to deal with him. His eyes bugged out of his head and he totally blew cover and went scuttling off into the crowd. It was the best of them all because this guy had seen us at least 25 times by now, at close range and we even sat right beside him a couple of days in court. We were laughing our asses off - you guys entertained us and kept us sane through the heat and the smog and the filth and boiler-room atmosphere and the dog abuse that is Woofstock all bloody weekend.
That's the kind of stuff that was going on in the background so we could blow off steam and have some fun while were fighting you guys to the finish to save dogs and democracy in Ontario.
The only money we owe is to ourselves, when three of us took out loans and lines of credit back in '06 when the fundraising was a lot harder and some people weren't holding up their end and we needed $100 grand or we were dead in the water. We made interest-free loans to keep this boat afloat and we're gently fundraising now to pay ourselves last. And that's only because we thought we might get costs for winning the motions or sending the law out of the first court knocked down with unconstitutional bits but for some reason we didn't. We couldn't afford to give any more which is why that one was a loan. This will be the only money we get back. We designed and paid for the t-shirts we then stood and sold on the street and we didn't get a dime. We traveled and boarded our dogs and bought research materials and made donations and sponsored events - in my case the Bully Ball - and on and on it went. We'd all given much more than we could afford. So that's why if we put out a letter asking for help to get that one small amount of money back on principle, I hope that all our wonderful supporters will think about helping us out one last time.
Our role was to fund this case and provide as much research material and resources as possible for free because Catherine was a stand-up kid who was suing in the public interest and there was no way she could pay for it herself and she couldn't get it pro bono. We became the interested public in other words and that public started expanding - I wish you could see it now McGuinty, because it would keep you up at night the way you've kept us up at night.
We've built an unbelievable collection of scientific information, data sources, legal documents and more. We've learned more about our two favourite subjects - dogs and democracy - in five years than most people learn in a lifetime about one AND we're completely up to date with current research. We could bang out PhDs from dissertation to defence off the top of our heads as a party game while reading the paper.
We didn't even know each other when this thing started, we were just all galvanized the same way and kind of drifted into a group but we became instant Sisters-in-Arms & Three Steves because like knows like. We have allies all over the world in many different fields who are working as hard as we are to change public opinion and preserve dog ownership and hard-won civil rights for future generations. We've built friendships that can never be torn apart no matter what happens - even between people who don't like each other - because our lives here at Banned Aid became full on focus, 90% work and 10% sleep for the past five years straight.
We did our job from the opening bell to the endgame toll and we're totally proud and happy that we did our absolute best all down the line and we did it with honour and decency.
We went around the world, and as hard as it got we kept the faith and never stopped believing in democracy and the rule of law as the one thing that could save us. And the right angels put us back in the same place we'd be if we did nothing at all - the date of enactment - August 29, 2005 - the day Hurricane Katrina pushed the McGuinty Massacre of the Innocents off the front page. And it was the safest damned place for us to be.
Does anybody, anywhere, think that we lost something here?
Best of all, the game pieces, play money and maps were scattered all over the place. The whole game is back together in the box with nothing missing, nothing broken and only a scratch or two on a couple of pieces.
The record of how the first game played out is there and there are more tools to improve the odds and will be each time somebody plays the game. We blazed a clear path from beginning to end all the way through. We ran a clean game and we played by the rules.
So it's all set for when the next people want to see if they can beat the odds when playing against the House.
*
Oh, and the reason I did all this, don't know about the others was because this is my absolute bottom line and you were violating both with this legislation:
Every citizen is entitled to equal treatment under the law.
The burden of proof lies with the prosecution.
*
THE LAST WORD
I put this here because I wanted people to know what happened in Ontario from my point of view since I was one of the few who was in long and deep and they're still lying about us and cutting us out of the media.
Lori called me the day it all came down and said CTV was saying that the Supreme Court of Canada upheld the fact that 'pit bulls' were vicious and should be banned. I wondered if somebody else was running a case and we didn't know about it but that was impossible.
The exact words that day from Chief Justice McLachlan were these:
Dismissed with Charges.
That was it - it's on their website.
Our case wasn't about whether 'pit bulls' were vicious and should be banned or if it was OK to kill 'pit bulls'. It was obviously a theme but as I told you, the core of our case was that they couldn't define what they were trying to ban, so too many people were vulnerable because of confusion and too many people were getting caught in the net who shouldn't have been.
So how did CTV, which is as close to being a member of the Liberal party as you can get (fact not theory), come up with that bizarre interpretation? And apparently they were the only ones who said it.
This is exactly why I don't really watch old media because they never even try to get anything right anymore and it just makes me unnecessarily mad. If I want info I go to the source - like straight to the SCC website in this case. These guys are tanking fast and they deserve it.
So for some strange reason I wanted to make sure there was some truth out there this time and it felt great to just open up not worry who was reading it too - because anything strategic will never be used again anyway.
I hope the others do the same.
Dalton McGuinty and Michael Bryant appeared so arrogant, desperate and unfit to serve the public that they casually tried to regulate something about which they obviously hadn't even the most basic understanding.
They remained wilfully ignorant despite being inundated with a king's ransom of information from experts that was given to them free of charge. They chose to ignore it.
They were bombarded with protests which should have made them realize that while they thought the issue was trivial, it may have been more important than they suspected and maybe they should do their jobs and work for the benefit of all citizens. They decided to ignore that correspondence, stonewall about what was happening and pretend most people wanted them to ban dogs execept for a noisy fringe of criminals and people who made money from owning and selling illegal fighting dogs. Trust me, I've got the emails and written submissions to committee.
They whipped the vote on the law, which meant everybody on the government side had to vote for it or leave the room, because they knew it wouldn't even pass in their own caucus on a free vote.
And then they started killing dogs and they had their trained parrots in the news outlets run the propaganda campaign and people still weren't buying it except for the extreme low-information set who were as ignorant and sociopathic as the perpetrators were but they pretended they were saving people from a dangerous threat.
In my mind, the dangerous threat was them.
So a handful of middle-aged dog lovers decided to see if they could shame or sue the bastards in order to save the longest association in history - a 50,000 year partnership that was growing stronger and getting better with each passing day. It is the most beautiful and the oldest love story in the history of humanity and although evil forces continue to try to separate them they will fight to protect each other as two against the world until the end of time.
The rest is up above and I just wanted people to know what happened in our country's and our generation's fight against tyranny. This is our Inquisition, our ethnic cleansing, our Civil rights March, our fight to preserve our way of life from terrorists and tyrants.
It's always the same game, you know. The evil ones just keep changing the game pieces and using different slogans and reasons.
This time, some stand up people took up the banner of one of the most unpopular causes of our time - we stood up to save the 'pit bulls' in Ontario because we knew that they were just dogs too - and we rallied support to our cause as all the others throughout history have rallied support to theirs.
And the dead dogs piled up and every one of those dogs was grieved and every one of those dogs was innocent and every one of those dogs was just a garden-variety mutt and every one of those dogs had an owner who was innocent too - again just like all the other times.
And we called it collateral damage to toughen ourselves up because there was nothing we could do about it - we weren't going to start fighting on multiple fronts.
We were outnumbered, it was all stacked against us, the bad guys had it handed to them on a platter and if they needed more they just reached out and took it. We bled, sweated and cried for everything we got.
And you can't always win and we risked losing everything but we went ahead anyway, seat of our pants, travelling light, making do and keeping our eye on the prize.
We knew all along that the final decision wasn't up to us - that was the hard part -and we had no way of knowing what it was going to be so we just had to hope they read our evidence and it was the right stuff and we were persuasive enough to get them seeing things our way.
*
And now the people who are angry because we didn't get for them what they thought they deserved and because they think we made mistakes because they are still killing 'pit bulls' in Ontario are out bad-mouthing our battle and staining our honest, clean contest that was fought with honour against an enemy who was prepared to descend into any kind of evil just so it wouldn't have to admit it had made a mistake.
Dogs will be kindly put to death until the end of time, my friends, because even in the No Kill Nation that other valiant forces are working to create, there will always be some dogs, as there will always be some people, that just don't have what it takes to survive - even with the artificial means that have vastly multiplied that number of beings within my own lifetime.
Those people are the most monstrous players of them all in this saga - and it is a saga.
We were out there begging for help, for supplies, for silver and gold. We needed backup, strategy, manpower and armament.
We went ahead anyway and they kept pushing us back and we kept fighting forward, side-by-side. We were quick, light, agile and focused. Best of all we were doing it for a bottomless love that made us smart and protected us from harm. It was all going so fast and furiously we didn't have time to send dispatches back from the field.
You can't always win and you can't always get what you want but you can always try.
Where the hell were you, you unimaginative wastes of time who are now telling us we zigged when we should have zagged? You still haven't understood that while we didn't win it all we won a lot of it and we didn't lose. You have to have a certain kind of mind to see it and I don't know if I can explain it to you. And, this first match isn't even over yet.
Later, more will come and build on what we've done and that's how you change the world - one campaign at a time. You go from A to B, not A to Z.
And you're willing to start collaborating with the enemy - which is violence and hatred - because you wanted us to win it all for you the first time out without your having to lift a finger to help carry the day yourself.
And that, my friends, is the bitter end.
Throughout this blog is the evidence. This final delightfully purple summary is my way of having fun while howling from the mountaintop that we somehow became the ones, for one brief moment in time, who would take on all comers and fight to defend our two-species nation and our democratic way of life to the finish. It's been long and tough and it damned near killed me but despite all that, I hope we get lucky and have a chance to do it again.
The lights have been out, the store is still in business.
One week ago my own light had burnt down to the point that I was straight-arming the Reaper as the machine sputtered and the bastard almost had me. In one drop-dead hour it turned around and today I'm here and burning so hot that I have to slow down cause I'm still where when people ask me how I am it's "I'm alive!!!"
I'm not sharing deets I do that with my close friends and fam.
Just wanted to explain the deal. No editing, don't care about typos, I'm not even supposed to be doing this yet.
I got one more shortie about the situation and I'm gone for awhile again. We'll be changing direction slightly anyway.
Pax.
And don't fuck with we 'pit bull people' as you morons like to call us. We're the ones that got game and we don't back down. We also don't start it but we'll fucking finish it - or literally die trying.
The FBI has added Daniel San Diego to its list of most wanted terrorists. He shares the honour with Osama bin Laden and others but has the dubious distinction of being the first domestic terrorist added to the list.
Oh, and thanks a lot, ABC. I was using the same title but had to change it after I visited your story.
The FBI put out a press release on April 22 listing various rewards for information in attacks targeting scientific researchers.
A couple of ALF members were indicted in Los Angeles on April 22, charged with conspiracy, stalking, and other crimes against researchers at UCLA.
A pro-research rally in Los Angeles attracted hundreds of supporters, vastly outnumbering the animal liberaton extremists protesting at the same time. I guess the animal liberation schtick is finally wearing thin with mainstream groups, which is a good thing indeed.
And then there's Mr Vick (rhymes with...). A buddy out west gave me the heads-up on this one:
Michael Vick in Talks to Become PETA Spokesman
Jailed NFL Superstar Looks to Rehab Image After Dog-fighting Rap
NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Michael Vick is in talks to become the new spokesman for PETA.
Yes, you read that correctly. The disgraced one-time NFL superstar
serving prison time for funding an illegal dog-fighting ring is primed
to do public-service ads for People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals upon his release later this month. According to three people
with knowledge of the matter, the proposed endorsement is part of a
comprehensive PR scheme aimed at rehabilitating the quarterback's image
and gaining him readmission to the league that banned him from playing.
Well, at least Vick and Peta have something in common - both have used 'pit bulls' to further their own ends, both have shown no respect for animal life and both appear to be greedy and manipulative enough to deserve each other.
What's the difference between bumping off animals you promised to place in new homes then throwing the corpses into a dumpster and bumping off animals you were supposed to care for and burying the bodies in the backyard? Thirty million bucks a year, I guess.
This guy Vick isn't too bright, is he? Doesn't he have teh Google? Somebody should let him know that the worst thing he could do to rehab his image (such as it is) is to join forces with the most hypocritical, self-serving, histrionic group of animal-killing phonies around.
If Vick thinks people who love dogs are mad at him now, just wait until his goofy mug appears in a Peta commercial. I hope he goes for it just because I'm nice that way.
I've been AWOL for over two weeks, for reasons beyond my control.
I didn't post about our booth at the All About Pets show on Easter weekend (Friday to Sunday) but it was a good event for us. Lots of people stopped by our booth to show support. It's amazing how many people own or have owned dogs that could be 'pit bulls' - from young students to middle-aged to elderly people.
Also, Fred from One Bark at a Time stopped by. It was great to meet him in person - always fun to see cyber-buddies in 3D.
We had mascots at our booth all weekend and they did a great job of meeting people and showing them what nice, friendly dogs they are. For contrast, I brought my three pups on Sunday.
Anyway, I have a few things I want to talk about once I get sorted out here.
Thanks to everybody who reads this blog and comments here. It makes blogging seem worthwhile.
Nathan Winograd has a couple of good posts up about the meeting of the 'pit bull' profiteers in Las Vegas.
I know that nobody is surprised that the HSUS continues to exhibit what amounts to a corporate sociopathy or by the fact that no progress was made.
The burning question isn't whether 'pit bulls' are just dogs (they are), whether fighting dogs are a product of their environment (they are), whether any thinking human would agree that dogs shouldn't die for our sins (they would) or whether the HSUS will veer away from its set course of animal liberation (it won't - at least not until the current BOD is booted out and some truly humane leaders are voted in).
No, to me, the most important question is this:
What makes these people think that they have the right to speak for 'pit bulls', dogs in general, 'bust dogs' (as they call them) or for all of us who are out here in the frontlines - in rescue, in the courts, and on the streets?
I deeply resent the intrusive, self-serving, double-dealing campaign by the HSUS to legislate pet breeding and ownership into oblivion while crying crocodile tears for dogs, cats, horses and chickens.
I'm insulted by the unending stream of contradictory, duplicitous and illogical statements that wouldn't fool a first-grader.
I am galled by their hubris in implying to the rubes ithat they are a government-sanctioned agency - worse, a law enforcement group - rather than a private special interest lobbying outfit which does not represent mainstream views.
Their arrogance in presuming to 'negotiate' repulsive ideas such as breed (ha ha) bans 'down' to breed-specific mandatory neutering (Louisville) and then say it's somehow better than a ban - would be hilarious were it not so deadly to dogs.
Most of all, I get really, really, really pissed off by all these people who make money and promote themselves on the backs of 'pit bulls' - be they incompetent politicians like Old Nanny McGuinty in Ontario, cheese-ass journalists who need a hook because they're too lazy or hung over to write an actual story, rescue groups who post all kinds of nonsense about how weird 'pit bulls' are on their websites, hysterics who get information from personal injury lawyers and white-hooders so they can get a hate on and all the rest of them - fooling themselves into believing that people like me give a damn about what they think or say.
If I want an opinion about 'pit bulls', I'll ask a 'pit bull'. At least they aren't in it for the money. Sometimes I think they're the only ones who aren't.
I wonder if we'll have more luck here in 2011 than we did in 2007 trying to get people to oust McGuinty? Surely by then even the lowest of the low-information voters will have realized that the Ontario Liberals are anything but - and not only because of their draconian, antiquated approach to dog ownership. They treat everybody as if they need Old Nanny McGuinty looking over their shoulders, telling them what to buy, what to eat, how to garden...you name it, Old McGuinty will ban it or tax the hell out of it. The rest he just mismanages.
This weekend we will be manning the DLCC booth at the All About Pets show.
The show is huge, and apparently very busy, so if you're in Toronto area and attending, please drop by our booth, number 536. I attach the floor plan. We are almost in the centre near the big rectangular area with the red dot on its left side. If you view the plan at 150%, you'll see where we are. Unfortunately, I can't save it as a rotated version because I'm too cheap frugal to buy Adobe software, so you'll have to turn your monitor 90 degrees, or your head, whichever is easier.
Information about what's happening and directions are on the All About Pets website. We'll be beside our friends from Southern Ontario Animal Rescue so if you're visiting them, you'll see us.
Now, back to working on my display for our booth. I never do things ahead of time since half the fun is staying up late with clenched teeth working to a harsh deadline. Isn't it?
Someone using the immensely credible handle, 'Anonymous', has been posting a comment...
"HSUS got the $190,000 from the amicus brief filed in the Michael Vick
case. The brief was signed by ADOA, the Animal Adoption Center, Best
Friends, The Cape Fear APBT Club,CHAKO, The Maryland Dog Federation,
The National American Pit Bull Terrier Association, The Real Pit Bull
Foundation for Advocacy and Rescue, Spindletop Refuge,Villalobos Rescue
Center, &Worthy Companions Domestic Animal Rescue"
...here and there, notably at Yesbiscuit! and Blue Dog State, both of whom (along with yours truly) have exposed the Wilkes County involvement of the HSUS using the transcript in the case.
Trouble is, it's a lie. BDS has been wondering where the $190,000 per dog rehabilitation cost mentioned by Amanda Harrington in court came from - and so have I.
Well, it certainly didn't come from the referenced Amicus curiae brief filed in the Vick case, as the intrepid BDS has discovered:
The amicus brief reads (emphasis aded) . . .
"Amici estimate an average cost of $2,500 per dog
for assessment and rehabilitation. To the extent that the Government
has calculated an amount in excess of that figure, Amici adopt the
amount estimated by the Government."
So, for the 53 Vick dogs, the estimate was $132,500 -- for all 53 dogs.
Not exactly $190,000 per dog, is it?
So, again: where did that $190,000 come from ?
Are we looking at perjury? Extortion? What?
Yeah, are we looking at perjury? Extortion? What? How about libel? Do Anonymous's comments constitute libel, or just a desperate attempt to lie about verifiable facts?
Over to you, Wayne-O.
Update:
It seems we aren't looking at either perjury, extortion or libel but we are still looking at something very fishy -
There's more information in another comment at BDS -
Page 29, Section A ....
Rehabilitation of fighting dogs is a
time consuming, labor intensive effort which requires 4 to 6 hours each
day per dog. Qualified trainers earn between $50.00-$75.00 per hour. At
5 hours a day, 30 days a month, this $9,70 dollars per month of
training. To this, add food and veterinary care, and the price to
rehabilitate a fighting dog is a little more than $10,000 per month. If
training and rehabilitating a dog takes 18 months, the cost rises to
$180,000 plus the run cost of $10,000 or $190,000 per dog.
That's where HSUS got the figure, page 29 of tha amicus in the VICK case that had nothing to do with this case.
Incidentally, this snip is not available in the online version of the brief.
Since none of the signatories to the Amicus curiae brief in the Vick case had ever attempted a rehab op like this one, they had no way of knowing how time-consuming or labor intensive it might be, which is fair enough.
However, to state flatly that it takes 4 - 6 hours of professional training daily for a month and for up to 18 months is not realistic.
First of all, if that's the case, they aren't dealing with pro trainers.
We're talking about an average of 150+ hours per month of individual professional training time. Taken for the maximum mentioned, 18 months, that amounts to 2,700 hours of training to socialize just one dog from a fighting bust.
You know, if something doesn't sound true, it usually isn't. Comparing this absurd estimate with the amount of time children spend in primary classes, which is around 100 hours per month for 9 months per year (one month deducted for holidays and PE days), we see that a child spends 900 hours in school each year.
So we are expected to believe that a child can attend school for three years in the amount of time it takes to socialize one dog?.
Was somebody trying to pad the bill a bit to take advantage of Vick's high profile? Maybe everybody is fighting over money, who knows? There's sure gold in them thar 'pit bull' hills these days if you're on the right side. Which means you're not on our side because that costs money and time in a big way.
However, to be fair, Harrington's testimony regarding rehab costs was reportedly sourced from court documents in the Vick case.
I guess we can't blame the HSUS for everything but we can still call them out for insisting that harmless dogs and puppies were better off dead.
They are the Humane Society of the United States, aren't they?
What these silly people are saying about 'fighting dogs' is based on a belief in cultural memory. The premise is that if a dog's ancestors were trained to perform an activity, then all their descendants can inherit that training,
rather than the qualities that made them suitable in the first place.
Of course, the animal liberation scribe Clifton believes this, so I
imagine others do as well. Ah hell, I don't imagine it, I know it -
they say it over and over and over again, not realizing how foolish it
makes them appear.
So, HSUS, you're off the hook on the supposed source for the $190 K per dog rehab nonsense, but not the rest of it, such as the fact that it had nothing to do with the Faron case, wasn't an estimate in the Faron case and wasn't even awarded in the Vick case.
Why would anybody use a figure like that? The only reason that I can see is that they want to be sure all rescue efforts around alleged dogfighting busts are scuttled. That way, they can still kill all the 'pit bulls' and move on to the next 'case'.
Thanks to the efforts of another blogger, we have seen the testimony in the Wilkes County, North Carolina dog-killing by representatives of the Humane Society of the United States. The dogs were seized from a Mr Faron, who couldn't afford the ransom to get his dogs back, including puppies that were born in the hoosegow. He pleaded guilty to 14 counts of dog-fighting, something which was legal in North Carolina until 1997.
A hearing was held to determine the fate of the dogs seized in the case and the puppies born in custody. The representatives of the HSUS testified on February 16, 2009.
First up was Amanda Harrington, former office manager, anti-tethering activist, and member of an animal welfare advisory board. She is now the North Carolina State Director for the HSUS and, like most HSUS spokepeople, seems to know very little about dog behaviour or dog breeding.
MS. AMANDA ARRINGTON: They [Best Friends] are offering to assist. That is their language that they used. That means it would still be the county's responsibility. And in their own words, it costs about $190,000 per dog to rehabilitate them.
THE COURT: $190,000 to rehabilitate a dog?
MS. AMANDA ARRINGTON: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: That's what Best Friends says?
MS. AMANDA ARRINGTON: Yes.
Wow, I guess a lot of people owe me a lot of money for all
the dogs I've adopted that needed rehabilitation training. We all know
that 8-week-old puppies need a lot of rehab. Way to scare the rubes,
Amanda, using big numbers like that. Did they all touch their wallets
when you dropped that bombshell? This kind of begs the question,
though: How much does it cost to rehab somebody from the Dr Phil show, if
it costs almost 200 grand to rehab a dog?
Then we get into the fun part, where HSUS
people, as usual, show that they really know their stuff.
THE COURT: why is this the so-called humane thing to do?
MS. AMANDA ARRINGTON: To euthanize?
THE COURT: Yes, ma'am.
AARRRGGHHH!!! I can't take it anymore! Make it stop! It isn't
frickin' euthanasia when you are destroying healthy animals. It's
killing. Face it HSUS/Peta/Shelter euphemizers, that's what you are doing - in record
numbers.
But wait, there's more:
MS. AMANDA ARRINGTON: For the dogs themselves, I think, because of the
way that they were bred. I think it is an unrealistic expectation for
us to ask these dogs that have been bred generations for fighting to
become regular pets. And it's an even bigger thing to ask people to
take on that responsibility and the county to take on both the
financial burden and the liability.
You know, we could be a couple years down the road and one of these dogs could do something, and I think it ultimately could come back on the county of Wilkes.
Ooh, I bet they touched their wallets that time. The old 'hit 'em with liability' trick, eh? You know that liability is the one thing that keeps government lackeys up at night, don't you?
There's an HSUS double-whammy here because what this bird is really saying is that nobody should try to place a dog into a new home through a city facility. Because, you know, a few years might pass and the dog might 'do something' and the city will be left wearing a barrel and suspenders, I tell you what.
Quelle cruche de merde. Yes, you heard me, merde. I'm surprised the judge didn't call it as he obviously saw it. He was probably trying to appear objective while being slimed with a bucketful of vintage HSUS being hurled in his general direction by these witnesses.
Next up is former animal control officer Chris Schindler (oh, the irony) who wants to make it clear that he knows dogs:
THE COURT: Sir, did you want to add something?
MR. CHRIS SCHINDLER: I'm Chris Schindler. I'm the Deputy Manager, Animal Fighting Law Enforcement, Humane Society of the United States.
Swoon - Not only a Deputy [manager], but a Law Enforcement Deputy [manager]. A regular Dudley Fiddlin' DoRight in the flesh.
There's just a slight problem, though. The HSUS is not a law enforcement agency, is not a government agency of any kind, has no mandate to represent anyone but its own twisted sistership which, being dazed and confused, supports the animal liberation agenda.
But I digress. Here's the part that really shows everybody what the HSUS is all about:
Your Honor, basically agree with all the things that everyone else has said. These dogs have been bred for generations upon generations for a single purpose of animal fighting; the puppies included.
They all have been bred to display those traits of gameness and these things that dog fighters look for. People don't come from all over the world to obtain dogs from Ed Faron because, you know, they are just a regular pit bull.
Pick me! I have some questions, Your Honor! Pick me!
1. Does Schindler believe that dogs can be bred for animal fighting? 2. Does he believe that young puppies, barely old enough to leave the nest, are dangerous? 3. Does he believe that every dog in every litter displays the same personality traits? 4. Does he know what he means by 'regular 'pit bull''? 5. Does he know that people come from all over the world to buy a lot of purebred dogs from long-time breeders, regardless of whether they are Chihuahuas, Beagles or American Pit Bull terriers?
Answers 1 - 3 are 'yes'. Answers 4 & 5 are 'no'.
There's more, not as much as I'd hoped, but enough to show that the HSUS people will never change.
They do not believe that each dog is an individual. They don't understand anything about dogs, breeds or breeding (I know, duh). They want to kill all the 'pit bulls'. They think that a dog-aggressive canine is dangerous, when in fact, many dogs don't get along with their own kind and make terrific pets. I've had a few of those - gasp! adopted from humane societies - and never had any problems.
Oh, and just for Donna and the gang, here's the grand finale from Deputy Chris:
"...I mean, these dogs, they are not on the same level. You know, people speak about the Michael Vick dogs. Those dogs have not even been rehabilitated."
(Brief Pause.) (Proceeding concluded at 10:52 a.m.)
You believe that there really are 4.7 million dog bites in the US every year.
You believe that somebody is actually counting dog bites.
You think that bites by dogs are always a big deal.
You think that if a dog of a particular breed (or shape) bites someone, then all dogs of that breed (or shape) will bite someone.
You believe there are dangerous breeds, rather than dangerous dogs created by dangerous owners.
You believe there are safe or friendly breeds.
You believe that mutts that look vaguely like a purebred are the same thing as a purebred.
You believe that shelter staff, veterinarians and animal control personnel can accurately identify the breeds in a mutt's ancestry.
You believe that there is a breed named 'pit bull'.
You believe that Golden retrievers and other popular breeds don't bite, attack or kill.
You believe that banning a breed is logical, fair and an effective way to stop dog bites.
You believe that the breeds hyped in news reports bite, attack and kill more often than other breeds do.
You believe that the breed names appearing in news reports are determined by experts who verify purebred identification and registration information before media report (and report, and report, and report) the story.
You think there is a pet overpopulation problem.
You think that legislating the neutering of dogs will stop shelter killing.
You think dogs can be 'bred to fight'.
You think 'fighting dogs' are dangerous as housepets.
You believe that dogfighting (and other cruelty to dogs) is widespread.
You believe that only marginal people own media darlings such as 'pit bulls', 'rottweilers' and 'mastiffs'.
You believe that alleged 'pit bulls' are easily identified by neighbours, bystanders, media reporters and animal control personnel, even though the term applies to 3 - 5 core breeds, over two dozen lookalike breeds and an unknown number of mongrels.
You believe that breed differences are hard-wired and more significant than individual personality differences among dogs.
You believe that so-called 'pit bulls' do more damage when they attack, have superior strength, more powerful jaws than other dogs and are not only unpredictable but also impossible to control if they are intent on doing something.
You believe that 'pit bulls' are in shelters because of overbreeding and overpopulation rather than legislation designed to put them there.
You think the HSUS is a humane society and that Peta cares about animal welfare.
If you believe any or all of these points you have a couple of options.
1. Get your information from reliable sources - not mass media reports or groups with an agenda geared towards eliminating pet ownership or filling their coffers. 2. Zip it and let the people who know what's what discuss issues around the problems caused by incompetent dog owners because seriously, you're not f$#%@ing helping.
Thanks to KC Dog Blog for the story directing us to Save the Pit Bull, Save the World'sreport on Italy's decision to reject the concept of dangerous dog breeds, which was a complete fiasco.
While the Italians had already reduced the banned or restricted list to a final 17 breeds, it seems that logic has carried the day and they are planning to apply the law to people, not dogs. This is a great idea, since dogs can't read.
I imagine it won't be long before the UK rescinds its failed legislation as well. Let's face it, the writing has been on the wall for the DDA for a few years now.
A little closer to home, Vauxhall, Alberta has removed its breed-specific bylaw and will replace it with something that actually works. Lori at Wag the Dog has the details along with a good quote from the town. Way to go, Vauxhall! Welcome to the 21st century.
Activism by dog owners stopped the Humane Society of the
United States (HSUS) freight train in Illinois and the City of Chicago this past
week.
Congratulations!
You
did what many people thought was impossible. You stopped HSUS in its tracks in a
state that is a must-win battle for the powerful and radical animal rights
group, which is pushing two bills that would have a devastating effect on people
who raise dogs.
Also, in the City of Chicago, where HSUS has political
clout at the highest levels, a mandatory spay/neuter ordinance stalled during a
committee hearing.
However, it would be inaccurate to say that you defeated
HSUS. You stopped them. You fought them to a stalemate. You have forced them to
back down because they didn’t have the votes to win.
But
you can also expect a bag of political dirty tricks to emerge in the coming
days, and the American Sporting Dog Alliance is urging you to be prepared to
continue this fight with renewed vigilance, energy and dedication.
Here’s what happened, and what to expect.
In
the state Senate, SB 139 and SB 53 did not get enough support to pass in
committee. SB 139 would have made tail docking and ear cropping into felony
animal cruelty offenses, and SB 53 would have imposed irrational and burdensome
restrictions on people who raise dogs.
Votes were not taken, but the bills’ sponsors saw the
handwriting on the wall and chose not to force the issue in the face of certain
defeat. Several senators credited numerous letters in opposition from dog owners
as being an important factor in changing their positions. The American Sporting
Dog Alliance was at the forefront of this effort.
However, the bills’ sponsors did not simply allow the
legislation to die. Instead, they turned them into what are called “shell
bills.” Shell bills are stripped of all language and sent to the Senate floor as
an empty document.
The
senators have until April 3, 2009, to amend new language into the bills, and
this deadline can be extended in some cases. This keeps the bills alive, in case
the sponsors can find enough support to pass them. If the empty bills are
amended at some point, they would be sent back to their Senate committees for
reconsideration.
However, dog owners were lied to by the sponsor of the
House version of the kennel legislation, HB 198.
I have to give the media curs an E for Effort for their never-say-die campaign to use 'pit bull' and/or 'vicious dog' in as many pointless reports as possible.
In a tale from Ohio, we learn that two people tried to break up a dog scuffle and ended up being bitten on their hands. This is certainly newsworthy because it's the most common way that people are bitten - they foolishly stick their hands into the business end of a dog fight. The video isn't loading for me for some reason so I can't see the 'pit bull' in this story.
In Virginia, a kid was bitten on the finger when he was attacked by two 'pit bulls' while riding his bike. Apparently, there was a domestic dispute call to the owners' address at the time the dogs were running at large. A deputy shot one dog which was probably more traumatic for the kid than the serious bite to his finger. The picture above is a screen shot of a still in the accompanying video - that's one sad-looking mutt but I couldn't begin to guess what kind of mix he might be. It's a poor photo, but I think I see long floppy ears, a narrow head and pendulous lips which are certainly atypical for a bull and terrier mix. Just saying.
Marjorie Darby, who ran the wonderful (and now unfortunately defunct) website, Goodpooch.com has one of those brains I like to pick. She's smart, logical and thorough. We sure miss her out here and wish she'd resurrect her site, but she's trying to have some fun these days so I'm not bugging about that. Much :>)
Anyway, somebody emailed me looking for the reasoning behind her statement that 99.9% of all dogs will never attack anybody. I asked her how she came up with the figure and in her usual gracious way, she responded in some detail. What follows is the explanation.
I hope you enjoy it and will pass it on.
____________________________
"Research
shows over 99.9% of all dogs, from all breeds, will never be involved in an
attack. Thus, I also like to say, “If any breed were genetically
programmed to attack, surely more than 0.1% of them would.”--Marjorie Darby
Back in 1999 or 2000, researcher Marjorie Darby looked at
news stories about dog bites, and separated them into what were reported to be
rather simple bites (ie, 'a pit bull looked at me') and those reported as being
more serious (ie resulting in more serious injuries - needing stitches,
hospitalization, surgery, etc.).
Ms Darby had a good contact at Toronto Humane Society at the time, who moved on
to Toronto Animal Services as an enforcement/investigation agent. When
queried about the number of dog bite cases, and the relative number of those
that were more serious than a simple bite she confirmed the general
ratio (nearly all reports were simple bites with minor injuries, only a tiny
number could be called "serious".) Based on all of this
information, it became clear that there were (and are) very few actual serious
dog bite cases in Canada.
There were maybe a dozen serious dog bite cases from across Canada in the
year studied.
To err on the side of caution, Darby decided to assume that the
real number of "attack" cases was double, triple or more compared with
what she had learned, since she didn't have (and no one has) access to the
precise number of incidents. As Janis Bradley says, nobody is counting
dog bites, you have to search hospital records for information - which only represent a portion of all bites.
Darby knew that many serious dog bite cases don't end up in
the media because of breed bias. Still, she could only confirm maybe a
dozen dog "attack" cases in Canada, nationwide, over a period of about
a year.
Not having access to every single dog attack case, she tried
to come up with a reasonable percentage to use in discussions about dog
attacks. With a dog population somewhere around 5,000,000 in Canada, 0.1%
is 5,000. That would mean that, in any given year, there would be 5,000
serious dog attacks, if just 0.1% of dogs were involved.
You can further extrapolate to come up with an even more
conservative statistic by theorizing a 10-year lifespan for dogs. It's
not a one-to-one ratio, but a simple way to do that is to simply divide by
10. That leaves the potential for 500 dog attacks per the entire lifespan
of every dog in Canada,
if just 0.1% of them were to do so. And based on what was found
concerning the the number of serious dog biting incidents, that is
still well within the range of the 0.1% figure (i.e.up to 500 attacks in any
given year). (Keep in mind that she only confirmed maybe a dozen or
so serious dog attacks in Canada that year - far fewer than the 500
figure.)
The process is the same for the U.S. but we have better
estimates about the number of 'pit bulls' there than here in Canada.
There are estimated to be about 65,000,000 dogs in the U.S.*
0.1% is 65,000. Meaning, in any given year, if 0.1% of American dogs
"attacked", there'd be 65,000 attacks, or 178 serious dog attacks
every, single day of the year. Not just bites, mind you, but
"attacks".
Hospital data vary greatly, but 800,000 dog bites treated
medically is at the extreme high end, and most of the data around 1999-2000
suggested the figure was more like 300,000 or 400,000. Still, that
doesn't tell us anything about severity, just that medical attention was sought.
Janis Bradley came on board and showed that fewer than 1% of
medically-treated dog bites score higher than a "1" (the lowest
ranking) in objective hospital injury recording criteria. Assuming the
dog "attacks" make up this 1%, that would mean about 4,000
biting incidents were more serious than a "1", if assuming
400,000 dog bites treated medically that year. 4,000 represents
0.006% of of the 65,000,000 dogs in America. If you want to do
the simple 10-year lifespan conversion, that would be 0.06% of all dogs at any
time in an average 10-year lifespan. That's still well-within the 0.1%
generalization. (It's almost half!)
There are estimated to be about 9 million 'pit bulls' in the
U.S.
Darby used a very conservative estimate of 5,000,000 to calculate what 0.1% of
'pit bulls' attacking would mean. It comes out to about 14 serious
attacks, every single day of the year. Every day that went by where there
weren't 14 serious 'pit bull' attacks somewhere in the U.S., that
would mean that even fewer than 0.1% of all 'pit bulls' were involved in a serious biting incident.
Given that 'pit bull' incidents are reported by the media at such a high rate,
I would be surprised to learn than so many serious 'pit bull' attacks
are being ignored by them, if it is to be alleged that more than 0.1% of 'pit
bulls' are attacking people.
You can do the 10-year lifespan calculations on an
estimated U.S.
'pit bull' population anywhere from 5 million to 9 million
individuals. None of the calculations suggest anything other than that
99.9% of dogs, or even 99.9% of all 'pit bulls' will NOT be involved in an
attack at any time in their lives.
'Pit Bull' Fatality
Data
"When it
comes to ‘pit bulls’, fewer than 0.1% will ever be involved in an attack at any
time in their lives, and even conservative estimates suggest at least 99.99998%
of all ‘pit bulls’ have not killed anyone."
When Darby was conducting this research in 1999-2003,
there had been approximately 80 human fatalities attributed to 'pit bull'
attacks in the previous 30 years or so in the U.S. 9,000,000 'pit bulls' (assuming
a 10 year lifespan) would easily translate into 27,000,000 'pit bulls' that
existed during that 30-year period. 80 fatalities out of 27,000,000 is
0.0002%.
While that seems incorrect to Darby, since she recalls at
some point, a few years ago confirming it was 4 zeros after the decimal,
rather than 3, that's what this calculation concludes. Nonetheless, we're
still talking about, at most, 0.0002% of 'pit bulls' having killed a person in
the U.S.
That leaves 99.9998% innocent of the allegation they're all killers.
When
we're talking about such small numbers, Darby would still have no problem
saying, "Frankly, I don't know what relevant information is gleaned
from the acts of less than 0.0002% of the population. Whatever it may be,
it certainly doesn't conclude anything about the rest.Again
I would also reiterate, if any breed were genetically-programmed to attack,
certainly more than 0.1% of them would".
---
*According to the most recent US census results, there are now an estimated 72 million dogs in the United States.
Don't you wish Bob Barker would stay in the land of fruits and nuts? He was lobbying in Chicago last year for mandatory neutering. That proposal was killed and dogs' lives were saved.
However, it appears that behind the scenes lobbying has been ongoing and per usual, councillors are being fed lies by those with an agenda geared toward extinction.
John Yates has the details. If you live in Chicago, get busy.
Here's the lede:
CHICAGO – A City Council joint committee has scheduled a
hearing for this coming Thursday on a proposed citywide spay and neuter mandate
for dogs and cats. The American Sporting Dog Alliance is urging Chicago dog
owners to attend this hearing and voice strong opposition to this ordinance. The
10 a.m. hearing will be held on March 12, 2009, in City Council
chambers.
We
also are asking dog owners to take an active role by contacting the aldermen and
informing them about the issues described in this report, and your own reasons
for opposition. Faxes and letters are best, followed by phone calls and emails.
Here is a link to contact information for each member of City Council:
FrogDog has a tale which is unfortunately all-too-typical of London, Ontario, where persecution of dog owners is the order of the day. Of course, it is the home of replacement Attorney General Chris Bentley, who believes that Bullmastiffs and Dogues de Bordeaux are 'pit bulls', so maybe orders are seeping down from the top. Actually, those breeds may as well be 'pit bulls' since there's no such thing, as everybody who didn't just fall off the turnip truck (including the Attorney General's own lawyer who defends the ban in court) knows full well.
This time, the crack dog identification team at London Animal Services got a Code Red when somebody applied for a dog tag for their - I kid you not - French Bulldog.
What's going on in California? Have they got too much time on their hands, too much money they can't figure out how to waste, or what? I thought the State was going bankrupt, couldn't meet its payroll, was looking for loans. Do they plan to spend their way out of debt?
Why are government officials obsessed with the gonads of dogs and cats and when did being a responsible pet owner start to include neutering, anyway? I know why the animal liberation gang is into it - it's the fast-track to extinction - but why do other people buy into it? They can't all be stupid.
Sen. Dean Florez, D-Shafter, has introduced one of the most controversial
ideas from the last legislative session: a bill that would encourage spaying/neutering of most dogs and cats in California.
Florez's SB 250 requires adult animals to be fixed unless the owner
obtains a license to have an "unaltered" animal over six months of age. Owners of unaltered
cats would be required to keep them indoors. The license
could be revoked at any time, and would also need to
be transferred to the new owner if the animal was sold
or given away.
Dubbed "The Pet Responsibility Act," SB 250 was given its number to
denote the $250 million a year spent to house and euthanize stray
dogs and cats. According to the US Census Bureau and
other agencies, a dog born in California today has
a one in four chance of dying in a shelter.
Imagine how much this puppy would cost to enforce, then consider that mandatory neutering laws cause more pets to be killed in shelters, not fewer. Bill Hemby at PetPac is all over it and has a petition to be signed as well (right sidebar).
Do we have any actual statistics to back up the 1 : 4 chance of dying in a shelter? And would that not be the fault of people in shelters who are killing animals?
I don't see the connection between risking your dog's health and possibly negatively affecting his temperament by neutering too early and being a responsible owner. I also don't see how performing life-altering surgery on a pet will change the culture of convenience killing in shelters.
Too many people out there are drinking the Animal Liberation flavour of Kool Aid for my liking.
There's a great piece over at The Opinion Mill that hit a strong note with me. If you substitute 'animal liberationist' for 'creationist' it's right on the money in describing why countering the talking points and myths put forth by the 'pit bull' haters is a waste of time, and why they don't seem to understand that there is no factual or scientific basis for their off-the-wall claims.
Here's a snip:
"...They also understand that for a scientist, getting into a “debate” with
a scientifically illiterate crank has no upside — it is simply a
time-suck that will keep him away from career-advancing research, while
giving the crank a spurious air of authority."
Brent has some pictures of a puppy that spent the weekend with his crew of natural-born killers, one of whom is a refugee from the Oklahoma situation. You can see from the pics that things were pretty tense, alright. For those of us in Ontario, the sight of a bull-and-terrier puppy is something we haven't seen for awhile so it's a nice treat. Hopefully the Ontario law will be struck down so that bully lovers here will again be able to welcome these charming bundles of wiggle-waggle into their lives.
It's time to post one of my all-time favourite statements from the Bench. I originally put it up in August 2006 and again in August 2007.
I'm a little overdue in reminding myself why I got involved in this 'pit bull' thing in the first place. In my view, it has little to do with dogs or 'pit bulls' and a lot to do with treating people equally under the law.
If only the dogsbite nutters and other low-information flying monkeys could stop repeating canned nonsense and take a good, long look at what's really going on, things would be a lot better for everybody.
Enjoy.
"I regard it as a salutary doctrine that cities, states and the Federal Government must exercise their powers so as not to discriminate between their inhabitants except upon some reasonable differentiation fairly related to the object of regulation. This equality is not merely abstract justice. The framers of the Constitution knew, and we should not forget today, that there is no more effective practical guaranty against arbitrary and unreasonable government than to require that the principles of law which officials would impose upon a minority must be imposed generally. Conversely, nothing opens the door to arbitrary action so effectively as to allow those officials to pick and choose only a few to whom they will apply legislation and thus to escape the political retribution that might be visited upon them if larger numbers were affected. Courts can take no better measure to assure that laws will be just than to require that laws be equal in operation."
I'm pleased to see that our friends in Calgary continue to make terrific progress in the areas of preventing dog bites and educating owners as well as children and utility workers about dog bite prevention.
Calgary dog attacks fall to lowest level in 25 years
City a leader in reducing canine problems, says top bylaw officer
By Sean Myers, Calgary HeraldFebruary 21, 2009
Attacks by aggressive dogs are at the lowest level they've been in 25
years despite a steady population growth and the absence of
breed-specific legislation brought in to tackle canine issues in other
jurisdictions.
Despite the low numbers, Calgary's top bylaw
officer plans to delve deeper into the causes of dog attacks to try to
bring the incidents even lower.
The population of Calgary has more than doubled since Bill started working on his program. The ongong statistics are depicted graphically at this link. The impound and kill stats also illustrate the remarkable achievement by Calgary Animal Services.
The Ontario Liberals were told of Calgary's success and asked to invite Bill Bruce to present at the Committee Hearings in 2005. Calgary was brought up throughout the hearings by various witnesses yet the government was reluctant to hear what Bill had to say.
I can only assume that's because they didn't want his remarks to be available through Hansard since one of their arguments in court has been that there is no alternative to their ill-considered approach to dog owner management.
Written presentations do not appear in the record so are therefore not available to the public. In the second snip, watch David Zimmer (Lib - Willowdale and friend of the WSPA) dance around when asked to invite Mr Bruce to present at Committee.
This was rigged from the start just as Bryant and McGuinty's law is completely rigged against dog owners.
February 2:
I will again direct you to Calgary's
approach. You received these many months back, and I'm sure you've received
them in the course of all these presentations. Their forward thinking has
worked for them for many years. Why can't it work here? Bill Bruce has even
offered to help set up and teach their approach to us here in Ontario. They
have approximately 90,000 licensed dogs in their city, and only five dogs
deemed vicious. That's five dogs -- count `em on one hand -- deemed vicious.
They are doing something right: zero tolerance for off-leash dogs and
unlicensed dogs, and strict requirements and high fines for owners who have
proved themselves incapable of being responsible dog owners.
Mr. Miller: Mr. Chair,
I have the director of animal and bylaw services for the city of Calgary, Mr.
Bill Bruce, who would like to appear before the committee, but because he's
employed by the city of Calgary and doesn't want to be seen to be interfering
in the affairs of Ontario, he needs to be formally invited by the committee
to be able to come before the committee. I would like the committee to invite
him to come before it. He has significant experience in animal control. The
city of Calgary has seen some significant reductions in animal bites. They've
had a 70% reduction in dog bites since they brought in their animal control
bylaws, and that has happened while the number of dogs in Calgary has
doubled. Mr. Bill Bruce would certainly be a very valuable person to lend his
experience to the committee, so I would move that the committee invite him to
appear before us.
The Chair: Mr. Miller
has moved that Mr. Bill Bruce, the director of animal and bylaw services for
the city of Calgary, appear before the committee. Is there any discussion on
the motion?
Mr. Zimmer: These
matters were taken up by the subcommittee, were they not?
The Chair: They
were.
Mr. Zimmer: There was
a witness list.
The Chair: There
was.
Mr. Zimmer: Presumably
this was raised then.
The Chair: It was
not.
Mr. Kormos: I don't
know the background of how this gentleman was brought to Mr. Miller's
attention, at least, but the fact is that here's a director of animal and
bylaw services for the city of Calgary. Reference has been made already to
the city of Winnipeg. I trust that other municipalities that have advocated
-- and fairly enough, because they've implemented breed-specific bans -- will
be called upon.
I don't know what the position is of
this gentleman from Calgary, but it seems to me that if the committee is
interested in getting the broadest range of information available to it --
gosh, we've got e-mails from people in other British colonies, Australia,
Great Britain. People are well aware -- this has attracted attention
internationally. If there's expertise available, why would we possibly shut
the door on it? If these people are prepared to assist the committee, let's
go; let her rip. Let's have these people in front of us. Quite frankly,
whether they're from Calgary or not doesn't offend me. It's of even greater
interest because obviously you've got a different provincial jurisdiction. I
encourage people to support Mr. Miller's motion.
Mr. Miller: I would
just like to support that by asking why we would not try to learn from the
jurisdictions that have had the most success, and Calgary has had significant
success. They've reduced dog bites by 70%. Here we have the director of
animal and bylaw services willing to come before the committee, but he needs
a formal invite to be able to come because he doesn't want to be seen to be
interfering with the affairs of Ontario. They've had very significant success
with an animal control bylaw that's not breed-specific, and I think we can
learn from that.
If the end goal is to have the most
successful legislation and to improve this legislation, I believe we should
be inviting Mr. Bruce to come before this committee. I would ask for the
committee's support in inviting Mr. Bruce to come and lend his expertise to
the committee.
The Chair: Shall I now
put the question?
Mr. Zimmer: This
matter of the witness list should have been -- if you wanted to make
arrangements to raise this matter, it should have been raised before the
subcommittee. This committee has set aside four days for hearings. There is
an extensive witness list for each of the four days. Each of the witnesses
has been allocated a time frame of approximately 10 minutes. The difficulty
now with entertaining last-minute changes to the witness list is, where do we
fit them in, and if we say yes to Mr. Miller's request, what should we do
with other requests that might come up from any other members on the
committee? There has to be some end to the process.
Mr. Kormos: The issue
seems to be the reluctance of this municipal official to make a submission to
this committee without invitation. Why doesn't the committee invite him to
make a written submission? Surely that can't be offensive to anybody. It
doesn't occupy any time of the committee, but it --
Mr. Zimmer: I'm going
to agree. I think that's a reasonable way to proceed.
Mr. Kormos: In that
case, you can interrupt.
Mr. Zimmer: That way,
we'll get the relevant evidence before the committee and we'll preserve the
integrity of the witness list for the remaining four days.
The Chair: Mr. Kormos
has the floor.
Mr. Kormos: But he
needs an invitation to make a submission so that he doesn't --
Ms. Monique M. Smith
(Nipissing): Written submission.
Mr. Kormos: Well, God
bless.
Mr. Zimmer: Yes.
Mr. Kormos: That's
what I said already -- so that he doesn't appear to be overriding his
jurisdiction.
Mr. Zimmer: We're with
you on this one, Mr. Kormos.
Mr. Kormos: You're on
track now.
The Chair: Mr. Kormos,
are you proposing an amendment to the motion?
Mr. Kormos: Mr. Miller
may want to. I don't want to cut his grass.
Mr. Miller: I
understand you're going to vote against this if we don't amend it. I'm
getting that feeling. Is that correct? The thing is, you have more members on
that side than we do on this side.
Mr. Zimmer: My
argument here is that we've got a very tight witness list. It's been planned,
10 minutes per witness over four days, and it's unfair now to re-jig the
witness list.
Mr. Kormos's proposal to accommodate
this witness, or accommodate your wish to have him send in a written
submission at our invitation, satisfies your purpose and preserves the
integrity of the witness list.
Mr. McMeekin: I'll
build on that. I suspect your political acumen is probably correct, Mr.
Miller. I think the rationale for argument from this side is where do you
draw the line? New Brunswick's looked at it. The provincial government in
Australia has looked at breed bans. There are a number of cities. To have one
isolated person in particular who has indicated a desire to make a
presentation -- I don't normally speak to amendments before they're made, but
I think on the surface, because we opened this up, there are at least a dozen
people I'd like to see invited. I think the concept of the written brief, as
Mr. Kormos has suggested and my colleague Mr. Zimmer has affirmed -- and
hopefully you, sir, might look at -- is a good way to go.
Mr. Miller: I would
certainly like to reiterate that I believe we can learn from Calgary's animal
control bylaw; I would be prepared to modify my motion to invite Mr. Bill
Bruce to make a written submission to this committee so that we may learn
from the city of Calgary.
The Chair: Mr. Miller
has amended his motion to read that Mr. Bill Bruce of the city of Calgary be
invited to submit a written brief to the committee. Is there any further
discussion? Shall I put the question?