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MandyPug
01-12-2008, 07:53 PM
This is an article from my local paper... it basically is what it says it is, and i honestly wish that more people were more aware of things like parvo and how to deal with it... i know all those dogs could not have been saved, but i guess i would want vaccinations for a dog i adopt... and to know they're gonna be somewhat healthy i guess... one of my friends got one of these pups that are mentioned in here, the pup AND the 6 month old shih tzu her sister adopted from the humane society had to be put down... this girl told me she'll never adopt again... i guess its these kinds of events that give shelter dogs a bad name...

"Animal shelter forced to euthanize dogs
By DAVE MABELL
Jan 8, 2008, 03:58

Disease at the city’s animal shelter led to the destruction of a number of dogs over the holiday period — including one puppy that had already been adopted.
Now that pet’s would-be owners are asking why Lethbridge doesn’t save the grief by vaccinating all cats and dogs when they arrive at the city-owned shelter. At city hall, however, officials say it’s not quite that easy.
The puppies and dogs were reportedly put down on Dec. 31, following an outbreak of the parvovirus. Their deaths followed the destruction of 55 kittens or cats earlier in the fall, after feline distemper was discovered at the shelter.
Christy Hadford, who’d already paid for the pet and signed its adoption papers, says the city should isolate and vaccinate pets when they’re taken to the shelter — “instead of wiping out entire populations of cats and dogs.”
“The vaccinations are cheap and the cost can be tacked onto the adoption fee,” she points out. “It wouldn’t cost the city anything.”
Hadford says she and her husband visited the shelter just before Christmas, as part of their search for “the perfect dog” to replace one who’d died a few years back.
“Our friends had suggested the city shelter as they had just adopted a beautiful dog there and knew his sisters were still at the shelter,” she explains. “My husband and I went and fell in love with the sweetest three-month-old shepherd/malemute cross.”
Shelter staff told her the pup could remain there a few more days — once it had been paid for — while the adopting couple spent Christmas out of town.
“My husband asked them about parvo, for the sake of the puppies, but the individual at the shelter said, ‘We don’t have to worry about parvo here.’”
Satisfied that the staff knew best, Hadford said she left the pet but planned to take it home Jan. 2.
On Dec. 31, however, a shelter staff member called to report their dog — and all the shelter’s puppies — were testing positive for parvo and they were all being euthanized.
About 10 pups were destroyed, Hadford says. Shelter officials, contacted Monday, would not say how many pets had been killed.
But Dave Henley, regulatory services manager for the city, confirmed the parvo outbreak resulted in a number of animals being put down over the holiday period. While it’s not a respiratory illness, he said, parvo is easily spread if an infected pup or dog contacts another.
Shelter visitors can also spread the disease, he adds, if they pet or touch more than one animal.
That risk couldn’t be eliminated by vaccination, Henley says, because the protection wouldn’t be immediate — and parvo has a two-week incubation period. It’s a two-step process, he adds, with the first shot costing the city $50 and the second one as much or more.
“We have to allocate our resources,” including covering veterinarian services for animals who’ve been hit by vehicles — there’s a fee, whether the animal is treated or destroyed — as well as paying for the shelter’s operation and for bylaw enforcement officers.
On the legal front, Henley says the city cannot vaccinate any dog within the first 72 hours, if its owners can be traced through dog tag identification.
The shelter’s operating policies, he adds, were revised when the new shelter opened in 2004. They’re similar to those in effect in Calgary’s animal shelters.
The city’s dog control bylaw was also revised at that time, Henley says, but a similar bylaw aimed at controlling the city’s cat population was never enacted.
© Copyright by Lethbridge Herald.com"

tiffers
01-12-2008, 08:03 PM
That's so sad. Seems to me the shelter has a problem that needs to be sorted out if just a while back all their cats were lost to Distemper. Someone isn't practicing good husbandry. Vaccinating when they come in will do little, if any, protecting if they're going to be tossed next door to an already sick animal. But, I repeat...the problem is obviously in the shelter staff and someone needs to educate them on the appropriate care of isolation of such viruses and diseases before any more genocide.

MandyPug
01-12-2008, 08:14 PM
The Humane Society here has a whole different building for animals that are sick... but the city-run shelter doesnt care about much, just they wanna get rid of these dogs and cats as fast as they can with as little money spent as possible... i know they dont have enough funds and stuff, but i've seen the way the cages are kept and its DISGUSTING. Nothing ever looks clean in there to me (and im only a low to moderate clean freak).
Some of the city/town shelters around here are so cheap that they don't euthinize, they use what has become known around here as the "shot-gun method"... just use your imagination with that one... it sickens me.

tiffers
01-12-2008, 08:21 PM
Some of the city/town shelters around here are so cheap that they don't euthinize, they use what has become known around here as the "shot-gun method"... just use your imagination with that one... it sickens me.
:eek: Oh wow.

...that's sooooo sad. That's why people don't like Shelter Dogs and Cats. :[

MandyPug
01-12-2008, 08:30 PM
As much as i love all animals, i do tend to stay away from our local shelters... only because they dont rehab the animals even if they're too timid or if they're anxious. If they don't bite they're adoptable, if they do bite its the end of the line for them...
All my adopted pets were left behinds at kennels, off the street pick ups, or "the kitty just followed me home" kind of things.

suebgone
01-12-2008, 08:37 PM
it is unfortunate but euthansia is the only way to stop parvo when you have 100 or so animals a day coming in - space is at a premium & you don't have much choice where you are putting anybody. isolation is but a dream.

parvo can easily develop just from the stress of being in the shelter just as it does from shipping. they come in during the incubation period & appear perfectly normal, then a couple days later they are down & out so it is not necessarilly a failure of the staff

Mandy, not sure where you are but you should check on whether it is legal to euth by shooting. in many states it is not. also, who licenses all these shelters that are filthy. I'd be reporting that too. have you considered volunteering at any of them?

tiffers
01-12-2008, 08:43 PM
parvo can easily develop just from the stress of being in the shelter just as it does from shipping. they come in during the incubation period & appear perfectly normal, then a couple days later they are down & out so it is not necessarilly a failure of the staff
I disagree. Good husbandry with Parvo is crucial. It is not airborne. It isn't spread unless the human is unsanitary and doesn't clean between paitents or the kennels aren't disinfected after Parvo has been in it. Poop, Contact, and/or Infected Environment are the only ways to spread. If the staff had their heads on straight and knew what they were dealing with, perhaps so many wouldn't have to die. I do agree that a low cost shelter has no other choice, I'm not mad at that, by any means. However, I do feel it is reflected on the staff of the shelter, at least by the bossman who fails to train or educate the staff and/or volunteers.

MandyPug
01-12-2008, 09:08 PM
Mandy, not sure where you are but you should check on whether it is legal to euth by shooting. in many states it is not. also, who licenses all these shelters that are filthy. I'd be reporting that too. have you considered volunteering at any of them?

I've tried volunteering, but they always tell me that only city workers can work there because of liabilty (i say a big fat BS to that considering i am able to volunteer at the humane society, i dont see what makes the difference) and only monetary donations will be accepted. Technically i DO work for the city but i'd have to be 18 to work there and currently im 2 years and 38 days short of 18 years old.
I'll be looking into my province's laws as to shooting the dogs instead of lethal injections, but even since it came into the news a few months back nothing has been done. I'll be looking into who licenses them as well, but as i said, they're not like horribly disgusting just unsanitary according to my standards and compaired to the humane society... but around here, no one really cares about much more than easy money... it's a sad fact

tiffers
01-12-2008, 09:09 PM
...shooting is definitely cheaper than all other terminations. But, you'd think if they're going to shoot them...why not just sell them to labratories for money? :[

MandyPug
01-12-2008, 09:15 PM
The labs are where all the poor ratties go when they're caught at the borders of Alberta... mostly neuroscience labs and high school bio classes though...
The places that typically use the "shot-gun method" are smaller towns that are chocked full of simple-folked hillbilly rednecks (excuse my language but i cant think of any other words to describe them) and selling them as lab subjects probably hasnt even crossed their minds... but then again what does other than the thought of "lets see who can hold on to the electric fence the longest!" or "lets see who can outrun bully the black angus bull when you shoot him in the butt!" (farm kids... gotta love em for the entertainment)

tiffers
01-12-2008, 09:18 PM
That's an exceptional point, Mandy. :] But, someone's got to have the brains and no how to run the business, eh? ...then again, the business is being run rather poorly, in my opinion. I guess you're right. :] ...unfortunately for the animals, I guess you're right. :[

suebgone
01-12-2008, 09:22 PM
Mandy thats great if you pursue those things. you are the kind of person that it takes to make change.

I guess you are in CA since you mentioned provience but the difference here would be the HS is privately owned, where the "city" owned shelters are run by the city & the rules are different.

here the humane societies or SPCA's are all individually privately owned & their Boards of Directors set the rules - the insurance company rules do vary tho from one ins. co. to another about age of volunteers

MandyPug
01-12-2008, 09:52 PM
Thanks guys, I'm understanding this issue a bit better now... The city shelter is now getting alot of trouble because of this whole parvo thing, so i hope it will maybe be some incentive for them to change for the better... My internet went offline for a bit there and i was able to think and remembered i have a dear friend who happens to be a city alderman. Maybe if i talk to him about it we could think up something together to help (he LOVES animals and WILL take any doggie home if it's lost or abandon!). I rescued an arthritic old aussie cattle dog a few months ago (and had to hide my little girls from the officer since they dont have their tags... totally my procrastinating on that one) and the officer was sooo friendly, like their staff does love animals i think, they just dont really regard them as highly as you or i would... Its seems the petlover type is a rare breed of person where i live, it baffles me where all these people learn their pet skills from.

*note to self... get dogs licensed before makin a stink about the shelter*