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Wisconsin Dog Frozen To Sidewalk, One Year Later

January 26, 2010 in Adoption News, News

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Once weighing in at a hefty 116 pounds, Jiffy was an obese border collie mix. Though he was nearly 70 pounds over his ideal weight, he may have to thank his extra pounds for possibly saving his life.

Just a year ago on December 2008, Jiffy was found frozen to the sidewalk after being left out overnight in frigid single-digit temperatures by his previous owner. Even though he was nearly frozen to death, his extra pounds kept him warm enough to survive the night.

After being rescued by the Humane Society, a court ordered his owner to give him up. The Humane Society received hundreds of calls all over the world with interest to adopt Jiffy, who was later adopted out to a loving couple from Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin.

Now a year later, Jiffy is 40 pounds lighter and thanks to the loving care of the Geise family Jiffy, can now walk normally. According to Parry Geise, Jiffy could barely step over a 4-inch-high pipe without having to rest afterwards when they first adopted him. Nowadays, Jiffy enjoys being able to move around like a “regular dog”.


LAFD Says Saving Dog Was The Right Thing To Do

January 26, 2010 in Heroics, News

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 By Sue Manning for The Washington Post

LOS ANGELES — Saving a German shepherd stuck in the rising Los Angeles River was the right thing to do, the risks were slight, rescue crews were on standby, extra taxpayer money wasn’t used and the alternatives were unacceptable, authorities said Monday.

The helicopter and swift water rescue crew members that saved the dog on Friday have been hailed as heroes, feted on television and radio and congratulated on the Web and in print. But they have also been vilified by a few in blogs, on social networks and story comment sections.

“You’re not going to please everybody. There’s always 10 percent, they either don’t like animals or think we are wasting taxpayer money,” Capt. Steve Ruda said.

The dog, nicknamed Vernon after the city where he was rescued, remained in quarantine at the Southeast Area Animal Control Authority shelter in Downey, just south of Los Angeles.

Joe St. Georges, 50, the 25-year firefighting veteran who hoisted Vernon to safety, lost a fingernail and fractured a thumb when the dog bit him during the rescue. St. Georges just needs time to heal and he will be back at work, Ruda said. “He’s anxious to get back to work to be with his crew.”

The dog, which appears to be about 4 years old and weighs about 65 pounds, was eating everything given to him, sleeping well and showing no signs of rabies, said Capt. Aaron Reyes, director of operations for the SAACA shelter.

If no owner shows up, “we do have a mile-long list of people who want him,” Reyes said.

On several Internet sites with comments about the rescue, the only people who left their names were those who supported the effort. There were a couple of open critics, but their identities were not easy to decipher.

Friday’s rescue was televised nationally by the major cable channels.

About an eighth of a mile downstream from the rescue site, the water was much deeper and the current much faster, Reyes said.

The dog would have drifted on down and died. Do you just wait at the mouth of the river and wait for the carcass? Any way you slice it, that is unacceptable. They would not have been able to live that down,” Reyes said. “They made a decision and we support that decision.”

Firefighters on the ground said a crew could get the dog and the helicopter pilot, who had been standing by just 45 seconds away from the river, reported he could clear high tension lines in the area, Ruda said.

Swift water teams were on standby because of weeklong storms that had dumped as much as 8 inches of rain on some parts of Los Angeles County, Ruda said. Although as many as 50 firefighters were at the river, no firefighters were called in on overtime to take part in the rescue.

“All life is important,” Ruda said. To prove his point, he pointed out that firefighters carry oxygen masks for cats and dogs that become victims of fire.

In addition, he said, 900 people die every year across the country in water accidents and one-third of them are rescuers. If St. Georges and his crew had failed to get the dog, “civilians, do-gooders and good Samaritans” would have been in the river, Ruda said.

The dog is thoroughly enjoying all the attention, Reyes said. “He’s a big lover” and caters to women at the shelter.


Dragged Dog Anger Grows: Thousands Sign Petition

January 26, 2010 in Inhumane Practices, News

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From Paw Print Post

Buddy has more than a few friends in the world, thanks to the power of the internet to spread information. He’s got thousands of supporters.

More than 100,000 people have signed an online petition calling for harsh punishment for a man accused of dragging a dog to death, the creator of a Facebook page called “Demand Justice for Buddy” said.

Thirty-seven-year-old Steven Clay Romero, faces a federal animal cruelty charge after Buddy, a German shepherd mix, was found dead Dec. 30 in Colorado National Monument. His sister, 32-year-old Melissa Lockhart of Fruita faces felony theft charges for allegedly stealing the dog and telling Romero to get rid of him.

Gary Sherman, creator of the Facebook page, said more than 212,000 people across the United States and 111 other countries have joined his page, with about half signing the petition. Romero could face up to three years in a federal prison.


Man Charged With Dragging Stolen Dog to Death at Colorado National Monument

January 26, 2010 in Inhumane Practices, Law Enforcement, News

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From FoxNews,com

FRUITA, Colo. — National Park Service rangers on Thursday arrested a Grand Junction man accused of dragging a dog to its death in Colorado National Monument.

Federal prosecutors charged Steven Clay Romero, 37, with animal cruelty, a felony.

His arrest came a day after a German Shepherd-Blue Heeler mix was found with a rope around its neck along Rim Rock Drive, the main road through the park in western Colorado.

Rangers said the dog, named Buddy, was stolen by others from downtown Delta on Tuesday. The dog was tied to a pickup truck and dragged for about 2 miles up the steep and winding road, rangers said.

Rangers said tips they got through a hotline helped lead them to Romero.

According to an arrest warrant affidavit, a witness wrote down the license plate of a vehicle that stole the dog. That led investigators to a Fruita home, where a neighbor said he saw Romero leaving the home with a dog and pickup truck that matched images seen in video surveillance taken from the park around 2:18 a.m. Wednesday, according to the affidavit.

Romero appeared in Mesa County court Thursday on unrelated charges and was arrested as he left the courtroom. A phone number for him was unlisted.


Dogs Ready To Lend Eyes To New Partners

January 25, 2010 in Health & Science News, News, Service Dogs

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By Noreen O’Donnell for LoHud.com

YORKTOWN — An optic glioma brain tumor cost 22-year-old Eric Holland his sight and forced him to drop out of college.

But Saturday, the Edmond, Okla., man took part in a graduation nonetheless. He and his new guide dog, Trooper, were part the first class of the year at Guiding Eyes for the Blind in Yorktown Heights.

“I have made not only friends, but family, new family members,” the 22-year-old told the audience. “And I’m lucky enough to be able to take one of them home.”

Holland was one of 11 graduates, nine of whom had trained at the Yorktown Heights headquarters over the past month. They came from across the United States and as far as Sao Paulo, Brazil, to which Rodrigo Galvao, a 32-year-old lawyer, will return with one of only 60 guide dogs in that country. He has already had several canes broken in the bustle of Sao Paulo, he said.

What will Trooper mean to Holland’s life?

“It’s amazing to get a first dog,” said Michael Moore, a lawyer from Oakland, Calif., who was back for a new dog. “It changes your life.”

A former Broadway designer, Moore, 44, had recently lost his vision and was living in Manhattan when he was paired with his first dog in 2000. He was tired of finding cracks in New York with a cane, he said.

How is it life-changing?

“It’s the difference between riding a bike and flying,” he said. “The cane is like a bicycle. You feel every bump. And with a dog you don’t feel that. I also tell people with a cane, you have to find the obstacle, figure out what it is. And with a dog, you just avoid the obstacle entirely.”

Like other graduations, this one featured well-wishers and speeches and whoops and cheers. But these graduates came paired with their dogs, whose noses stuck out from under the seats. And in the audience were the volunteers who had raised and trained the dogs as puppies, couples such as Mike and Raina Napolitano of West Warwick, R.I., who had taken in Moore’s Orion.

“This is our first dog, and our first attempt at anything so wonderful,” said Raina Napolitano, who had been encouraged by her granddaughter, Willow Keel of Monroe, N.Y., to participate. “All I wished for was a good home and he’s got one.”

Was it hard to give up Orion? Her tears were her answer.

Founded nearly 55 years ago, Guiding Eyes for the Blind is an internationally accredited, nonprofit guide dog school, the third-largest in the country. It prides itself on its small classes, never larger than 14, said Lisa Deutsch, a vice president. Its $17 million budget comes solely from contributions.


Dog Deluge? Not Yet.

January 25, 2010 in Legal News, News

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By Tim Darragh for The Morning Call

PENNSYLVANIA — Three months after the state beefed up regulations to ensure more humane conditions for dogs living in Pennsylvania’s largest commercial breeding kennels, 125 of the facilities across the state have closed.

But the loss of those kennels and the displacement of their dogs have not swamped the state’s rescues and shelters, as some had predicted.

Part of the reason for the smaller-than-expected surge in dogs is that dozens of kennels that do fall under the regulations are operating — legally — out of compliance.

To read the rest click here.

Want To Be Buried Next To Your Dog?

January 25, 2010 in In Remembrance, Lifestyle News, News

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Dating back to Egyptians pharaohs, royalty were buried with their pets.

Today, according to an article in the Telegraph.co.uk, companion animals are family members to those who they share their lives with and many people are now choosing to be buried alongside their pets.

Before joint animal and human cemeteries were approved, owners had to be cremated in order to stay with their beloved animals.

Last week, planners in Lincolnshire, England approved a joint cemetery where owners can be buried with their pets in the same plot. This new change reflects how society today is becoming more pet friendly. Owners are seeking burials with their dogs, cats, and even horses.

According to the Association of Private Pet Cemeteries and Crematoria, an estimated 1.5 million dogs and cats die every year. Some 300,000 are buried in the garden, 1,000 in pet cemeteries, 100,000 are individually cremated and the rest incinerated as clinical waste.

And even our animals would like to stay with their human companion. One widely known example is a small terrier, Greyfriars Bobby. This loyal and faithful dog stayed on guard at his owner’s grave in the yard of Greyfriars Kirk. Bobby kept this up for fourteen years until his death in 1872.

However during the time period animals were not allowed to be buried on “consecrated” ground. Bobby was instead buried inside the gate of Greyfriars Kirkyard, not far from his owner John Gray’s grave.

Luckily for people today, time has changed. With the rising popularity of owners seeking burials with their companion animals, our society now allows us the option to stay with our family members that including our pets.

Would you like to be buried next to your beloved canine? Let us know in the comment section.

Dog Files Viewpoint: Please Don’t Take My Sunshine Away!

January 25, 2010 in Breed-Specific Legislation, Dog Files Viewpoint, Hannah Powell, News

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Please Don’t Take My Sunshine Away…

By Hannah Powell For The Dog Files

It was a typical Saturday morning. Bacon was sizzling on the stove while the smell of freshly brewed coffee filled the kitchen. The two family dogs had just been walked and fed; they were now snoozing on the couch. The parrot whistled occasionally, which broke up the silence.

A loud knock on the door startles the entire family. The dogs immediately start barking and wagging their tails frantically with anticipation. They love it when people come to visit! They do not recognize this man at the door, but these two dogs know no strangers.

The man greets the family with a friendly “Hello”. He is holding a brown clipboard with an attached list of names and addresses. “Are you Mrs. Powell?” the friendly man asks.

The woman answers “Yes” as she sighs and rolls her eyes. She dislikes door-to-door salesmen, especially on Saturday mornings.

The man speaks again, but instead of talking about the vacuum cleaners or magazines he is selling, he takes the woman by complete surprise. “A breed ban has been implemented in Issaquah, WA, and I am here because there is a pit bull named ‘Sunshine’ registered to this address.”

After a long pause, the woman asks in shock and disbelief “What!?”.

The man calmly answers, “Well, there is no ‘Grandfather’ clause in this legislation, so you either need to move to another town, find Sunshine another home outside of Issaquah or have Sunshine humanely euthanized. If you decide not to follow one of the suggested options, then we will confiscate your pit bull, and she will be taken to animal control to be humanely euthanized. We will be checking back with you in one week from today. Thank you for your time Mrs. Powell.” The man takes a yellow highlighter from his shirt pocket and highlights the family name and address on his list. He offers a friendly “Have a good day!”, then departs.

In utter shock and disbelief the woman stands outside the open door watching the man walk away. Then *poof*, she wakes up from the recurring nightmare. Eddie and Sunshine are sleeping on the bed by her feet, and the little family is safe, for now.

What is a breed ban? What is BSL (Breed Specific Legislation)? To pit bull owners, BSL is a topic very well-known, and it is a fear that could become a reality. Breed bans target one breed of dog or several breeds of dog that are thought to endanger the public. Some breed bans contain a “Grandfather” clause. This means that the dog can be kept by the owner, but it usually comes with certain mandates. These mandates may include muzzling the dog at all times outside the house and purchasing expensive liability insurance.

Why does BSL not work? Because BSL punishes the responsible pit bull owners. It punishes those of us who have raised and trained our dogs to be good canine citizens. Our pit bulls are part of the family; BSL punishes us. BSL does not punish irresponsible dog owners, dog owners who do not leash or secure their dogs, dog owners who do not properly train and socialize their dogs or dog owners who intentionally train their dogs to be aggressive. Also, breed bans are extremely difficult to enforce.
There are many breeds and mixed breeds that fit the description of a pit bull.

What is a better alternative to BSL? Stricter laws need to be enforced regarding dogs being on-leash or secured when outside. Laws regarding dangerous dogs, regardless of breed, should be enforced.

There should also be higher fines and punishments for those who abuse animals and participate in dog fighting.

Please remember, ANY dog can be aggressive. Please do not judge an entire breed and punish them for the bad deeds of irresponsible dog owners. Don’t let them take my Sunshine away.

Hannah PowellHannah lives in Issaquah, WA with her husband, two dogs, and a parrot. She runs a dog walking/pet sitting business and volunteers her time to local dog rescue groups. In her spare time she enjoys skiing, hiking with her dogs, and camping. The experience of pit bull ownership has been her motivation for writing about this wonderful and misunderstood dog breed. Please check out Busybark for more about Hannah and her love of dogs.