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You are browsing the archive for 2011 December.

Cargill Recalls Year’s Production Of Dog Food

December 7, 2011 in Dog Food, Dog Safety, Endangerment, News

River Run and Marksman are being recalled.

River Run and Marksman are being recalled.

U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill Inc. said it was voluntarily recalling a year’s output of dog food under the brands River Run and Marksman due to high levels of aflatoxin.

The dog food was manufactured at Cargill’s Lecompte, La., plant from Dec. 1, 2010, to Dec. 1, 2011, and distributed in 13 states and two territories: Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Hawaii, Florida, California, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands.

“No illnesses have been reported in association with these products to date, and no other Cargill Animal Nutrition pet food products are involved in this recall,” Cargill said in a statement.

Aflatoxin, a toxic substance that can cause liver failure and death in dogs, is often found as a byproduct of a corn fungus. The fungus tends to develop on crops during years of severe heat and drought and is most commonly found in the southern United States.

At least 76 dogs were believed to have died in the United States in 2006 after eating aflatoxin-infected food produced by Diamond Pet Foods.

They are recalling all River Run and Marksman dry dog food on the market in 13 states: Kansas, Missouri, Northeast Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Western Kentucky, Southeast Indiana, Southern Illinois, Hawaii, and limited areas of Florida and California. Guam and the Virgin Islands are also affected.

Baggage Handler Who Refused To Transport Sick Dog Is Offered Job Back

December 7, 2011 in Dog Safety, Endangerment, News

Lynn Jones with her dogs.

Lynn Jones with her dogs.

Do you think this outcome would have happened without the power of the internet? Not only does she get her job back, but the company is donating money to the Nevada Humane Society!

This women is the kind of employee that any company should want!

– Kenn Bell

RENO, NEVADA – The baggage handling contractor that fired a Reno airport worker in a dispute over transporting an unhealthy dog has offered the woman her job back with back pay, and the company’s president praised her courage to stand up for the animal.

Airport Terminal Services Inc. also will contribute an unspecified amount of money to the Nevada Humane Society over the next three years to help “strengthen awareness regarding the mistreatment of animals,” said Sally Leible, president and CEO of the St. Louis-based company on Tuesday.

Lynn Jones, who had worked more than five years as a baggage handler for ATS at Reno-Tahoe International Airport, said she was fired about three weeks ago when she refused her supervisor’s orders to put the emaciated hunting dog on a plane bound for Corpus Christi, Texas.

Animal welfare workers picked up the animal. It recovered and was eventually returned to its owner.

Jones “was trying to protect the dog, and I think she was courageous in doing that,” Leible told The Associated Press. “I really, truly hope she will come back.”

Lieble said the company would use the incident as a learning tool to educate workers at the 38 U.S. airports ATS serves and renew the company’s “commitment to recognize and report animal abuse of any form.”

Jones said Monday that she was working in the cargo area last month when she saw the dog in a pet carrier. She said its body was covered with sores and its paws were worn raw.

“It was so thin, it made me cry,” she said. She said when she told her supervisor about it, he insisted she load the pointer onto the plane because its paperwork was in order and its condition was none of her concern.

“I kept telling my supervisor, `That dog is going to die if it gets on that plane,’” Jones said.

Leible said would not discuss whether any other employees would face disciplinary action. She told AP she was out of the country last week and returned “to this firestorm” when she came back Sunday.

She said the matter had not previously reached the senior executive level so she asked a vice present to “completely reinvestigate it.”

After talking to all the employees involved, “and with the benefit of some hindsight, we looked at it in a fresh and frank way,” she said.

“There was just a lot of high emotion at the end of the day,” Leible said. “Emotion can be forgiven because you are trying to do the right thing.”

As of Tuesday night, Jones had not accepted the job offer, Leible said.

“We’re trying to bring it to a resolution. We’re not across that finish line yet,” she told AP.

Jones, 56, did not immediately return a telephone call seeking comment Tuesday. She said Monday that she didn’t know what she would do if offered her old job back.

“I would have to really think about it,” she said.

Beagle Puppy Baying: Cute Video

December 6, 2011 in Fun Videos, News

Look up the word cute in the dictionary and you’d see a photo of this little guy!

Airport Worker Fired After Refusing To Load Dog

December 6, 2011 in Dog Safety, Endangerment, News

Pointer - File Photo

Pointer - File Photo

RENO, Nevada — Airport baggage handler Lynn Jones saw the sad look on the listless, emaciated dog sitting in a pet carrier and knew something was wrong. Then she saw that its body was covered with sores and its paws were worn raw.

“It was so thin, it made me cry,” she said.

If that dog gets on that plane, she remembered thinking, it would certainly die. And when she refused a supervisor’s orders to load it onto the Texas-bound flight, she was fired.

Now, a month after the incident at Reno-Tahoe International Airport, the dog has recovered. And Jones, while her former employer and airport officials have praised her for her actions, remains without her old job.

Peggy Hohl, vice president of employee services for Jones’ former employer, Airport Terminal Services Inc., based in St. Louis, said in an email that the company is taking the matter “very seriously.”

A statement posted on the company’s web site said officials were investigating, and that the company “commends this employee’s situational awareness and her desire to raise the concern on behalf of the canine.”

“ATS is reviewing the actions of all employees involved to determine if the appropriate action was taken,” it said.

Jones, 56, is no stranger to animals. She once owned a dog grooming shop and lives about 10 miles (16 kilometers) east of Reno with three dogs, three cats and a bird — all rescued from shelters over the years.

“I wanted to adopt this dog,” she said.

When she was working in the cargo area several weeks ago, she saw the pet carrier and the dog.

When she told her supervisor about it, she said, he insisted she load the pointer bound for Corpus Christi, Texas, because its paperwork was in order and its condition was none of her concern.

“I kept telling my supervisor, ‘That dog is going to die if it gets on that plane,’” Jones said.

“He didn’t even really look at the dog,” she said. “He just kept saying: ‘The dog is going, the dog is going.’ And I kept saying, ‘It is not.’ And we went back and forth, ‘Yes it is, no it isn’t, yes it is.’”

“I was hysterical and crying and yelling because the plane was going to leave and I was afraid the dog was going to be on it. I kept saying, ‘Please, please, the dog is going to die,’” she said.

Airport police phoned the animal welfare agency, which took custody of the dog.

The dog, apparently owned by a hunter who has it shipped to places he hunts, was shipped back to Texas after being nursed back to health, according to the Reno Gazette-Journal, which first reported the incident on Monday.

“It just breaks my heart to think that dog has been sent back to that owner. It’s disgusting. It makes me ill,” she told The Associated Press. “I can’t fathom why they would send it back to someone who obviously was abusing the dog.”

Jones said that Monday was the first day her ex-employer had contacted her.

“They wanted to hear my side, finally,” she said. “They said, ‘I abandoned my job,’ but I didn’t. He told me to go home. I was a very good employee. I was there early every day. I would not have abandoned my job.’

Jones said she doesn’t know if she would accept an offer to return to her job.

“I would have to really think about it,” she said.

Oklahoma Police Dog Dies In Possible Kidnapping

December 6, 2011 in Dog Safety, Inhumane Practices, Law Enforcement, News, Working Dogs

K9 BakAuthorities in Oklahoma are mourning the loss of a beloved police K-9 that was found dead under suspicious circumstances Saturday.

“We sent him off to a vet,” where they will perform a necropsy on the dog, said Moore Police Officer Jeremy Lewis.

According to police, Bak, a 5-year-old German shepherd, was last seen Friday night in a kennel on the property of his handler, Sgt. Kerri Andrews. Someone removed the lock on the security pen and either took the dog or allowed him to escape, police said.

“Someone let him out, but we don’t know who,” Lewis said. “We are still investigating.”

A police officer found Bak’s remains the following day more than a mile away, near Interstate 35 in Moore. The location was within the Oklahoma City Metropolitan Area. According to Lewis, there was obvious trauma to Bak’s body.

For three years, Bak worked for the police department, tracking suspects, conducting building searches and sniffing out narcotics. He was one of two K-9s on the force and was considered a member of Andrews’ family, police said.

While police are still trying to determine what exactly happened to Bak, authorities do suspect foul play.

“[He] was inside a kennel, inside a backyard, inside a gated neighborhood, so someone basically had to let him out of three things,” Lewis said.

It is not uncommon for someone to target a police K-9, but Russ said it occurs less today than it has in years past.

“When we first started getting involved with dogs finding narcotics, there were several cases where dogs who found large stashes of narcotics had bounties put on them,” Russ said.

According to Lewis, police are not aware of anyone who wanted to harm Bak. If a suspect is identified, he or she will be charged. Causing the death of a police dog in Oklahoma is a felony offense.

Anyone with information on Bak’s disappearance and death is asked to contact Moore police at 405-793-5171.

 

Dog Shoots Hunter With Shotgun

December 1, 2011 in Dog Safety, News

If you have to go hunting, please be smart and safe!

Gustav, His Story In Pictures: Heartwarming Video

December 1, 2011 in Endangerment, Inhumane Practices, Inspirational, News

Check out this video of Gustav, an abused dog who beat the odds. Some of the first few pictures are hard to take, but it’s worth it to see him getting better.

Katherine Heigl Hates Balls: Funny Video

December 1, 2011 in Dog Safety, Fun Videos, News

Only watch this video if you have a sense of humor. I don’t think it’s NSFW but it’s close!