Shelter killing falls to lowest rate in six decades despite two years of weak economy

From ANIMAL PEOPLE,  July/August 2010:



          Animals killed  YEAR  1,000s   Animals
         per 1,000 people       of people  killed
---------------------------------------------------------
Toronto               2.1  2008  2,632     5,526
Calgary               3.1  2008  1,043     2,803
Montreal              7.4  2007  1,621    12,000
Edmonton              6.5  2008    782     5,107
---------------------------------------------------------
CANADA (7.5%)         4.2       33,213   139,495

New York City         2.1  2009  8,300    17,080
NEW HAMPSHIRE         2.3  2008  1,316     2,374
Brookhaven (NY)       1.0  2009    500       475
---------------------------------------------------------
NORTHEAST (30%)       2.0       33,971    66,430

New Castle/Sussex, DE 1.2  2009    727       880
NEW JERSEY            4.4  2008  8,866    37,673
Pr. George Cty, MD    7.1  2007    841     6,000
Philadelphia         10.5  2008  1,611    15,286
---------------------------------------------------------
MID-ATLANTIC (49%)    5.0       24,497   122,120


Broward County        7.3  2008  1,751    12,782
Dekalb County, GA     7.4  2009    737     5,462
Cobb County, GA       8.5  2009    698     5,958
Miami/Dade County     9.1  2009  2,297    21,000
Gwinnette Cty, GA     9.8  2009    776     7,608
VIRGINIA             11.3  2009  7,883    88,730
Palm Beach County    12.8  2009  1,294    16,600
St. Johns Cnty, FL   13.0  2007    169     2,201
Manatee County, FL   13.6  2008    316     4,294
Alachua Cty, FL      14.4  2009    240     3,459
Pinellas Cty, FL     15.9  2008    910    14,500
Tampa region         16.5  2008  1,205    19,837
Lee County, FL       19.1  2007    571    10,907
NORTH CAROLINA       21.7  2008  9,381   203,490
Duval County, FL     23.5  2007    838    19,662
Columbia, SC         23.5  2007    468    11,000
Clayton County, GA   23.4  2009    272     6,257
Charleston, SC       24.1  2007    332     8,000
Clay County, FL      27.3  2007    179     6,542
Robeson Count, NC    34.6  2009    130     4,500
Volusia County, FL   42.3  2007    497    21,000
Clay County, FL      44.7  2007    179     8,000
Macon, GA            46.0  2009     93     4,278
---------------------------------------------------------
SO. ATLANTIC (62%)   16.2       50,192   813,110

Montrose, CO          2.5  2009     16       383
Reno/Washoe           3.5  2009    414     1,453
Weld County, CO       6.2  2009    244     1,500
Denver metro area     6.5  2008  2,397    15,570
UTAH                 11.9  2009  2,784    35,528
NEVADA               14.4  2009  2,643    38,163
Las Vegas/Clark Cty  14.4  2009  2,000    28,937
Phoenix/Maricopa     14.8  2008  3,955    57,287
Albuquerque          23.8  2007    505    12,029
Tucson               25.3  2008  1,014    25,600
NEW MEXICO           33.7  2007  1,978    66,709
Clovis, NM           48.9  2009     37     1,821
--------------------------------------------------------
WEST (68%)           16.0       22,123   353,963             Animals 
killed  YEAR  1,000s   Animals
         per 1,000 people       of people  killed
---------------------------------------------------------
Louisville           13.0  2008    722     9,368
Nashville            16.0  2009    626    10,000
Memphis              20.0  2008    671    13,416
Kanawha/Charleston   34.1  2007    192     6,553
---------------------------------------------------------
APPALACHIA (46%)     17.8       15,319   272,678


Plano, TX             5.3  2009    268     1,430
Richardson, TX        9.4  2009    102       957
Dallas               11.7  2008  2,346    27,355
Austin/Travis Cty.   11.9  2008    921    10,916
Jefferson Parish     16.9  2008    456     7,720
Shelby County, AL    16.9  2007    178     3,000
Houston              18.4  2007  3,886    71,395
San Antonio          19.6  2008  1,329    26,000
Fort Worth           21.3  2007    682    14,546
Mobile               22.1  2009    406     8,971
El Paso              24.0  2009    751    18,000
MISSISSIPPI          24.8  2007  2,939    73,000
Garland, TX          25.0  2009    226     5,651
ALABAMA              25.7  2007  4,662   120,000
Caddo Parish         26.1  2009    253     6,600
Waco/McLennan Cty.   27.0  2008    230     6,204
Brownsville          28.4  2009    176     5,000
Tuskaloosa, AL       31.1  2009    178     6,019
Baldwin County, AL   34.5  2009    174     5,063
Mesquite, TX         41.6  2009    132     5,488
Amarillo             58.8  2009    187    11,000
Odessa/Ector Cty.    71.4  2008    132     9,423
---------------------------------------------------------
GULF COAST (56%)     21.5       37,025   796,038


Parke-Vermillion, IN  1.5  2009     17        25
St. Charles Cty., MO  2.4  2009    349       820
Oakland County, MI    2.6  2009  1,202     3,125
Dane County, WI       3.8  2009    477     1,797
Mason County, MI      3.9  2007     30       116
Duluth                4.0  2009     86       344
Livingston Cty, MI    5.9  2009    183     1,084
St. Louis             5.9  2009    356     2,105
Chicago               6.7  2008  2,851    19,228
Macomb County, MI     7.2  2007    833     6,000
Jefferson Cty., MO    8.5  2009    224     1,900
Porter County,  IN    8.7  2007    160     1,384
Dayton/Montgomery    10.1  2009    538     5,431
Kansas City, MO      10.9  2008    452     4,912
Quad Cities, IL-IA   12.7  2009    312     3,944
Sangamon Cty, IL     14.7  2008    195     2,857
St. Clair Cty, MI    15.3  2007    170     2,600
Indianapolis         16.7  2007    866    14,470
Genesee County, MI   18.9  2009    424     8,000
Tulsa                18.9  2009    386     7,303
Oklahoma City        28.0  2007    691    19,365
Shelby County, IN    29.4  2008     44     1,293
River Rouge, MI     129.4  2007      9     1,165
--------------------------------------------------------
MIDWEST (18%)        10.1       60,124   607,252
          Animals killed  YEAR  1,000s   Animals
         per 1,000 people       of people  killed
---------------------------------------------------------
San Juan Capistrano   1.3  2007     37        48
San Francisco         1.3  2009    815     1,031
Whidbey Islsnd, WA    2.2  2009     60       132
San Diego             4.0  2007  2,942    11,700
Orange County, CA     4.3  2007  3,002    13,000
Los Angeles city      5.1  2009  3,834    19,561
Santa Barbara Cty.    5.3  2008    405     2,136
Portland/Multnomah    6.1  2009  2,049    12,500
Los Angeles total     6.8  2007  9,503    64,457
Los Angeles County    8.5  2007  5,082    43,373
Anchorage             9.1  2007    275     2,490
Clallam County, WA   10.0  2009     71       708
CALIFORNIA           10.9  2008 36,757   400,000
San Bernardino Cty   15.5  2009  2,061    32,000
Long Beach           13.0  2007    469     6,075
Spokane              16.8  2008    463     7,824
Kern/Bakersfield     22.8  2009    824    18,811
Fresno               35.0  2009    942    33,000
---------------------------------------------------------
PACIFIC (80%)        10.7       49,445   529,062

U.S. TOTAL           11.6      307,007 3,560,658

	(The regional and national totals appearing in bold are not 
tallies of the data used to produce them,  but are rather estimates 
proportionately weighted to reflect demography.  The percentage 
figure in parenthesis is the percentage of the human population 
encompassed within the shelter service areas from which the totals 
were derived.)




U.S. progress against shelter killing

1950     2.0    13.5

1970    23.4   115.0

1985    17.8    74.8

1997     4.9    21.1
1998     4.9    19.4
1999     4.5    16.6
2000     4.5    16.8
2001     4.4    15.7
2002     4.2    15.3
2003     4.5    14.8
2004     4.9    17.4
2005     4.4    14.8
2006     4.0    13.6
2007     4.2    13.8
2008     3.6    11.6



More progress for dogs than for cats

(The numbers of dogs and cats killed in U.S. and Canadian
shelters were approximately equal in the mid-1990s.)

Region                Cats killed       Dogs killed        Ratio
---------------------------------------------------------
CANADA           114,386       25,109     82/18
Northeast         47,165       19,265     71/29
Mid-Atlantic      86,705       35,415     71/29
So. Atlantic     457,256      357,768     56/44
Appalachia       147,246      125,432     54/46
Gulf Coast       429,861      366,178     54/46
Midwest          376,496      230,756     62/38
West             184,034      169,905     52/48
Pacific          333,309      169,300     63/37
---------------------------------------------------------
U.S. TOTAL     2,062,072    1,474,019     57/43


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Testing the finding of record low shelter killing–and looking for even better

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2010:
U.S. shelter killing of dogs and cats appears to have fallen
by 17% during the past three years, according to the 17th annual
ANIMAL PEOPLE analysis of shelter exit data, and for the first time
since 1950 has dropped below 13.5 per 1,000 Americans.
Canadian data, last included in the analysis in 2000, shows
comparable progress during the past decade in four of the five
largest cities, but lack of recent statistics from British Columbia,
the Atlantic provinces, and rural areas allows question as to
whether these numbers are representative of the nation.
The current rate of shelter killing of dogs and cats in the
U.S. appears to have dipped to 11.6, the lowest on record. The 3.6
million dogs and cats killed in U.S. animal shelters is the lowest
total since circa 1955.

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Bear-baying in S.C.

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2010:

COLUMBIA, S.C.–Bear-baying, legal in
the U.S. only in South Carolina, exploded into
national visibility on August 23, 2010 through
the near-simultaneous publication of an exposé by
Associated Press writer Meg Kinnard and the
release of undercover video by the Humane Society
of the U.S.
Descended from medieval bear-baiting,
bear-baying consists of releasing hounds to rush
a caged or tethered bear. The dogs, who are
purportedly being trained to hunt bears, are
called off when the bear rises on hind legs,
which would permit a hunter to shoot the bear.

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American Humane Association deal with egg producer may undercut California standards

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2010:

 

SACRAMENTO–Humane Society of the U.S. factory farming
campaign senior director Paul Shapiro rejoiced on July 7, 2010 when
California Governor Arnold Schwarz-enegger signed AB 1437, to
require that all eggs sold in California be produced under conditions
meeting the welfare standards for laying hens kept in California that
were established by the passage of Proposition Two in November 2008.
Shapiro called AB 1437 “a bill that will require all whole
eggs sold in California by 2015 to come from hens who can stand up,
lie down, turn around, and fully extend their limbs. In other
words: cage-free.”
Shapiro was scarcely alone in his understanding.
Editorialized The New York Times, “Since California does not produce
all the eggs it eats, this new law will have a wider effect on the
industry; every producer who hopes to sell eggs in the state must
meet its regulations. There is no justification, economic or
otherwise,” The New York Times added. “Industrial confinement is
cruel and senseless,” the editorialists wrote, “and will turn out
to be, we hope, a relatively short-lived anomaly in modern farming.”

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Defenders of Wildlife stops paying ranchers for livestock lost to wolves

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2010:
WASHINGTON D.C.–Defenders of Wildlife on August 20, 2010
announced that it will end paying compensation for verified livestock
losses to wolves in most states on September 10.
The 23-year-old Wolf Compensation Trust managed by Defenders
is widely credited with opening the way to wolf reintroduction in the
Rocky Mountains. Defenders has paid $1.4 million since 1987 to
ranchers in six states, for the deaths of 1,301 cattle, 2,431
sheep, and 108 other animals. “Our goal is to shift economic
responsibility for wolf recovery away from the individual rancher,”
said the Wolf Compensation Trust mission statement, “and toward the
millions of people who want to see wolf populations restored. When
ranchers alone are forced to bear the cost of wolf recovery, it
creates animosity and ill will toward the wolf,” which can “result
in illegal killing.”

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Rodeos try cultural defense, denial, & erasing cruelty law

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2010:

CALGARY, CHEYENNE, BRAZILIA–Exempted from prosecution
for 52 animal deaths in 24 years, including the deaths of six horses
in 2010, Calgary Stampede promoters defend rodeo as culture.
Not prosecuted yet, despite repeated attempts by Showing
Animals Respect & Kindness (SHARK), Cheyenne Frontier Days promoters
contend that animal injuries repeatedly videotaped and aired tens of
thousands of times on YouTube never happened.
Brazilian rodeo promoters just keep trying to repeal all
legal protection of domesticated animals from cruelty.
The two-week Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo ended in August
without documented fatalities, unlike in 2009 when SHARK founder
Steve Hindi videotaped at close range the fatal injuries suffered by
a horse named Strawberry Fudge during the bucking competition.

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Showdown expected in Ohio over farm standards evolves into a deal

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2010:
COLUMBUS–Instead of shaking hands and
coming out fighting on the November 2010 Ohio
state ballot, representatives of the Ohioans for
Humane Farms coalition and the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation on June 30, 2010 shook hands with
Ohio Governor Ted Strickland over a truce that
leaves the proposed ballot issues to be arbited
by the newly formed Ohio Livestock Care Standards
Board.
That the industry-controlled Ohio
Livestock Care Standards Board rather than voters
should control farm animal conditions was a goal
sought by agribusiness for more than two years.

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BOOKS: Kids Making a Difference for Animals

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2010:

Kids Making a Difference for Animals
by Nancy Furstinger & Sheryl L. Pipe
John Wiley (111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030), 2009.
(Order c/o <www.aspcaonlinestore.com>.)
84 pages, hardcover. $12.99.

Kids Making a Difference for Animals is inspirational,
heartwarming, and reduced me to tears, sharing examples of children
and teens committed to improving life for animals, both domestic and
wild.

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Animal Equality, of Spain, collects video from 172 pig farms in just three years

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2010:

 

MADRID–Sharon Nunez, founder of the
less-than-five-year-old organization Animal
Equality, on May 19, 2010 disclosed that 70
Animal Equality volunteers between August 2007
and May 2010 “physically entered a total of 172
pig farms in 11 regions of Spain,” documenting
their findings with 200 hours of video and 25,000
still photos.
Nunez released 50 minutes of the video and 2,600 photos.
“This intensive work comprises the
largest investigation into animal exploitation so
far carried out in Spain,” Nunez said.
In actuality the Animal Equality
investigation was larger by itself than all
previous undercover probes of farms and
slaughterhouses combined, worldwide.
The Animal Equality volunteers “recorded,
amongst other events, how workers routinely kill
pigs by slamming them against the floor,” Nunez
said, or “how pigs are hit, kicked or have
fingers thrust into their eyes to force them to
stand or walk,” and witnessed “countless scenes
of cannibalism–as much on organic or
‘free-range’ farms as on factory farms.”

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