Gassing in animal shelters nears abolition, but continues on farms & in fields

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2010:

 

Momentum toward abolition of gassing
shelter animals was evident in seven of the last
states where gassing continues as the May 2010
edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE went to press, but a
faxed publicity release received near deadline
made clear that abolishing carbon monoxide
chambers will be just the start of abolishing
gassing altogether.
The publicity release touted kits for
connecting the exhaust pipes of cars, trucks,
and lawn mowers to hoses, in order to gas
burrowing animals with unfiltered hot fumes.
The American Veterinary Medical
Association still accepts use of gassing to kill
small animals, including dogs, cats, and
captive wildlife, but not gassing with exhaust
fumes. “Fumes from idling gasoline internal
combustion enginesŠare associated with problems
such as production of other gases, achieving
inadequate concentrations of carbon monoxide,
[and] inadequate cooling of the gas,”
summarizes the AVMA publication Guidelines on
Euthanasia. “Therefore, the only acceptable
source is compressed carbon monoxide in
cylinders.”

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BOOKS: Los Mutts

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 2010:
 
Los MUTTS
by Lorraine Chittock
Self-published: http://losmutts.com/order.htm
96 pages, paperback. $18.95.
 
Among the pervasive myths of humane work is that most street
dogs are castoff pets, or are chiefly descended from pets. Though
most street dogs may have some pet or working dog ancestors, most
dogs worldwide have been street dogs for as long as streets have
existed. Globally, most dogs still are street dogs. Even in the
U.S. and Britain, pet dogs have outnmbered street dogs for less than
a century.

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Editorial: How to introduce neuter/return & make it work

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 2010:

 

Even before publication of our first edition, in September
1992, ANIMAL PEOPLE advocated and demonstrated the use of
neuter/return in place of catch-and-kill animal control. Our very
first project proved the efficacy of neuter/return plus vaccination
to keep raccoon rabies from spreading among feral cats at eight sites
in Connecticut.
Witnessing, documenting, and reporting about the success of
neuter/return in controlling dog and cat populations worldwide often
provides a sense of accomplishment. Yet a frequent source of
frustration comes from seeing the failure of poorly planned, ineptly
executed, and negligently maintained neuter/return projects.

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The search goes on for a single-dose non-surgical way to sterilize dogs & cats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 2010:

 

DALLAS–More than 50 contenders for the
$25 million Michelson Prize for the invention of
a successful non-surgical method of sterilizing
dogs and cats registered for an intensive
briefing about how to win the money at the April
8-10, 2010 Alliance for Contra-ception of Dogs &
Cats conference in Dallas.
The first step, for most, will be
winning some of the $50 million research and
development funding offered by Found Animals
Foundation founder Gary K. Michelson, M.D., to
help the contenders approach the jackpot.
To do that, the contenders must present
ideas that clear rigorous screening for
feasibility, practicality, and safety by the
Found Animals Foundation scientific advisors.
As holder of more than 900 patents issued
or pending worldwide for medical instruments,
procedures, and other medical devices, mostly
used to treat back pain, Michelson has a clear
idea what he wants to see: a single-dose
treatment that will quickly, inexpensively
sterilize dogs and cats for life, and can win
regulatory approval for widespread use.

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Retired cavalry general rides to the rescue of Animal Birth Control programs

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2010:
CHENNAI, AHMEDABAD– Responding to alleged corruption that
has in recent years crippled the Indian national Animal Birth Control
program, Animal Welfare Board of India chair Rammehar Kharb warned
the cities of Ahmedabad and Ludhiana against employing unauthorized
ABC providers.
“You are requested to cancel your ABC contract awarded to
Animal Shelter & Hospital at Ahmedabad Foundation, which is not
recognized or registered with AWBI,” Kharb wrote to the Ahmedabad
Municipal Corporation, “failing which AWBI will be constrained to
initiate action in the matter.”

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BOOKS: Rescue Matters

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2010:

Rescue Matters:
How to find, foster and rehome companion animals
by Sheila Webster Boneham, Ph.D.
Alpine Publications (38262 Linman Road, Crawford, CO 81415), 2009.
166 pages, paperback. $14.95.

Sheila Boneham recognizes that animal rescue is central to
the volunteers involved. They give up evenings to transport unwanted
animals from shelters to foster homes. Huge chunks of their weekends
are spent at adoption events. They may skip a holiday dinner to pick
up a stray dog who has been hit by a car. Hearts get broken along
the way too, when favorite animals don’t survive.
Rescuing animals can be rewarding, but it can also be
challenging and dangerous. And it’s not for everyone. There is a
lot more than plucking a stray dog from an animal shelter or saving a
cat from a band of hoodlums. Be prepared for hard work.

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Japanese shelter numbers fall

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2010:

 

OSAKA–Who is making the fastest progress toward becoming a
no-kill nation?
A good case could be made for Japan, according to 2007 data
collected by All Life In a Viable Environment and published in
December 2009 by Animal Refuge Kansai.
1999 data collected by Yoshiko Seno, published in the
November 2002 edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE, showed that Japan then had a
dog population of about 10 million, of whom 280,199 were killed in
animal control shelters. Japan has no non-governmental shelters that
kill homeless animals. As Japan has had no visible street dogs in
more than 40 years, all of the dogs entering shelters were presumed
to be former pets.

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Madras & Delhi courts rule on dog breeding & feeding

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2010:

 

COIMBATORE, DELHI–High Court verdicts rendered five days
apart in Chennai and Delhi in mid-December 2009 were hailed by media
nationwide as among the most significant for dogs since Maneka Gandhi
vs. Delhi in 1992.
In the 1992 case, recalled Utkarsh Anand of the Indian
Express, “the Delhi High Court held that street dogs are a part of
the city, and just beng classified as strays does not mean they
should be killed. The court accepted that sterilization and
vaccination of dogs is the only scientific and humane solution to the
so-called problem of street dogs.”

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Cats removed from “Island of the Blue Dolphins”

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2010:

 

VENTURA–Birders and feral cat defenders
both claim victory over the outcome of a cat
eradication program on San Nicolas Island, 65
nautical miles west of the California mainland.
The semi-arid 24-square-mile island was
occupied by the Nicoleño people when discovered
by Spanish explorer Sebastián Vizcaíno in 1602.
The Nicoleño were evacuated in 1835 by Spanish
missionaries who hoped to save them from bloody
raids by Russian-led Aleut sealers. None
survived exposure to mainland diseases for more
than a few years.

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