Medicine Hat News

Charge laid after Saskatoon kennel deaths

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SASKATOON The owner of one of 14 dogs that died from heat stroke and dehydratio­n at a boarding kennel says her family is relieved that a charge has been laid.

Dawn Loessin says pet owners had braced themselves after being told that the chance of a charge “was slim to none” because animal protection laws are vague in Canada and Saskatchew­an.

“We kind of were hoping for the best, but psyching ourselves up for nothing, so that the charges were formally laid today was awesome,” Loessin said Wednesday.

“It just meant to us that our dogs mattered and that there was a big step forward in the animal laws and that hopefully we’re going to now get justice for our dogs.”

A 50-year-old Saskatoon man is charged with negligence under the Animal Protection Act. He is to appear in provincial court March 29.

Police said the charge followed an investigat­ion done with the Saskatoon SPCA into the deaths last September at the Playful Paws Pet Centre.

Investigat­ors said the animals were left unattended overnight and were without water in a room that was dangerousl­y warm.

The family still misses its one-yearold husky-shepherd cross named Linc, who was also a therapy dog for Loessin’s 15-year-old daughter Sydney. Linc helped with Sydney’s anxiety disorder.

“She's dealing with it. Obviously, today is a rough day,” said Loessin.

“And she’s got definitely now more good days than bad ... she’s just trying to move on.”

A message posted on the pet centre’s Facebook page in September said a mechanical failure in a rooftop heating unit caused it to continuous­ly pump warm air into one of its upstairs kennel rooms and that staff were devastated by the deaths.

Patricia Cameron, executive director of the Saskatoon SPCA, said at the time that there are no licensing regulation­s for kennels.

On Wednesday, she said a conviction for negligence under the Animal Protection Act can net a fine of not more than $25,000 or up to two years in jail, or both.

But it’s unusual to see penalties at the top end, Cameron said.

“That’s one of the issues that the community has been having with cases of animal neglect and cruelty is that there’s often fairly light penalties,” she said. “People feel it should be a more significan­t deterrent.”

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