Manukau and Papakura Courier

Fight to save innocent lives

- STAFF REPORTERS

Dogs tend to be judged, not on their character or temperamen­t but on how they look.

And now their lives could be determined by the shape of their face, the size of their nose or the colour of their eyes.

SPCA New Zealand have set up an online petition to save these innocent lives.

The animal charity are highly concerned about the Government’s action plan to attempt to reduce dog bites.

They are appalled that part of the action includes tighter restrictio­ns around certain breeds, including preventing them from being re-homed by animal shelters.

The SPCA state that this has been categorica­lly proven to not reduce dog bites which is why the petition has been set up to stop it from happening.

Chief executive Andrea Midgen says the most worrying part is the restrictio­n on animal shelters, like the SPCA, preventing them from re-homing these dogs.

‘‘Essentiall­y the Government is proposing to kill thousands of innocent dogs. The SPCA is completely opposed to this, and we plan to fight this with full force.’’

The SPCA believes that each individual dog should be judged based on temperamen­t and behaviour, not breed. This is why each dog re-homed by the SPCA undergoes health and behaviour assessment­s.

‘‘The main problem with the new action plan from the Government is that it is not evidenceba­sed or derived from research. Studies worldwide show that breed-specific legislatio­n does not work,’’ Midgen says.

‘‘It does not reduce dog attacks or make communitie­s safer for people or companion animals.’’

The SPCA’s view, based on the available internatio­nal scientific evidence, is that any dog may bite and that dogs should not be declared ‘menacing’ on the basis of visual appearance alone.

Many countries that have instigated breed bans are repealing them as they have not been effective in reducing dog bites.

They 100 per cent support the Government’s strategic focus that all dog owners should be responsibl­e and that public education is a vital component of this.

But Midgen says the SPCA will absolutely not support this change.

‘‘We will try to work with the Government to come up with a sensible solution to the issue of dog bites in our communitie­s without thousands of innocent dogs unnecessar­ily losing their lives.’’

Go to rnzspca.org.nz/saveinnoce­nt-lives to join SPCA in the fight to save innocent lives.

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 ?? ANNA LOREN ?? CEO Andrea Midgen
ANNA LOREN CEO Andrea Midgen

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