Daily Press

‘Way too many issues and animals’

Bone to pick: There’s 1 dogcatcher, 30,000 strays in tiny Guam

- By Kelly Kasulis Cho

MANGILAO, Guam — Driving alone in his truck, Nicholas Ibanez prowls the tiny American island of Guam in uniform, carrying a most-wanted list of dangerous predators that must be taken off the streets.

He starts early, before 8 a.m. — up and out with coffee in hand. Lately, he also emerges after dark, to avoid the vigilantes who would impede his work. On the road, he scans the edge of forests for shady patches to set his traps. In a box sits his bait: bits of chicken from a local Jamaican restaurant, a strip from KFC, maybe a vienna sausage.

Ibanez, 41, is the Guam government’s only dogcatcher. And no matter how many hours he works, no matter how elusive he is at the animal control office, he faces an inescapabl­e reality: On this island, there’s just one Nicholas Ibanez, and at least 30,000 stray dogs.

“There’s way too many issues and animals — there’s always something waiting,” said Ibanez, who has held the job for more than five years. “It can be dangerous. I’ve never been bitten, and I don’t want to get bit.”

Across Guam, which is home to about 170,000 people, packs of these “boonie dogs,” as they are known, can be seen everywhere — crossing highways and chasing cars, roving the parking lots of luxury hotels, lounging in cul-de-sacs fringed with coconut trees.

On social media, residents frequently post stories and photos of dangerous encounters, like one that left a tuxedo cat with bloodied eyes and a ring of red around its neck, and another in which a feral stray climbed three stories of an apartment

building to attack a pet.

In the animal control office, Ibanez looked through photos of pet dogs with bloodied legs and one that showed a stray baring its teeth at a toddler as she stood on her doorstep.

“I can say like 80% are vicious,” he said.

The island has struggled with stray dogs for decades.

In 1967, during a rabies outbreak, the U.S. military tried to shoot the strays. But the dogs proved so smart and elusive that authoritie­s eventually resorted to planting poison, said Cyrus Luhr, president of the board of directors at Guam Animals in Need, an animal shelter.

Now, Guam, which covers about 200 square miles, has about one stray dog for every six residents — a ratio that looks to some like a pile of dynamite.

“Rabies is a very real threat to us,” said Alison

Hadley, executive director of the shelter, which is the only one on the island that receives government funding.

This summer, a video that went viral got the island talking about the problem with strays — and inflamed passions over what to do.

The video showed a pack of about 50 dogs flocking to an abandoned building near the airport. It caught the attention of the island’s mayors, animal welfare groups and parents, catapultin­g the issue onto front pages and fueling public meetings for months.

The debate has at times gone to extremes: Some have called for permits that allow hunters to shoot the strays, while others want them left alone entirely. When captured, the dogs are brought to the shelter, where they are put up for adoption, or euthanized if

they are beyond medical help.

“There are people that hate them, there are people that — you see it on the news, they shoot or poison them — and there’s people out there who are like, ‘OK, let’s make a schedule for feeding groups of strays,’ ” said Julie Cunningham, a nurse whose pet cat was nearly mauled to death by three dogs this year.

The island’s divisions have crept into Ibanez’s daily work, forcing him to go on capture missions in the dark of night to avoid the small number of animal welfare activists who have taken to heckling him and scaring away the strays.

“I never had problems until recently,” he said. “People take out their video and get in my face.”

While Guam has long contended with stray dogs, it has never done so with so few resources.

The animal control division lost many staff members in the early 2000s, when the Guam government moved the division to the Department of Agricultur­e. In late 2020, Ibanez became the only officer in the field, after his last counterpar­t retired.

“In Guam, everything is underfunde­d,” Luhr said.

The animal control division has been looking to hire more officers, and since the video of the airport dogs went viral, the Guam government has passed legislatio­n to increase the shelter’s annual funding to $600,000 from $150,000.

Those closest to the issue say that free or low-cost spaying and neutering programs are the best longterm solution, though the island chronicall­y struggles with a shortage of veterinari­ans and a lack of education about sterilizin­g pets.

“I want a little bit more of everything,” said Chelsa Muna-Brecht, director of the Guam Department of Agricultur­e. “It would take at least two to three years with proper staffing and support of the island before we could really turn this around.”

As public debate rages on, Ibanez mostly keeps to himself, making his way through routine dog captures, animal abuse investigat­ions and visits to areas known for strays. He ignores any angry social media posts about him, he said, and tries to decompress by spending evenings with his wife.

“You have to deal with a lot — people’s emotions when you have to remove their animals, or emotions when you see an animal sick or dying or abused,” he said. “But it doesn’t get to me. You have to handle it, or the job is not meant for you.”

 ?? ANTHONY HENRI OFTANA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A staffer at Guam Animals In Need, left, talks about an animal abuse case with dogcatcher Nicholas Ibanez.
ANTHONY HENRI OFTANA/THE NEW YORK TIMES A staffer at Guam Animals In Need, left, talks about an animal abuse case with dogcatcher Nicholas Ibanez.

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