Humane or Insane?
Importation of foreign stray animals into US
shelters threatens
health, sustains ‘overpopulation’
By: Patti Strand
Date: 01/30/2003
If you don't know what's happening at your local animal
shelter, or what
local pet rescue groups are doing, it's time to find out!
Destructive
practices are emerging that threaten public health, sustain 'pet
overpopulation'
and undermine responsible dog ownership and
breeding.
Finding out what's happening in the world of animal sheltering
and
rescuing, however, is not always that easy. Although most shelters use
the issue
of 'pet overpopulation' to raise funds, it turns out that few of
them have
sufficient records to support the term. In fact, a major
impediment to
solving the US stray and surplus pet problems is the lack of
reliable shelter
statistics.
Many shelters combine dog and cat
statistics, thus making it impossible to
track dog or cat trends
individually. Shelters also
tend to lump together all shelter deaths
regardless of the reason for
euthanasia, even though their data would be of
far greater statistical value if
categorized, for example, as: 1) owner
requested due to health,
temperament or old age; 2) shelter mandated because
the animal was judged too sick or
too dangerous to be rehabilitated and
placed; 3) and, shelter mandated
because insufficient resources existed to
continue maintaining an animal even
though it was healthy and adoptable.
Of these three categories, only the last, the adoptable pet that died
for
lack of a home, signifies a surplus animal problem. But muddled
euthanasia
statistics combined with fundraising campaigns to stop 'pet
overpopulation'
encourage the public to believe that all shelter deaths are
part of a
massive 'pet overpopulation' problem.
The practice of
relocating pets from a crowded shelter to one with empty
runs within the
same community also leads to confusion if the source of the
animals is not
reported. The practice itself may be reasonable and humane if
it increases
adoptions, but too often all participating shelters count the
same animals
in their totals inflating the number of shelter animals
reported for a given
community.
Over-representing shelter impounds hinders the development of
an accurate
baseline for shelter populations. Without an accurate baseline
it's
impossible to get a handle on pet population trends and difficult to
identify
remaining problems, much less to plan appropriate strategies to
solve them.
Over-representing shelter impounds or shelter euthanasia
statistics generates
few negative consequences for shelters, while higher
numbers and the
appearance of a crisis buoy donations and
budgets.
Another confusing factor is that the actual number of euthanized
adoptable
dogs (surplus dogs) varies enormously from one region to another
and from
rural to urban areas within states and regions. Generally speaking,
many of
the larger cities in the Pacific Northwest, New England and the
Great Lakes
region have dog population dynamics that are in balance, meaning
that the
demand for dogs equals or nearly equals the supply of dogs in their
regions. This may seem incredible to people living in cities or regions
where
shelters are still brimming with surplus animals, as in some of the
farm belt
states and parts of the South - but it is true.
In many US
cities today, campaigns to end 'pet overpopulation' have been so
successful
that the demand for dogs far outstrips supply. In fact,
shelters in many of
these cities would have a significant percentage of empty dog
runs were it
not for the mushrooming practice of moving dogs around from
one region to
another and from one shelter to another within regions, an
activity known
somewhat euphemistically as humane relocation.
Humane relocation began as
a common sense method for helping animals to get
adopted through cooperative
efforts among city shelters. It made no sense
for the humane society to
euthanize dogs for lack of room while the local
animal control agency had
the space and resources to help get them adopted.
Over time, as the number
of surplus dogs in some cities continued to drop,
they began taking in
animals from greater distances. For example, some
shelters in the greater
Portland metropolitan area routinely accept dogs from
other counties in
Oregon, Washington and sometimes from states as far away
as
Hawaii.
As long as participating shelters publicly disclose what they are
doing so
that taxpayers and donors can assess the risks and benefits, and as
long
as exporting municipalities and shelters increase their commitment to
the
responsible pet ownership programs in their areas, humane relocation can
be a
helpful tool. However, if exporting regions do not increase local
spay/neuter and public education programs, humane relocation could amount to
little
more than a constant reshuffling of dogs and resources and would not
lead
to further reductions of surplus animals. Irresponsibly used, humane
relocation could be used for maintaining the status quo and increasing
bottom
lines instead of solving long-term shelter problems.
The Flies
in the Ointment
Unfortunately, humane relocation is not being conducted
responsibly by a
small but growing number of shelters and rescue groups. The
answer for some
shelters with empty runs has not been to contact shelters in
their own
regions or in other areas of the continental US, but to institute
programs of
importation from other countries and territories. According to
their own
records, one foundation, the Save a Sato program championed by
PeTA, has
already sent 14,000 dogs to the US. Satos (a slang term for
mixed-breed street
dogs in Puerto Rico) arrive in US cities practically
every day. Dozens of
shelters are involved. Some of the shelters NAIA is
tracking bring in 100-200
dogs each month and are placing them for $200-$250
each.
From Florida, Texas and Michigan to New England and the Pacific
Northwest,
more and younger Puerto Rican dogs and puppies are finding their
way into
American shelters every month. Massachusetts in particular is a
magnet and a
distribution center for relocated surplus pets and strays, but
other
states with empty shelter runs are picking up the cause as well. This
is not a
phenomenon that can be brushed off lightly as a passing phase. If
you
examine the evidence and connect the dots, the steady influx of foreign
strays
reveals an evolving plan.
New 501(c) charities devoted to
rescuing dogs from distant lands are
popping up in states across the US.
They are not being formed to place only
Puerto Rican dogs, but also to save
dogs from as far away as Taiwan 6 and other
Asian countries. Several
shelters and rescue groups in the Northwest
knowingly accept dogs from
Taiwan, Puerto Rico or Mexico.
There is another disturbing pattern
developing, a trend toward importing
progressively younger dogs. Two years
ago when NAIA first began researching
the issue, the foreign imports
depicted on shelter web sites were of varied
ages. Today, most of them are
puppies. It is easy to speculate that if no
one is capturing and altering
the illusive strays that produce these
orphans, then enterprising rescuers
and shelter directors could help developing
countries become breeding
grounds for stocking US shelters.
Long-term flooding of US cities with
foreign dogs has unavoidable
implications for pet population dynamics in the
US. The practice of importing dogs
from developing countries not only
prevents us from making further progress
against 'pet overpopulation,' in
time it could also diminish the
responsible breeding and placement of well
bred, healthy dogs and cats.Many
conscientious dog breeders are so concerned
about 'pet overpopulation' they have
already accepted the idea that a good
breeder is one who seldom breeds. The
problem with this conclusion is that
it does not recognize the basic
marketplace reality that demand drives
supply. When responsible breeders quit
breeding, it means only that in the
future someone else will supply the public
with the dogs or cats they want.
In this specific case, it also means that
the public will have fewer
reliable sources for healthy, well bred and
socialized purebred
dogs.
In the two years since introducing the subject of stray
importation, (see
/articles/archives/redefining.htm) the practice has taken
off, with the
result that some animal shelters are clearly operating as pet
stores today.
Whether they acquire their inventory from distant states or
foreign countries
or territories, they operate like commercial businesses,
not charities
formed to serve the public good.
They acquire their
stock at little or no cost, advertise their product
using time-tested
campaigns against 'pet overpopulation,' rotate inventory
quickly, restock
immediately and bring in staggering amounts of money.
Projecting from
figures on the web site of one active shelter, gross revenues from
imports
that include a constant supply of satos, will total more than
$500,000 this
year alone!
It is also disturbing to see the animal rights party line
being used
against breeders to justify importation. The following quote was
taken from the
web site of the Humane Society of Snohomish County, a
Seattle-area importer
of dogs from Taiwan "By saving Taiwan dogs, we do not
feel this takes away
from saving a dog at our own shelters. The majority of
dogs from Taiwan are
small and our own shelters do not have many small dogs.
At this time we
have over 38 people on our waiting list for small dogs. We
feel it is better
to bring small dogs in from another part of the world than
to have these
people going to a breeder. Many people, sadly, still do after
they have been
on our waiting list for an extended period."
The Buddy
Dog Humane Society in Massachusetts shares the anti- breeder
sentiment and
offers a similar rationale on their web site: "Many people ask
why we are
taking dogs from Puerto Rico. The answer for us is simple. Most of
the dogs
are small, usually under 30 pounds, thus enabling Buddy Dog to
find many
adopters looking for a smaller dog, a new companion, without going
to a pet
store or breeder. At the same time we are helping homeless dogs
get off the
streets and into a caring home."
A certain picture begins to emerge when
reviewing Buddy Dog's statement of
priorities: 1) to have the right product
to fill consumer demands; 2) to
prevent the public from getting a dog that
was deliberately bred, whether
from a pet store or a private breeder; and 3)
to help a homeless dog.
When coupled with the stated goal of the animal
rights agenda to eliminate
the purposeful breeding of dogs and cats, the
anti- breeder mantra echoed
throughout this enterprise should convince even
the most skeptical of
readers that stray importation is only part of a far
more ambitious plan. The
oft-repeated vision for pet ownership espoused by
PeTA's founder, Ingrid
Newkirk makes humane relocation a moral imperative.
"If people had companion
animals in their homes, those animals would have to
be refugees from the
animal shelters and the streets."
Eliot Katz,
president of In Defense of Animals and the foremost advocate of
'guardianship,' states a similar goal, "to convince people to rescue and
adopt instead of buying or selling animals, to disavow the language and
concept of animal ownership." IDA's leader says that it is essential for
people
to understand that, "an owner buys, a guardian adopts or rescues."
Katz is
currently leading the campaign to get Los Angeles to adopt
'guardian' in
all of its municipal codes.
NAIA unequivocally opposes
the importation of stray dogs (and more recently
cats) into the US for
adoption. Importing strays is a dangerous and
irresponsible practice and
should be outlawed immediately. The only reason that
laws don't already
exist to prevent such destructive rescue activities is
that no reasonable
person could have imagined a scenario in which anyone
would be irrational
enough to do it.
Health Matters
Even before considering the health
issues, it is a reckless and
indefensible practice to import stray animals
into a country that pours hundreds of
millions of public and private dollars
annually, (and has for decades) into
animal control and 'pet overpopulation'
problems! Imports from other
countries displace American shelter dogs that
need homes, too. The importation of
strays does not save lives, it sustains
overpopulation and assures that
adoptable dogs in US shelters will be
euthanized.
The current scale of importation also poses significant
public health
risks. These animals, destined to be domestic pets, are from
countries where the
standards of veterinary medicine are not as high as they
are in the US.
Diseases and parasites that are not found here may be endemic
in poor or
tropical countries. If the fundraising materials accurately
describe the
rescued dogs, they are not pets from private homes but strays
from the streets
and therefore are among the most likely reservoirs for
parasites and
diseases. In addition, they are bringing them into communal
shelters where they are
most likely to pass on whatever diseases or
parasites they have to other
companion animals or to their
caregivers.
Some diseases and parasites pose serious health risks for
human health as
well as for dogs and other species. Dogs are a leading
vector for rabies in
many poor countries. Currently, the only thing required
for a dog to enter
the US is a health certificate and proof of a rabies
shot. Given the
incubation period for rabies, from five days to several
years, with 20-60 days
being the norm, unquarantined importation of street
dogs from poor countries
with low rates of vaccination for rabies, is a
disaster waiting to happen.
Exotic parasites, worms, protozoa and certain
ticks pose significant risks
as well.
Living in a country where it is
difficult to get a banana through customs,
(especially since 9-11) and where
livestock importation is strictly
regulated and animal protection groups
seek ever-tighter regulation of dogs from
breed enthusiasts along with
commercial breeders, it is a sick and
intolerable paradox that poorly bred,
often diseased, foreign-bred dogs enter our
country by the thousands with
the barest of regulation - often on airlines
that fly them to the US at no
charge to help out the 'cause.' Seemingly, the
only unregulated operators in
the animal world today are the 'animal
dealers' working in the animal
protection groups that fundraise on overpopulation
while importing dogs from
overseas. Indeed, the only thing that puts the
madness into perspective is
the fact that importing groups and the national
animal rights groups that
support them are still fundraising on the issue
of 'pet
overpopulation!'
At NAIA we salute anyone working to improve the welfare
of animals so long
as they conduct themselves responsibly. If groups such as
PeTA that support
importation of strays want to help animals in poor and
developing
countries, though, we recommend that they take a fraction of
their millions and
fund spay and neuter clinics or launch public education
campaigns. Those
initiatives might actually help. Importing Satos or Taiwan
strays, on the other
hand, does little more than displace US shelter animals
with ones that are
more suitable for fundraising.
NAIA recognizes
that most people working in animal shelters and rescue
conduct themselves
honorably while performing a difficult and often thankless
job. This article
is not intended to tar the whole sheltering community with
the irresponsible
actions of a few. Even so, if the good people who work
in animal control and
protection remain silent on the issue, they are
culpable as well. For too
long, extreme groups like PeTA have co-opted the animal
movement and brought
shame to the cause of animal protection. It's time
for reasonable people in
animal welfare to separate themselves from the
corrupt and radical fringe
and bring respect back to their cause. The public
needs to know that being
humane doesn't't have to mean being insane!
For more information on this
and other issues affecting dog and cat owners
and breeders, visit the NAIA
web site at _www.naiaonline.org_
(
http://www.naiaonline.org/) NAIA and NAIA Trust
will continue to work on the issue of
stray imports. NAIA will pursue
researching and reporting on the subject and
NAIA Trust will set out an
agenda for dealing with it legislatively and
legally. If you have
information on the subject, please contact
mailto:_naia%40involved.com_
(mailto:
mailto:naia%40involved.com) If you
would like to work with NAIA
Trust on this issue, contact
mailto:_naiatrust%40involved.com_
(mailto:
mailto:naiatrust%40involved.com)
.
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