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Post Info TOPIC: Montreal Just Delivered A Death Sentence To Thousands Of Dogs


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Montreal Just Delivered A Death Sentence To Thousands Of Dogs
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City councillors in Montreal just signed a death warrant for thousands of dogs in the Canadian city.

At a council meeting on Tuesday afternoon, legislators voted in 37 to 23 favor of breed-specific legislation, effectively outlawing any dog that resembles a pit bull — unless owners meet a strict set of conditions.

"I have a responsibility as the mayor of Montreal to protect the citizens," Mayor Denis Coderre told reporters after the vote.

But pit bull-type dogs currently in city shelters need not apply. Under the ban — which loosely covers American pit bull terriers, American Staffordshire terriers and Staffordshire bull terriers — no dog considered a pit bull can be adopted from Montreal shelters.

"For dogs that don't have an 'owner' on the day of the passing of the legislation, the way the legislation is drafted, the dogs have to be euthanized," Alanna Devine, of the Montreal SPCA, told The Dodo last week.

The Montreal SPCA takes about 2,000 dogs into the city shelters it runs every year. Among them, she says, about a third, or 700, meet the city's standard as pit bulls.

"Based on the way legislation is drafted, they can't be adopted," Devine noted.

Some pit bull-type dogs have already found their way out of Montreal shelters in advance of the ban. Rescue groups have been working feverishly to find spaces for them in western provinces that don't enforce a breed-specific ban.

"It absolutely makes no sense whatsoever," Carolynn Williams, who has been organizing a pit bull exodus from the city, told The Dodo earlier this month, "It's a proven fact that it doesn't work. They're just going to force people to hold them illegally which will create more problems."

So far, the handful of dogs who have found safe haven in Alberta and Saskatchewan pales in comparison to the number facing euthanization in Montreal.

 

Not everyone on city council could get behind the legislation at Tuesday's vote. Debates raged for much of the morning, resuming again after lunch.

Sterling Downey, a city councillor representing the political party Projet Montreal, warned that a ban would set Montreal apart from many jurisdictions that have rejected similar laws.

And he wasn't wrong. Protest over the ban has erupted around the world, from dog lovers, celebrities and even the organizations like the American Bar Association, which sent a letter to Coderre questioning the legality of the ban.

Even the Quebec Order of Veterinarians has a lodged a formal complaint against the ban, saying its members have the right to choose whether they want to euthanize a dog.

"I, professionally, morally, ethically am not required to euthanize those animals," Karen Joy Goldenberg, a veterinarian at a local animal hospital, told CBC News.

In addition, the SPCA of Montreal has issued its own ultimatum. The group, which operates shelters and animal services in 12 Montreal boroughs, says it will cancel its contract with the city under the ban.

The legislation was proposed after a spate of dog attacks in the city. Among them, the most notorious resulted in a woman being killed by a dog in her yard last June. But, even in that case, there's doubt whether the dog that attacked her was even a pit bull.

Under the law, people who own dogs deemed pit bulls have until March to undergo a criminal background check and pay $150 for a special permit. Their dog will have to be sterilized, vaccinated and microchipped —as well as muzzled and on a 4-foot leash at all times in public.

"There are a lot of low-income and homeless people in Montreal who simply won't be able to afford all of the criteria they need in order to get the special permit," Devine told The Dodo. "Those dogs will have to be seized and have to be euthanized."

 

Sadly, the decision in Montreal may have a domino effect on the rest of Quebec. Provincial legislators have been mulling a similar ban, which, Devine told The Dodo, could be announced shortly after the Montreal decision. But if lawmakers are looking for proof of a breed ban's effectiveness, they need only look to the neighboring province of Ontario, where pit bulls have been banned for more than a decade — and dog bites have actually gone up in that span.

"In 11 years, Ontario's breed-specific legislation has done nothing but tear apart families, dramatically reduce the quality for life of dogs living under the legislation, and, ultimately, take the lives of thousands of innocent dogs. The impact will be no different in Montreal," Clare Forndran of Dog Tales Rescue and Sanctuary noted in a press release.

 



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What a bunch of dickfaces

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I'm sorry. This doesn't really bother me.

Maybe I'm an awful person for it and I'm sure I will be flamed for because of it.

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lilyofcourse wrote:

I'm sorry. This doesn't really bother me.

Maybe I'm an awful person for it and I'm sure I will be flamed for because of it.


 Me neither. They will be euthanized very humanely. A dog that ends up in a bad home would be much worse off, and many pit bull type dogs end up in the wrong hands. Also, a human who is attacked by one of these dogs suffers much more than these dogs will.



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sweet tooth wrote:
lilyofcourse wrote:

I'm sorry. This doesn't really bother me.

Maybe I'm an awful person for it and I'm sure I will be flamed for because of it.


 Me neither. They will be euthanized very humanely. A dog that ends up in a bad home would be much worse off, and many pit bull type dogs end up in the wrong hands. Also, a human who is attacked by one of these dogs suffers much more than these dogs will.


 I am leary of pitbulls too.  that is due to the numerous attacks, mostly by dogs that have been trained by their drug dealing owners.  But killing dogs based solely on their type is ridiculous.  Euthanize the dangerous ones, the ones that have shown they are dangerous, not the others.



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On the bright side...... Christmas is coming! (Mod)

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They should sterilize them and allow them to find homes, not kill them. That would be the kindest way.

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Would sterilization take care of their natural aggressive tendencies? If so, go for it. If not.....

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This is a bad law.

You euthanize the bad ones, not the breed that some people train to be bad ones. I've known several very friendly pit bulls over the years.

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Doesn't bother me either.

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I know what to do_sometimes wrote:
sweet tooth wrote:
lilyofcourse wrote:

I'm sorry. This doesn't really bother me.

Maybe I'm an awful person for it and I'm sure I will be flamed for because of it.


 Me neither. They will be euthanized very humanely. A dog that ends up in a bad home would be much worse off, and many pit bull type dogs end up in the wrong hands. Also, a human who is attacked by one of these dogs suffers much more than these dogs will.


 I am leary of pitbulls too.  that is due to the numerous attacks, mostly by dogs that have been trained by their drug dealing owners.  But killing dogs based solely on their type is ridiculous.  Euthanize the dangerous ones, the ones that have shown they are dangerous, not the others.


 It isn't even about the breed, to me, really.

2000 dogs being cared for, are they in private shelters or government shelters? 

If government, that's a whole lot of tax dollars to care for the animals.

Don't get me wrong, I don't think animals should be killed willy-nilly. 

But that can be a real drain on resources. 

Money that could be better spent some where else. 



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On the bright side...... Christmas is coming! (Mod)

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karl271 wrote:

Would sterilization take care of their natural aggressive tendencies? If so, go for it. If not.....


The problem with pit bulls is that people have ruined some of them by breeding the more aggressive with the aggressive to make them fighters, and we don't know which ones those are.  They were once all sweet, loving dogs, and then, of course, stupid people got involved.  And sterilization might help in the aggressive ones, but the main purpose would be to lower the population without just killing them all.  



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On the bright side...... Christmas is coming! (Mod)

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And I REALLY don't like them forcing veterinarians to euthanize dogs. For an animal lover, that's akin to forcing doctors to do abortions. It's just wrong.

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The problem is, "pit" mixes are included in this law. The "pit"/lab mix with the big head and Labrador personality is going to be included. So are everyone mixed offspring of other bully breeds becuase they "resemble" a "pit bull".

The issue with the shelters putting these dogs down aside, the families within city boundaries have to now jump through hoops to meet criteria AND drum up considerable money to keep their family pets, you know that Lab/pitt mix that has been happily lounging around at the foot of their beds for 2-3 years.

You cannot cry "it's in thier genes" if it's a mutt, since the dog also has the genes of any other "safe" breed.

That is hypocritical.

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Aggressive dogs aren't bred they are raised. ANY breed can be aggressive.

That's like the notion that all chihuahuas are obnoxious aggressive barkers. It's just not true. Chihuahuas that are raised to be constantly picked up and coddled and treated like babies instead of dogs become that way.

The problem with this law is the fear mongering ignorance and the seed that plants in people's minds about so called "bad breeds ."

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We have three Chihuahuas and they are not the yippy kind at all, because from the time they were babies they were taught to not just bark cause they have a mouth! I would say No (their name) in a stern voice and point at them, and if they yipped (One would always test me ) I repeated NO in a sterner voice and keep pointing and they stopped. We can take them camping in a camp ground and people are amazed they do not bark. Now if there are deer taunting them along our fence line, all bets are off they become crazed little guard dogs LOL

about this thread. We also have a mix Boxer and American Terrier, Sara.  She is a gentle and loving girl who does think she is a Chihuahua all 45 pounds of her

and American Terrier is a breed that is also considered a version of a Pit Bull and the Boxer is also a *Bully* breed.  She is no more a threat to anyone other than squishing them as she tries to sit on your lap.  She rides our MC's with us as do our other three.  She is part of our family.

See above mentioned deer, these were in hay field in across from my house, some were in our hayfield but further away, these does were just munching and watching me intently as I left my house this morning for work.

Spoiler
Spoiler
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and this is Sara

Spoiler

 

Spoiler

 

camping

 

Spoiler

 

She was watching my husband outside doing something

Spoiler

 

Spoiler

 

Liam and Sara watching his tummy time

Spoiler

 

this law is not fair to those pets who are not a threat. 

 



-- Edited by Riding on Friday 30th of September 2016 12:42:36 PM

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VetteGirl wrote:

Aggressive dogs aren't bred they are raised. ANY breed can be aggressive.

That's like the notion that all chihuahuas are obnoxious aggressive barkers. It's just not true. Chihuahuas that are raised to be constantly picked up and coddled and treated like babies instead of dogs become that way.

The problem with this law is the fear mongering ignorance and the seed that plants in people's minds about so called "bad breeds ."


 The only dog I have EVER been bitten by was a chihuahua.  Twice.  With no provocation. 



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On the bright side...... Christmas is coming! (Mod)

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And Vette, I cannot agree that dogs cannot be bred to be aggressive. Dogs are bred all the time to "better" breed lines. As are horses, and cows, and other animals.

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I had a lab pup that attacked me and nipped at my ankles constantly. It went down.

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Riding wrote:

We have three Chihuahuas and they are not the yippy kind at all, because from the time they were babies they were taught to not just bark cause they have a mouth! I would say No (their name) in a stern voice and point at them, and if they yipped (One would always test me ) I repeated NO in a sterner voice and keep pointing and they stopped. We can take them camping in a camp ground and people are amazed they do not bark. Now if there are deer taunting them along our fence line, all bets are off they become crazed little guard dogs LOL

about this thread. We also have a mix Boxer and American Terrier, Sara.  She is a gentle and loving girl who does think she is a Chihuahua all 45 pounds of her

and American Terrier is a breed that is also considered a version of a Pit Bull and the Boxer is also a *Bully* breed.  She is no more a threat to anyone other than squishing them as she tries to sit on your lap.  She rides our MC's with us as do our other three.  She is part of our family.

See above mentioned deer, these were in hay field in across from my house, some were in our hayfield but further away, these does were just munching and watching me intently as I left my house this morning for work.

Spoiler
Spoiler
Spoiler

 

and this is Sara

Spoiler

 

Spoiler

 

camping

 

Spoiler

 

She was watching my husband outside doing something

Spoiler

 

Spoiler

 

Liam and Sara watching his tummy time

Spoiler

 

this law is not fair to those pets who are not a threat. 

 



-- Edited by Riding on Friday 30th of September 2016 12:42:36 PM


Sara looks like a sweetie pie!smile

Great pictures, Riding!

Our Jupiter would be in trouble, too, if a law like this ever passed down here.  She is half Am-Staff and half Whippet mix, so she would be considered a bully breed.

She's never met a person that she didn't like.

Pitbulls rank just behind the Lab, in temperament testing.

That makes them #2 in being good natured and stable.

Back in the day, they were known as "America's Dog", and "The Nanny Dog", due to their sweet and loyal nature.

How the perception of them went so wrong, is very sad.cry

 



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I got chased by one. It had broke of it's leash. You know the chain type that are like razor blades poking them? The thing was out of control. Animal control could barely control it.

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It is heartbreaking that this has gotten so out of control that we are euthanizing an entire breed. The two pit bulls that lived with me were wonderful dogs. The older one was a perfectly behaved lady. The younger one wasn't trained yet but was super sweet.

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Lexxy wrote:

It is heartbreaking that this has gotten so out of control that we are euthanizing an entire breed. The two pit bulls that lived with me were wonderful dogs. The older one was a perfectly behaved lady. The younger one wasn't trained yet but was super sweet.


 Some of them are wonderful forever.  Some are wonderful until they not.  Some are the ones that give the breed the bad name.  The fear comes from not knowing which they are.



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Lawyerlady wrote:
Lexxy wrote:

It is heartbreaking that this has gotten so out of control that we are euthanizing an entire breed. The two pit bulls that lived with me were wonderful dogs. The older one was a perfectly behaved lady. The younger one wasn't trained yet but was super sweet.


 Some of them are wonderful forever.  Some are wonderful until they not.  Some are the ones that give the breed the bad name.  The fear comes from not knowing which they are.


 Yeah but you could say that about any dog on the planet. I've read news stories where a husky or a pomeranian mauled a young baby. I've been bit by a golden retriever and a weiner dog. When I used to train dogs I specialized in aggressive behaviors and you wouldn't believe some of the "nicer" breeds that were just scary, angry dogs. 



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VetteGirl wrote:
Lawyerlady wrote:
Lexxy wrote:

It is heartbreaking that this has gotten so out of control that we are euthanizing an entire breed. The two pit bulls that lived with me were wonderful dogs. The older one was a perfectly behaved lady. The younger one wasn't trained yet but was super sweet.


 Some of them are wonderful forever.  Some are wonderful until they not.  Some are the ones that give the breed the bad name.  The fear comes from not knowing which they are.


 Yeah but you could say that about any dog on the planet. I've read news stories where a husky or a pomeranian mauled a young baby. I've been bit by a golden retriever and a weiner dog. When I used to train dogs I specialized in aggressive behaviors and you wouldn't believe some of the "nicer" breeds that were just scary, angry dogs. 


C'mon Vette, you know as well as anyone that pit attacks account for an inordinate amount of the attacks.   You cannot ignore the numbers, you just can't.  

 

Out of 360 dog attack deaths from 2000-2015, 232 were caused by pit bulls.

 

Dog Breed Deaths % of Total

Pit bull 232 64.4%

Rottweiler 41 11.4%

German shepherd 13 3.6%

Mastiff/Bullmastiff† 12 3.3%

Husky 12 3.3%

Mixed breed 11 3.1%

American bulldog 11 3.1%

Unknown 10 2.8%

Combination‡ 6 and less 5.0%+

 

And the anomaly of a golden retriever or a poodle, or a Pomeranian being in an attack is so rare it doesn't even get it's own section on the pie chart.  And those attacks are usually because of illness or a pack attack that includes the other, more aggressive dogs.  

I cannot take seriously the argument that a golden retriever is just as likely to attack as a pit bull.  That is just not true. 



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And further, I can attest and agree that other dogs will bite, but the reason those dogs don't get reported? Their bites don't kill. I've been bitten by the same chihuahua TWICE for no reason whatsoever. Once, I had just arrived, he ran out of the bedroom, bit my ankle and ran back into the bedroom. Then the owner tried to get me to become friends with the dog (I'd never not been his friend) and when I did as she asked and extended my hand in the most docile way, the damn dog bit me again. Each time it was annoying. But I was not seriously injured and if I wanted to, I could have kicked that damn dog across the room (I did not). A Pomeranian would be the same.

Now, I've met perfectly lovely chihuahuas, but because of that experience I will certainly never own one.

Had a pit bull run out of the bedroom and attacked me? I would have been seriously hurt, if not dead.



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I'm afraid of most dogs, to be honest. It takes me a long time to get to know someone else's dog before I'm comfortable with them. There were only a handful I actually "liked." One was a little silkie, the next door neighbor's doberman, and another had part pit bull in it. The dog that lives next door is one of those Alaskan Huskies and she seems okay, never barked at me or the boys and wags her tail (she's getting pretty old), but I won't go in her yard (they have an electric fence) when she's out.

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My father had a beautiful Great Pyranees when I was a kid. Heidi. She was the sweetest, most beautiful thing. Dad loved dogs would foster them and find them new homes. He then rescued a pit bull, and that was death of Heidi. The first time the pit got loose, he killed Heidi. Dad learned a valuable lesson that day. You can't rescue all dogs if you don't know what they have been through even when you have the best of intentions.

Didn't completely teach him, though. The next thing he brought home was a young, wounded raccoon he found. Even I knew that was a bad idea at 12. Seriously, like a kid with animals.

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So, I get people who have pit bulls they love being upset about this. And I am completely against the government requiring people to get rid of their pets, pay fines to have them, or euthanize them. And I'm pretty much against killing any dog indiscriminately.

But, I guess I wonder if people feel compelled to defend pits because they have/had one they love, and are in essence defending THAT dog by defending the breed? Because, I guess I just wonder why the breed itself is needed. They are not working dogs, and the people who defend them always say people are reckless for leaving any dog alone with children, so that "nanny" dog argument goes out the window. What is the NEED for the breed and why can't we reduce the number through sterilization? Can people not love another breed of dog if a pit was not available to adopt? And if so, why can that person only love pits?

I absolutely love my golden retriever, but we got her from the pound when we went looking for an Australian Sheppard because that's the dog breed I loved most. And I wouldn't trade having owned her for all the Australian Sheppards in the world.

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