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What Do You Think of Animal Care & Control? Facebook Article Sounds Off

11/20/2012

12 Comments

 
SEE THIS LINK FOR FULL ARTICLE ON FACEBOOK:

                              >>>LINK<<<

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NYC Animal Care & Control (or "ACC" to those of us in NY) is New York City's "pound." It operates in large part to "control" the homeless animal population in the city.

History:

In 1894, the ASPCA agreed to take charge of the "care and control" of NYC's homeless dogs and cats. To facilitate this, NY State passed a special law allowing mayors of major cities the power to designate an agency to deal with "lost, strayed or homeless animals."

In 1972, the ASPCA's then board member Gretchen Wyler sued the ASPCA for financial irregularities and cruelty to animals. The ASPCA settled with Wyler and, for the first time, sought financial aid from NYC. In 1976, Mayor of New York Abe Beame assigned the City's Department of Health (DOH) to administer the ASPCA and set the annual budget.

In 1994, the ASPCA formally resigned from performing care and control services claiming that operating a "high kill" shelter was tarnishing its reputation, and that the city's funding was inadequate.

Mayor Giuliani's office responded by creating the "Center for Animal Care and Control" (CACC), a 501(c)(3) entity, to assume responsibility for the City's homeless pet population. While ACC is technically a stand-alone nonprofit corporation, DOH controls every aspect of ACC's existence: drafting its by-laws, selecting its executive directors and directors, setting its budget, and imposing various requirements. Despite its nominally private status, the ACC is subject to FOIA, in part because it is a "volunteer organization on which a local government relies for the performance of an essential public service" and the City of New York (in the form of DOH) "exercises a great deal of control over its operations and financial affairs," including, but not limited to, the composition of the ACC's board of directors (see Van Ness v ACC, Index No. 103410/97 [Sup. Ct. NY Cty 1999]). (Also see Shelter Reform Action Committee for history.)

The Contract:

The DOH mandate is to safeguard the "public" (i.e., human) health.

The current contract between NYCACC and DOH is visible at: http://www.shelterreform.org/files/2010AugContract.pdf.

Per the contract, DOH has "the power and duty to administer Departmental programs relating to the impact of animals on public health," and ACC was created, in part, "for the public purpose of seizing animals deemed to be a threat to the public health, providing and operating facilities to shelter, hold, examine, test, treat, spay, neuter, place for adoption, assure humane care and disposition of and otherwise control animals which the [ACC] has seized or accepted for shelter" (2011 contract, p. 1).

Funding: DOH funds ACC. ACC will receive $35,793,710 for the five-year period from July 2010 to July 2015, or $7,158,742 per year.

Mayor's Alliance, Maddie's Fund, and New Hope:

Please see the FAQ for this information.

Current Staff:

ACC Board Members and Titles

Dr. Thomas Farley, Chairman (also the Commissioner of DOH)
Adrian Benepe, Director
John M. B. O'Connor, Director
David Colon, Director
Patrick Nolan, Director
Bruce Doniger, Treasurer
Jay Kuhlman, DVM, Secretary
Executive Team Members

Julie Bank, Executive Director ([email protected]; p: 212-442-2059; f: 212-442-2066)
Dr. Stephanie Janeczko, Director of Operations (resigned June 13, 2011)
Risa Weinstock, Director of Administration/General Counsel
Richard Gentles, Director of Development and Communications ([email protected])
The above individuals can also be reached by mail:

Animal Care & Control of NYC
11 Park Place, Suite 805
New York, NY 10007
Board Meetings:

ACC holds board meetings that are open to the public approximately twice per year, in January and June.

However, controversy ensued at the last meeting (June 21, 2011) concerning, among other things, the fact that ACC turned away members of the public.

Kill Statistics:
Dog and cat statistics according to ACC were as follows for the period from July 1, 2010 to June 30, 2011:

Total intakes: 32,396
Total adoptions ("includes animals transferred to New Hope partners"): 20,893
Total killed (this does not include "owner"-requested kills, kills for "illness," "injury," or "aggression"*): 8,271
Total returned to "owner": 1,495
*ACC notes that it "only performs Owner Requested Euthanasia to relieve the suffering of a pet when the pet's life has seriously deteriorated due to illness or injury and no other remedy is possible. Aggressive animals are also euthanized. Healthy, well tempered pets are not euthanized on demand."

Thus, there were 1,737 dogs and cats taken in who were unaccounted for in these statistics. Presumably these animals were surrendered by guardians who requested that they be killed, were "aggressive," or were ill or injured. It is unclear how ACC determines what kind of illness or injury should result in a death sentence. It is also unclear how ACC determines animal temperament.

For "others" (i.e., animals other than dogs or cats), the figures are as follows:

Total intakes: 2,482
Total adoptions: 1,584
Total killed (this does not include "owner"-requested kills, kills for "illness," "injury," or "aggression"**): 576
Total returned to "owner": 46
**Thus, there were 276 animals other than dogs or cats taken in who were unaccounted for in these statistics. Presumably these animals were surrendered by guardians who requested that they be killed, were "aggressive," or were ill or injured. Again, It is unclear how ACC determines what kind of illness or injury should result in a death sentence, and it is unclear how ACC determines animal temperament.

Other Recent Controversy:

In addition to the controversy surrounding the lack of access to ACC's most recent board meeting, ACC has come under fire recently in several areas:

Allegations of neglect: Several months ago, WABC Eyewitness Investigation carried a story about the deplorable conditions in the Manhattan ACC.
Budget cuts: DOH cut ACC's budget by about $1.5 million dollars this year. The reporter for this article noted: "New York City is downright miserly when it comes to funding for Animal Care and Control. It allocates one of the lowest per capita rates in the nation for animal control—85 cents per resident. National animal control recommendations suggest 4 to 7 dollars per capita to provide appropriate animal services." (Id.) As a result of these budget cuts, ACC has terminated their lost-and-found system (so they will no longer help reunite guardians with their lost pets) and reduced their field operations, leaving strays and abandoned animals to fend for themselves in the city streets. According to Shelter Reform Action Committee (SRAC), these services were supposed to be "mandatory" under ACC's contract with the city. 
However, according to SRAC and Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, budget cuts are only the symptom of a deeper, structural problem with ACC: the fact that it is funded and administered by DOH. Stringer notes: "AC&C is controlled by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, an agency whose core focus is the welfare of people, not animals. This institutional limitation causes AC&C's budget to shrink every year. AC&C and its small, seven-member board lacks both the independence and fund-raising capabilities that would help it fulfill its important mission." (emphasis added) (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/scott-stringer/protecting-new-yorks-anim_b_928513.html) He and SRAC advocate a "top to bottom" restructuring of ACC so that it can fulfill its mission. Unsurprisingly, DOH responded unfavorably to Stringer's analysis and proposal (http://www.shelterreform.org/ACCvsCPConservancy.html).
ACC's killing (AKA "euthanasia") policies: As noted above, ACC excludes several categories of animals from its kill tally. While this makes ACC's kill rate look less onerous, what it means is that many animals' deaths are completely invisible to the public. Recently, the Examiner shed light on another excluded category--near full term animals. The story concerned the aborting of eight near full term puppies during a spay operation. The puppies were apparently removed from the mother alive, and then killed. The reporter notes:"Everyone needs to understand this: aborting puppies this late in Ginger's pregnancy means that each of these eight puppies was old enough to survive on its own. That means the ACC cut Ginger open, took out each of the eight squirming puppies, one by one, and gave each puppy the same injection that they use to kill grown dogs every other day of the year. Those are eight lives who would have had rescue groups fighting to take them. Instead, they are eight forgotten bodies that the ACC will not include in its daily tally of killed dogs." (emphasis in original)
Volunteer and employee policies: ACC's volunteer policies are also controversial. ACC has come under fire recently for terminating volunteers who express disagreement with the organization. Additionally, SRAC notes that the volunteer program is poorly run and does little either ensure that volunteers will be prepared and effective. Nor does ACC's treatment of employees appear much better.
What's Next? Proposed Shelter Reform Legislation:

The COMPANION ANIMAL ACCESS AND RESCUE BILL (CAARA) is proposed legislation which would, if passed, allow "qualified" rescue groups to pull animals from a shelter (such as the ACC). Equally important, CAARA would also set out basic minimum standards of care for shelter animals. CAARA was introduced in the NY Senate in May, 2011, by Assemblyperson Micah Kellner under bill # A7312-2011. You can read the text of the bill here: http://m.nysenate.gov/legislation/bill/A7312-2011.
As noted above, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer has called for ACC to be decoupled from the administrative umbrella of DOH, and restructured "into a quasi-independent, not-for-profit with a large, diverse board that can bring both new resources and new expertise to the city's animal welfare system."
12 Comments

Raffle Benefit Raises Thousands!

11/20/2012

2 Comments

 
Just to update everyone, the event went very well and we raised over $2,000!


Thanks to everyone for coming!
2 Comments

Raffle Benefit for K9 Sandy Victims!

11/15/2012

5 Comments

 
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Everyone come down to 30 Gansevoort Street this Sunday to take part in a raffle to benefit K9 victims of Hurricane Sandy in NYC.


Here is the invite:
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5 Comments

Doggie Seatbelts

9/5/2012

7 Comments

 
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See Article
Bergan Auto Harness
Bergan
We buckle up. Why shouldn't our best friends? Minimize driving distractions and increase protection for both you and your dog. Bergan's Auto Harnesses meet V9DT B2009.1. Pet Safety Durability Test (see www.v9dt.com). The minimum durability thresholds are designed to ensure confidence that a harness will withstand forces generated from sudden stops while minimizing distractions from traveling pets. The complete harness system comes equipped with an adjustable safety tether that has two high-grade aluminum carabiners. These carabiners are climbing-grade and have been tested for 2,500 lbs. for the small size and 5,000 lbs. for the large. The Bergan Auto Harness is durable but also lightweight and comfortable for the dog, and easy to use!

Note: Any tethered car harness can be released if the dog accidentally steps on the release button. For ultimate safety, we recommend using the Angel Guard Seat Belt Release Cover to prevent this from happening.

Comes in four fully adjustable sizes. 
 
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FDA Approves Neutering by Injection!

7/27/2012

22 Comments

 
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What a wonderful, phenomenal, game-changer. See below! Neutering by injection costs $12!


"FDA approves shot to neuter puppies WASHINGTON (AP) -- Veterinarians now can offer an alternative to surgery to neuter puppies.

Called Neutersol, it's a shot administered directly into the testicles of puppies at the right age for neutering. The ingredients -- the amino acid l-arginine and a zinc salt -- cause the testicles and prostate to atrophy.


The alternative, surgically removing the testicles, guarantees sterility. In a study of 224 dogs, Neutersol did almost as well: Semen analysis showed only one sterilization failure, said Dr. Melanie Burson of the Food and Drug Administration.


The FDA approved Neutersol in March, but did not announce the approval until Monday.


A type of chemical castration already is available for humans. Sex offenders often are sentenced to regular injections of hormones that deplete testosterone. But that's not permanent sterilization.


The new method for dogs is permanent, but some testosterone production continues because it's not hormonally driven, Burson said. So unlike surgical castration, Neutersol may not eliminate unwanted male behaviors such as roaming, marking and aggression, the FDA warned.


Pet overpopulation is a serious problem, and scientists have struggled to find ways to make animals infertile. Some were dangerous either for the animal or for the veterinarian administering them, said Bruce Addison, founder of Addison Biological Laboratory of Columbia, Missouri, which is selling Neutersol.


For some reason, Neutersol ingredients are toxic to cells when injected directly into the testicles but not other parts of the body, Addison said.


It is crucial for vets to administer the shot properly, and for owners to care for the puppy during the following week to avoid ulceration and infection of the injection site, the FDA said.


Scientists now are studying whether Neutersol can safely sterilize older dogs and cats, Addison said."

>FULL ARTICLE<
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22 Comments

A Puppy Graduation Video From 2011

6/26/2012

8 Comments

 

Watch our puppy graduation video from a 2011 class  below or at this LINK:


If your video does not display correctly >CLICK HERE<

Puppy Graduation from Zaheer Cassim on Vimeo.

8 Comments

Is It OK To Change Your Dog's Name?

5/17/2012

23 Comments

 
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It happens to rescue dogs all the time - and they are usually fine it. I would rather a person changed their dog's name than call them MORE than 1 name! Here's another OK example:

Article from: The Bark Magazine
By: Karen B. London

Tim Tebow’s Dog has a New Name Bronco has become Bronx Karen B. London, PhD | May 16, 2012 Tim Tebow and his dog, Bronx Football player Tim Tebow ‘s every action seems to attract attention, so it’s no surprise that when he changed his Rhodesian Ridgeback’s name recently, it made the news. The name Bronco, which was such a great name when he played for the Denver Broncos, became awkward once they traded him to the New York Jets.

Many sportswriters are discussing how cruel it was to make this name change and claiming that the dog will suffer terribly as a result. Most dog professionals, myself included, think that changing a dog’s name is fine, even if the new name is nothing like the old one.

Bronco to Bronx is a minor change, which makes me suspect that Tebow made a real effort to change his dog’s name to something similar. Most people do think that it’s a big deal for a dog, so this gesture may have been prompted by a thoughtful attempt to minimize any issues for his dog.

Love him or hate him, Tebow’s big news is a sign of many things: his status as a cultural icon, the pattern of naming our dogs after what’s important to us, and the ever-increasing importance of dogs in our culture.


LINK

23 Comments

How to Choose a Dog Breed (Book Reco)

5/8/2012

66 Comments

 
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Link to book website

Breedfreak – The Dog Breed Guide for Normal People with Real Lives, Families, Houses, and Budgets is  a complete guide to picking a dog breed.  While other breed atlases and breed organizations have a financial interest in making sure you think their breed is flawless, we are here to lift the veil and give you the dog breed secrets that all vets, behaviorists, and dog trainers know but are afraid to tell you.

There are no “bad” breeds but there are breeds that will make your life a nightmare if you do not choose wisely.

Each breed entry includes a thorough, extremely biased, and remarkably opinionated breed description; an estimate of what you can expect to spend on your dog (hint: it is more than you think); and a whopping dose of humor to keep you interested. Here is a list of breeds that are included in the book.

In addition to the breed entries there are several background chapters with excruciatingly important information you need to know about selecting a breed including:

  • The basics of picking a dog breed
  • The truth about owning a “tough guy” dog
  • Information about mixed breed dogs that every prospective dog owner should know
  • A guide to the most important congenital health issues in pure bred dogs
  • The truth about health certification including hip dysplasia screening (the truth is out folks)
  • What is REALLY costs to own a dog
  • Which breed thinks like this: “Here comes a little kid, should I bite him in the face or should I let him live a scar free life? Wait, I cannot stop barking. Why am I barking. I think I just bit him. Wait, I just peed. Dammit. I keep peeing all over. Duh.”
This book is not for everyone and comes with a PG-13 rating. If you are OK with with words and phrases like turd and crack baby; and you like your dog breed descriptions with a small dose of crass and a side of humor, you should order your copy today. If you listen to what we have to say  you will save THOUSANDS of dollars in headaches, destroyed furniture, and maybe even a failed marriage. Yup. It’s that good. Buy it today.

66 Comments

How to fix submissive urination!

3/30/2012

36 Comments

 
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Many people use a classic approach to fix and train a dog's behavior. I ascribe to some classic methods as well. When it comes to submissive urination, meaning when your puppy simply cannot help peeing when you walk in the door, classic approaches can be the key. Sometimes however, you need a new approach.

A classic approach says: ignore the dog COMPLETELY when leaving and entering. NO eye contact, NO petting, and NO talking. This is also helpful to prevent puppies from peeing at the door when they grow up. If your puppy started peeing out of excitement when they see you and you were the culprit - you made your own bed.


Other than ignoring your dog, some tips involve managing the problem such as making sure they have gone to the bathroom recently and to only say hello to your dog on an easy to clean surface. Diapers or Belly Bands can contain messes. But they don't fix them.

Sometimes the dog grows out of it at a year old, if you stop getting them too worked up by the door. If it doesn't go away, try this:

Keep some treats by the door and feed you dog treats for sitting nicely at the door.
If your dog doesn't pee, then you can move to the next step - lean over your dog a little bit (introduce the idea that they can be submissive very slowly).

Eventually, you should be able to pet your dog, if only a little. If they pee - go back a few steps and move slower towards the goal.

Another tip: sometimes the dog still gets excited by sitting. If so, try teaching your dog to do a down instead. You can also try keeping your dog crated when you arrive and only letting them out after a few minutes after your arrival. Good luck!
36 Comments

Remember the Dingo? Australia sees them anew

3/13/2012

2 Comments

 
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GROWING CONCERN More dingo attacks have been reported in recent years.

By JAMES GORMAN and CHRISTINE KENNEALLY Published: March 5, 2012

NYT Article:

Thirty-two years ago, 9-week old Azaria Chamberlain disappeared from a campsite in the Australian outback, and her mother’s claim that a dingo took the child caused a storm of public outrage and disbelief.

The saga reached far beyond
Australia when it inspired “Cry in the Dark,” a 1988 movie starring Meryl Streep. And as popular culture transmuted tragedy into morbid comedy, a misquote from the movie, “A dingo ate my baby!,” caught on, popping up in “Seinfeld,” “The Simpsons” and other shows.

The reason the whole story became so well known, of course, was that in reality it has remained unclear whether the dingo did it. And over the ensuing decades, the human drama and the figure of the dingo, Australia’s enigmatic wild dog, have become entangled. Like the wolf in America, the dingo is a symbol that may mean one thing to hunters or sheep ranchers and another to scientists and nature lovers.

Now the Chamberlain case, and dingoes themselves, are back in the spotlight. On Feb. 24, testimony ended in the fourth coroner’s inquest on Azaria’s death, and the office of the Northern Territory coroner, which held the inquest, said a ruling would be handed down within the next two months. This time, the Chamberlain family hopes that the coroner will conclude, once and for all, that a dingo killed Azaria.

Lindy Chamberlain, Azaria’s mother, has struggled for years to get such a ruling. She was originally convicted of killing her child and sent to prison. She was released after three years and acquitted only after Azaria’s jacket was found near a dingo den.

When Azaria disappeared, dingoes were thought to be shy of people, and with no known attacks on humans, it was hard to believe one had been aggressive enough to come into a campground and take a baby from a tent.

But in the past decade or so, there have been a number of reported attacks, some disputed, and one unarguable fatality. Adrian Peace, an honorary associate professor of anthropology at the University of Queensland, who has studied the change in attitude toward dingoes, said, “The demonization of Mrs. Chamberlain has been replaced by the demonization of the dingo.”

Much of the change, Dr. Peace says, comes from public encounters with dingoes on Fraser Island, a nature reserve visited by hundreds of thousands of tourists yearly. Starting in the ’90s, minor human-dingo incidents started worrying managers of the reserve, and in 2001 two dingoes killed a 9-year-old boy, Clinton Gage, and injured his brother. “That was really the game-changer,” Dr. Peace said. There were calls for the extermination of dingoes on the island, which did not happen, but rangers kill any dingoes believed to pose a danger.

Dingoes are generally classified as a subspecies of wolf, Canis lupus dingo, although in the past they have been classified as a subspecies of dog and as a separate species. Physically, they resemble a generic, medium-size dog, about 40 pounds, usually tan-colored, with pricked ears and a bushy tail.

They do not have some of the physical signs of domestication found in many dog breeds, like barking as adults. They breed once a year, like wolves, and when undisturbed they have a stable pack structure topped by one male-female pair, the only ones in the pack that reproduce.

Bradley Smith, a research associate in public health at Flinders University in Adelaide who has studied dingoes, said by e-mail that experimental tests put dingoes closer to wolves in the kind of intelligence they display. “Both dingoes and wolves, being highly effective predators, are great at problem solving, working well in groups, and independent problem solving,” he said.

But they also understand humans in a way that wolves do not. They get it when a person points at something, while wolves are clueless or supremely uninterested. Dingoes are not as good as dogs, however, at following a human’s gaze.


Dingoes, Dr. Smith wrote, “seem to be a prime example of one of the first types of ‘dogs’. Not domestic dogs as we know them now, but some form of early dog that made it easier for the human-canid relationship to develop. You could almost say dingoes are frozen in time — as they have made a very good home in Australia and have been isolated for many thousands of years.”
 

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Dingoes came to Australia 3,500 to 5,000 years ago, probably with Asian seafarers, and already at least partly domesticated. At the time, people had been on Australia for almost 50,000 years, without dogs. The dingo quickly became an essential part of Aboriginal life and stories.

Deborah Rose, a professor at Macquarie University in Sydney who has done research with Aboriginal peoples and is the author of “Dingo Makes Us Human,” said the dingoes were a deep part of Aboriginal life. “The dingoes had names, they had kinship classifications, which makes them so unlike all other animals in Australia,” she said. “They had a place at the campfire.” Or even closer. The phrase “three-dog night” has been attributed to indigenous Australians as a way of describing how cold it was. However, it does not seem that Aborigines bred dingoes selectively.

Europeans, who brought sheep with them, did not share the Aboriginal affection for dingoes. They killed them as pests, and built a 3,300-mile fence to keep them out of southeastern Australia. The result is a confusion in even the legal status of dingoes. In some parts of Australia dingoes are pests, but in other parts they are protected. Their status can change with shifts in public opinion.

For instance, Ernest Healy, a founder of the National Dingo Preservation and Recovery Program, said that in the state of Victoria in 2009, the legal status of the dingo changed overnight. “It had been legally categorized as an introduced pest species with pigs, feral dogs, foxes, and it is now endangered wildlife,” he said.

In the United States something similar happens with wolves. They may be endangered one day and hunted the next. Wisconsin, for instance, is now considering a wolf hunting season.

Whatever the outcome of the coroner’s inquest, and even as new science shows the ecological importance of dingoes, their populations are under some kind of pressure all over Australia.

Arian D. Wallach, at James Cook University in Queensland, said research has shown that dingoes, as top predators, are essential to preventing “breakouts of opportunistic species” like rabbits and feral cats, and should be left alone as much as possible.

But even protected populations are controlled, she said, by shooting, trapping, poisoning — what Dr. Wallach calls “persecution.” Killing adults, she says, destroys pack structure, and means the young are more likely to kill livestock or cause other problems. They are, she said, like “hooligans,” whereas in a traditional pack, “they’ll have jobs to do; they won’t be unemployed.”

The problem, Dr. Wallach said, is that from sheep country to Fraser Island to national parks, “every single population of dingoes that I know of in Australia is persecuted.”


See Full NYT Article

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"Jessica is great. Bindi's behavior has improved ten-fold in just a day. It's amazing."

- 'Bindi Rose' & Edwin
"Where do I even start?! Jessica and Dapper Dog Training has been a huge help in Oski's development and training. Puppy class: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. "
                                                                              - 'Oski' & Amy           
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Photos from simonov, DaMongMan, dogrando, Team Erin Sucks