Sign our petition!

We request that ineffective dogcatching at UNMC be stopped, and that a strategy incorporating desexing and tactics to minimise human-dog interactions be adopted, as per the report provided below.

Summary

•    Research has shown that dog catching is not controlling the campus dog population.
•    There are currently at least three litters of 5-8 puppies each on campus.
•    Several of the breeding females have successfully evaded multiple attempts at catching by the UNMC dogcatchers.
•    Dogs are getting through the campus boundaries on a regular basis.
•    There continue to be numerous dogs at the SA cafeteria and elsewhere, begging for food scraps and digging though rubbish bins.

Recommendations

•    The population management strategy should be shifted to one of spaying, which will also ameliorate many problematic human-dog interactions.
•    Boundary maintenance should continue being practiced, but with the understanding that it will not be completely successful at preventing dogs from entering the campus.
•    The balcony at the SA cafeteria should be fenced/gated, and a safe space provided for students to deposit scraps to be fed to the dogs away from the eating areas.

Our first spaying!

We are very proud to say that we have just completed our first spaying of a stray dog from the TTS/UNMC community, thus launching our TNR (trap-neuter-release) programme!

Blicky!

Blicky!

‘Blicky’, who recently gave birth to a litter of 7 puppies (originally 9, but 2 died shortly after their birth) who have been looked after and adopted out by an amazing group of UNMC students (more on this soon), was spayed this Wednesday, ensuring that she doesn’t contribute any further to the stray dog population in TTS/UNMC, and in Malaysia more generally. She has been returned to her existing territory within TTS (Edusquare) , and is being monitored to ensure that her healing process continues to go smoothly. She was also vaccinated against canine distemper and canine parvo virus, to ensure that she remains healthy and continues occupying her territory and thus prevents more non-spayed dogs from moving in and breeding. We have her marked with a collar/tag to indicate that she has been spayed, although we hope to move to ear-notching as a more permanent marker in future operations.

Her ‘boyfriend’, named ‘Puppy’ by the students in the area Blicky and he occupy, is very happy to have her back, even though we have blocked his ability to become a father to any more of her puppies! He was very upset when we took her to the vet. Blicky and Puppy are looked after and fed by the kind boss of the Edusquare guard team, and in return, they act as guard dogs for Edusquare community.

This spaying operation was made possible by the generous donations made by a number of UNMC staff – THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOUR SUPPORT! We currently have enough funding pledged for at least 6 more spaying operations, but we need more to make a real difference. If you would like to pledge money towards our TNR programme, please let us know – drop us a comment, or email us at unmcaw(at)gmail.com – and please spread the word about and support for us. We are currently taking pledges (promises of funding), and collecting money gradually/as we use it for operations, until we get a bank account sorted out for the group.

Related:

Blicky (Spay Profile)

Blicky’s Babies

Feeding Stray Dogs Cheaply and Well

Did you know that you can make food for stray dogs pretty cheaply, rather than spending money on supermarket dogfood that’s not really worth the price?

670px-Prepare-Home-Cooked-Food-for-Your-Dog-Step-2

All you need to know is a few basics – dogs should eat a diet very similar to a balanced human diet – roughly 40% protein, 30% grain, and 30% vegetables. You should always make sure they get some fats from either the protein or from added oil as well, but otherwise, that’s pretty much it. If it was your own dog, you would probably be a bit more careful about it, but remember these are stray dogs – they are usually scavenging for garbage, so this is much, much healthier for them, and cheaper than buying dog food. And it’s easy!

The links below give you some more information, but a basic ‘recipe’ would be the following:

Homemade Dog Food ‘Recipe’

  • 3 cups (uncooked) of the cheapest rice you can buy – I got 10kg for RM18!
  • 400 grams of some kind of protein source (anything, really, the cheapest meat you can find – I bought dry cat food because it is about 1/3 pure protein and is a lot cheaper than dog kibble, and it also means I don’t have to cook the meat which you would otherwise need to do)
  • Vege scraps and leftovers – a couple of cups worth.

Cook the vegetables and rice however you normally cook them, I’d just chuck the chopped up veges into the rice cooker with the rice, or you can microwave them (and also cook the meat if it’s raw), then mix it all together. Stir in an egg if you like. Feed the dog! Easy, and much cheaper than buying dog food.

More Information:

http://www.wikihow.com/Prepare-Home-Cooked-Food-for-Your-Dog

http://www.whole-dog-journal.com/issues/15_7/features/Home-Prepared-Dog-Food-Nutritional-Information_20568-1.html

http://pets.webmd.com/dogs/guide/homemade-dog-food

Outcome of emails to UNMC Mangement re: dogcatching

An update on the outcomes of the emails Sengtat and I sent to UNMC management:

  • Perhaps most importantly, we secured an agreement that any dogs spayed and clearly marked as spayed by this group, will be relocated to TTS if they are caught by dogcatchers on campus. So we can start establishing a population of spayed dogs.
  • On this note, campus boundaries are being secured further with key-card gates at TTS etc. Students must not enable dogs to get through these access points or over fences. I really doubt any of you are doing this anyway, but just to pass this on. I personally don’t think the dogs need any help getting in, the fences aren’t that high, and dogs, especially stray ones, can climb.
  • The UNMC dogcatchers being used are NOT from the Kajang Council, and UNMC are well aware of the bad reputation of MPKJ. They have been trained to catch dogs humanely#, and dogs are being relocated “somewhere appropriate”* while puppies are being taken to shelters as they have a higher chance of adoption.

* I don’t know where this is, or what this means. I personally have trouble imagining anywhere “appropriate” for both humans or dogs, given that it won’t be a shelter as they’re already overcrowded.

# This doesn’t, of course, mean that they shouldn’t be monitored. If you see any UNMC dogcatchers behaving in a manner you think is of concern, please take photos or video and report it to the group.

“University of Nottingham homeless pets vet clinic to continue http://www.nottinghampost.com/University-Nottingham-homeless-pets-vet-clinic/story-20434643-detail/story.html …”

Tweet from Paul Greatrix, Registrar at the University of Nottingham UK Campus.

 

University of Nottingham homeless pets vet clinic to continue

By Nottingham Post  |  Posted: January 13, 2014

University of Nottingham homeless pets vet clinic to continue
 Comments (0)A SERVICE which has helped to treat homeless people’s pets has been hailed a success.

The University of Nottingham established its student-led veterinary clinic with the Big Issue last January.

The clinic, which has treated around 60 pets at its monthly practices, is now looking to continue for another two years.

Jenny Stavisky, a research fellow in the university’s School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, said: “I chatted with some local homelessness organisations who agreed there was a need and we decided the clinic might offer a good way to allow people to access veterinary care, as well as providing a great learning opportunity for our students.”

The clinic initially received support from Dogs Trust and the Vet School, before obtaining £10,000 from the university’s Cascade Fund.

Read more: http://www.nottinghampost.com/University-Nottingham-homeless-pets-vet-clinic/story-20434643-detail/story.html#ixzz2qGQ4d95x

Email to UNMC management re: dogcatching #1

Please note that I will not be posting the responses from management (if any are forthcoming) in full due to privacy concerns (it isn’t ethical to post emails from other people unless they have expressly made them public). I will, however, post key pieces of information from any such communications.

*  *  *  *  *

Tessa Houghton

To: HO SENG TAT

Cc: Estate Office, SANDY LOKE LAI MOOI, CHRISTINE ENNEW

Re: Stray dogs Issue

Dear all,

I’d just like to add a few issues of note to this. I was planning to write this email re: the planned desexing programme anyway, but seeing as the group has already sent the previous email I am writing this now.

The spaying programme we are planning will be funded by donations, and will be applied to dogs both on campus and in TTS, because they are all the same ‘territory’. (We already have, as of this morning, donations to the value of 6 and a half fully funded RM300 operations, and this is purely from me personally approaching colleagues over the last 4 days to ask for ‘seed donations’). Most of our students live in TTS and are directly affected by the stray dog population there, not just on campus. Spayed dogs will be identified either by ear notching or collars. This method is proven, over, and over, to be the best method of dealing with stray dog populations in developing countries, both in terms of reducing dog numbers and reducing aggression related incidents. See the links below for more detail, but I have posted a few bits of information below as well:

Why don’t euthanasia programmes work in the developing world?

Studies by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Animal Welfare Board of India (Ministry of Environment & Forests) show that dog population control measures which work in developed countries are unsuccessful in third world developing countries, since urban conditions are very different. The urban environment here encourages breeding of stray dogs, so no matter how many dogs were killed, they were quickly replaced by more.

If stray dog population control is the issue, wouldn’t it make more sense to kill the dogs or take them away?

Removal or killing of stray dogs seems to be the most obvious method of controlling the population, but it has actually proved to be completely useless. This is because even when large numbers of dogs are killed, the conditions that sustain dog populations remain unchanged. Dogs are territorial and each one lives in its own specific area. When they are removed, the following things happen:

  • The food source – garbage – is still available in abundance, so dogs from neighbouring areas enter the vacant territories.
  • Pups born and growing up in the surrounding areas also move in to occupy these vacant niches.
  • The few dogs who escape capture and remain behind attack these newcomers, leading to frequent and prolonged dog-fights.
  • Since they are not sterilised, all the dogs who escape capture continue to mate, leading to more fighting.
  • In the course of fights, dogs often accidentally redirect their aggression towards people passing by, so many humans get bitten.
  • Females with pups become aggressive and often attack pedestrians who come too close to their litter.
  • They breed at a very high rate (two litters of pups a year). It has been estimated that two dogs can multiply to over 300 in three years.

Since dogs who are removed are quickly replaced, the population does not decrease at all. The main factors leading to dog aggression – migration and mating – continue to exist, so the nuisance factor remains.

Since removal of dogs actually increases dog-related problems, the effective solution is to sterilise the dogs, and put them back in their own areas.

Can’t some of the dogs be released in another place?

Since they would be entering the territory of other dogs, there would be a lot of fighting in the area in which they are released, and in the process more humans would get bitten. Their original territories would also be left vacant, so new dogs would enter… and the stray dog problem would go on forever.”

Links to research:

https://unmcaw.wordpress.com/stray-dogs-in-the-developing-world/

If dogs are being removed indiscriminately, then this will directly undo any of the good achieved by the spaying programme, which is, in my opinion, unacceptable, if the larger wellbeing of the student body is what is in question. This is before we even start considering the corporate responsibility issues involved with ‘relocating’ strays from this area into a new area, which actually creates a dangerously volatile situation to do with territory disputes – and is, in effect, highly inhumane in terms of the stress it places on the ‘new dogs’ (the relocated ones). And I know efforts have been made to secure the campus, but it is my belief that there is no way to effectively close the campus off short of deer fences, and the gates being manned by people who are paid well enough to actually care about keeping the dogs out. The fences in place could have easily been scaled by the dog I had while growing up, and she wasn’t even of a ‘jumping’ breed.

I thoroughly agree that any aggressive dogs should be dealt with, and cannot remain on campus. As I have said, IMO they either need to be put down, or, at the very least, desexed before being relocated so as to mitigate against future aggression. I still don’t agree with the relocation for reasons previously outlined, but I appreciate the attempt to avoid euthanasia, even though I think it is misguided in this instance.

My request is this: Any dogs clearly identified as spayed (ear-notched or collared) should:

  1. Not be removed from campus.
  2. Failing this, they should be relocated to TTS so the students can at least have the benefits accruing from having a spayed dog population around their homes, rather than these dogs being removed and new, unfixed dogs moving in.

Tessa

*  *  *  *  *

HO SENG TAT

To: Estate Office

Cc: TESSA HOUGHTON, SANDY LOKE LAI MOOI

Subject: Stray dogs Issue

Hi Estate Office,

I have been informed that Estate office have ordered to get a dog catcher on campus, and catch and relocate stray dogs on campus. While we have a group of students on the Facebook and planning future spaying programs for stray dogs on campus. The reason is simple, catching dog and relocating dog is not a permanent and efficient solution. By that I understand there are a group of dogs acting aggressive on campus and that will be a potential threat to the campus. It is totally okay to handle dog issue with humane and proper way, but we would like to know what is the plan from the Estate Office to tackle the dog issue. Keep on catch them to somewhere else? We are not sure what estate office is doing. Therefore, we would want a proper answer to monitor and protect animals.

My concern is simple. Who are the dog catcher coming from? Are they professional in handling stray dogs? If not, are they handle dogs without damaging dogs? Where are the dogs will be relocated? Also, The cost of relocating the dogs may be better to de-sex dogs on campus and That will reduce dog aggressiveness and lower dog population. Any unclear regarding this email, feel free to visit the facebook group as we have been planning how to tackle the dog issue in an efficient and ethical way. https://www.facebook.com/groups/UNMCAnimalWelfare/

Please do response. Our group wants transparency regarding how campus management dealing with dog issues.

Sincerely,

Sengtat.

Hello world!

This site has been created as a companion to the UNMC Animal Welfare Group on Facebook.

I’m pleased to say that the fundraising figure shown to the right is real – we already have RM1200 pledged towards our spaying initiative! We’ll post more information on this soon – including letting you know how you can make donations as well.

In the meantime, why not check out the site?