REPORT ROBERT SMITH SPAY NEUTER AND RETURN
web site European Law
By ROBERT SMITH
This Report was written by Robert Smith
and updated in April 2005.
NEUTER & RETURN STRAY DOG
"HOW
TO SOLVE ROMANIAN STREET DOG PROBLEM
EFFECTIVELY,
HUMANELY AND FOR EVER"
updated April 2005 scroll down for report please
Neuter &
Release plan for a town or muncipality with 4000 unsupervised
dogs.
This equates to a town
or area of 100.000 to 500.000 people depending on the density of
dogs, i.e. depending on human beings attitude to the
dogs
SOLUTION TO
ROMANIA'S STRAY DOG PROBLEM
HOW TO SOLVE ROMANIA’S STREET DOG
PROBLEM
- EFFECTIVELY, HUMANELY AND FOR EVER.
Contents:
1. Introduction. Why spend money on dogs ?
2. Stray dog statistics.
3. Rabies
4. Solutions - ‘Neuter and Return’
5. Policies which fail: (a) Killing (b) Incarceration
6. F.P.C.C’s work so far
7. School Education Project
8. F.P.C.C.’s methods
9. Projections for Neuter & Return in a typical municipality
with
60-80,000 people and 4000 stray dogs
10. Municipal ‘complaints fatigue’
11. The only answer: a Private Enterprise-Public Sector
Project
12. Dog Population Management Board
13. Local neutering clinics - at least one per municipality
14. Public Relations and networks of volunteers
15. How much will the project cost ?Answer: US$ 0.17 per resident
per year for 3 years.
16. Commercial sponsorship
17. Future use of clinics and future dog control
18. Licensing of dog breeders
19. Pitfalls.
20. Lobbying
21. Conclusion.
1. Introduction.
Street dogs cause road accidents and nuisance, wake residents at
night, disturb rubbish, frighten children and cause complaints to
municipalities. The sight of hungry, sick dogs foraging desperately
for food, or of their dead bodies squashed on Romania’s roads, is
distressing to visitors and residents alike and tarnishes Romania’s
image as an applicant to the European Union. Most of these
miserable strays are potentially loyal, affectionate companions,
pets and guard dogs. The problem is worse in Romania than in many
other countries because of the policies of the previous communist
regime and because many Romanians are animal lovers and
deliberately feed street dogs. The proliferation of rubbish also
supports the stray dog population.
FPCC’s purpose is to persuade central government and local
authorities to solve Romania’s stray dog problem effectively,
humanely and permanently.
“Each habitat has a specific
carrying capacity for each species. This specific carrying capacity
depends on the availability….of resources (shelter, food, water).
The density of a population of higher vertebrates (including dogs)
is almost always near the carrying capacity of the environment. Any
reduction in population density through mortality is rapidly
compensated by better reproduction and survival. In other words
when dogs are removed, the survivors’ life expectancy increases
because they have better access to the resources, and there is less
competition for resources”. –
World Health Organisation Guidelines for Dog
Population Management, Geneva 1990, page 9.
2. Stray Dog
Statistics
By “stray dog” we mean not only feral dogs, which stay at a safe
distance from human beings, but free-roaming dogs or inadequately
supervised dogs, which are occasionally or regularly fed by human
beings, who may or may not consider themselves the dog’s owner. In
other words all dogs except those few which are both fully
dependent and always prevented from copulating.
We have no accurate figures for the unsupervised dog population of
Romania. However FPCC has in two and a half years from mid-2001 to
end 2003 collected, neutered and vaccinated over 4500 dogs in and
around Campina, an area with a human population of about 70,000.
This suggests that the carrying capacity of Campina and suburbs is
about 4000 dogs including owned but largely unsupervised dogs, a
density of 1 dog per 17.5 people. This suggests that there are no
more than 1.5 million unsupervised dogs in the whole of Romania.
The density of dogs in Campina is higher than in many other towns
because of dog dumping, so a figure of 1 unsupervised dog per 15
people is probably a more accurate overall estimate (this excludes
puppies which die before breeding age).
This suggests that the carrying capacity of Bucharest is between
100,000 and 150,000 dogs. Stray or unsupervised dog populations
grow and decline in direct proportion to the human population.
FPCC’s sister organisation in Istanbul, SHKD, has witnessed this in
the new suburbs springing up all around Turkey’s commercial
capital, one of the biggest and fastest growing cities in the
world.
Numbers in urban areas of Romania are temporarily reduced by
sporadic extermination campaigns such as those instigated by the
mayor of Bucharest. When Pitesti city hall stopped killing dogs in
April 2001 and brought its stray dogs to a former fox fur farm
converted by Mrs Aurora Brizzi and Mrs Ute Langenkamp into an
animal shelter, the dog population in the shelter quickly grew to a
massive and barely manageable 3000 dogs by 2001. Pitesti has a
population of about 200,000 people and there are still over 4000
dogs on the city streets, many of them now neutered and vaccinated
by AULIM, Mrs Langenkamp’s charity. In addition to the 3000 dogs in
AULIMs shelter and the 4000 or so on the city streets, AULIM has
rehomed thousands of dogs, mainly abroad, in the last 3 years. We
estimate that the carrying capacity of Pitesti is between 6,000 and
12,000 dogs.
The stray dog population of every Romanian town and village depends
solely on the carrying capacity of the area which in turn in a
climate with plentiful water depends solely on the food (and in
winter shelter) available. The food on which stray and unsupervised
dogs survive consists of edible rubbish and handouts by animal
lovers. The rubbish and handouts are in direct proportion to the
human population. Stray dogs cannot survive independently of human
beings.
Semi-stray or unsupervised dogs, those ‘owned’ by residents but
always or sometimes allowed to stray at will, and therefore to
breed, must also be taken into the equation (and of course be
neutered and vaccinated). In Campina we estimate that 90% of the
dogs with owners or feeders are allowed to wander and if not
neutered, to breed.
Virtually every stray dog in Campina was known to us until we
stopped our neutering campaign in February 2002 due to the
intervention of dog catchers from the Bucov shelter near
Ploiesti.
It is likely that the dog population is 55-60% male and only 40-45%
female because of the human preference for males as guard dogs,
because male dogs tend to be better foragers and because female
dogs die younger due to repeated pregnancies.
3.
Rabies
“Since dog elimination in general is very cost-intensive and lacks
any positive impact on the occurrence of rabies it is not
recommended.” – Report of W.H.O. Consultation on Dog Ecology
Studies related to Rabies Control, Geneva, 22-25 February 1988
(page 11).
Although FPCC has never had a single case of rabies since its
inception in 2000 rabies is a danger because it is endemic in the
wild mammal population, especially foxes. The threat of rabies is a
persuasive reason for the Romanian Government and the European
Union to find the political will to get to grips with the stray dog
problem once and for all, before Romania’s borders with the EU
disappear in 2007.
4.
Solutions
There are only 3 ways to solve stray dog problems. (1) To kill or
remove every single fertile bitch. (2) To remove the food source,
i.e. somehow prevent animal lovers feeding unsupervised dogs and
remove all rubbish from the streets so that the dogs starve to
death. Or (3)
‘Neuter and Return’.
“In the long term, control of reproduction is by far the most
effective strategy of dog population management” – W.H.O., Geneva,
Guidelines for Dog Population Management, page 72.
Extermination campaigns, for example the indiscriminate poisoning
or shooting of dogs at night irrespective of whether they are
neutered and vaccinated or indeed pets with owners, have never
succeeded anywhere in the world.
‘Neuter and Return’, the policy advocated by the World Health
Organisation and the World Society for the Protection of Animals,
solves the problem permanently, although dogs have to be tolerated
on the streets for 5-8 years for it to succeed. Providing it is
implemented to the edge of the urban area it is however a permanent
and humane solution which politicians can be proud of.
‘Neuter and Return’ must be implemented in conjunction with
education campaigns to explain the importance of neutering, of
vaccination and of preventing dogs from reproducing.
Romania needs to invest money and effort now to solve the problem
for ever.
Stray dog populations anywhere depend solely on the amount of food
available. Nature adjusts the population to the carrying capacity
of the territory. If just one fertile female escapes being killed
or captured she can breed up to 67,000 offspring in 6 years.* That
is why killing dogs can never succeed unless every single female is
exterminated.
If however the carrying capacity of an area is filled with sterile
animals the population will gradually die out, providing no fertile
dogs can infiltrate from surrounding areas and providing freshly
abandoned dogs are collected by dog wardens, police and residents
(as in developed countries).
* source: Doris Day Animal League, U.S.A.
5. Policies doomed
to fail: Killing and Incarceration.
“Removal and killing of dogs should never be considered as the most
effective way of dealing with a problem of surplus dogs in the
community: it has no effect whatsoever on the root cause of the
problem.” – Guidelines for Dog Population Management, W.H.O. Geneva
1990 (page 74).
“In none of the study areas did the elimination of dogs by any
method have any significant long term effect on dog population
size.” –Report of W.H.O. Consultation on Dog Ecology Studies
related to Rabies Control, Geneva, 22-25 February 1988 (page
11).
(a) Killing.
This is usually done surreptitiously at night by municipal workers
or by private contractors to municipalities who then return to
collect dead bodies. No notice is given to local residents of
poisoning so dog owners are unable to protect their pets from it.
In Gorj province various mayors have resorted to asking hunters to
shoot dogs and even to throwing them down wells to drown. Pitesti’s
municipal dog catchers have killed dogs in the woods with makehift
spears. This barbaric behaviour is of course illegal, but some
mayors seem to have little respect for the law. The penalties for
cruelty to animals are in any case derisory.
Officials and municipal vets are reluctant to admit knowing
anything about these extermination campaigns. One municipal vet in
Sadu (Gorj province) was however dismissed recently for carrying
out a poisoning campaign. [The poisoning or extermination of dogs
by any means other than humane euthanasia is now illegal in
Romania].
In any case although poisoning reduces the stray dog population in
the short term it can never be carried out intensively and
persistently enough to eradicate stray dogs. That is why dogs are
prospering in Romania as a species despite the wholesale slaughter
carried out by local authorities for many years.
If killing worked the stray dog populations of Romania’s towns
would have been eliminated long ago.
If each fertile bitch has 8 live puppies twice a year 71% of all
fertile females, most of which will have ‘owners’, must be killed
twice a year before the dog population starts to diminish slowly.
If as many as 76% of all fertile females could be caught and killed
every 6 months the stray dog population in a town like Campina
would be reduced from 4000 dogs to 2668 dogs after 7 years (again
assuming each bitch has 8 live puppies twice a year).
This compares to a stray dog population of only 52 after 7 years if
Neuter and Return is implemented.
Whereas ‘neuter and return’ can be carried out 24 hours per day
every day of the week openly and with the cooperation of animal
lovers and ‘owners’, catching and/or killing has to be carried out
secretly and occasionally because of the likelihood of protests and
disruption. If animal lovers and owners of semi-strays know dog
catching or extermination squads are coming to their area they will
do their best to protect the dogs they look after. In Campina
Bucov’s dog catchers have to be protected by Gendarmes because of
opposition by residents and dog feeders.
‘Catch and Kill’ would have to be carried out persistently
in every area of every municipality for six years once a week,
without disruption from ‘animal protectors’, to kill 76% of the
dogs every breeding season, and it would still take 7years of
consistent killing to reduce the dog population to 67% of the
carrying capacity !
DOG
POPULATION REDUCTION IF 76% KILLED EVERY 6
MONTHS.
- assuming half of the killing is done before dogs give birth and
half afterwards
# assuming 12.5% of adult females dies naturally and 38% of balance
is killed before giving birth in first 6 months, thereafter no
natural deaths because almost all survivors will be young
* assuming 50% puppies die of illness before 38% of balance is
killed
Date . . . . Total . . . Surviving Fertile . . . Surv. Puppies* . .
. . .Killed adults
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Females# . . . . . . . .after 38%
killed . . . . before / after breeding
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . after 38% killed . . .
. .Male Female . . . . . M
. . . F. . . .M . . . .F
31.12.05 4000 (100% of
carrying capacity)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1085 . . . . . . . . 1345 . . .
.1345 . . . . . . .665 . . .665 . . 665 . . 665
30.6.06 . .3530
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1063 . . . . . . . . 1318 . . .
.1318 . . . . . . .651 . . .651 . .651 . . 651
31.12.06 3462
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1041 . . . . . . . . . 1290 . . .
.1290 . . . . . . 638 . . .638 . .638 . . 638
30.6.07 3387
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1019 . . . . . . . . . 1264 . . .
.1264 . . . . . . 624 . . .624 . .624 . . 624
31.12.07 3318
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .998 . . . . . . . . . 1238 . . .
.1238 . . . . . . 612 . . .612 . .612 . . 612
30.6.08 3247
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .976 . . . . . . . . . 1210 . . .
.1210 . . . . . . 598 . . .598 . .598 . . 598
31.2.08 3178
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .956 . . . . . . . . . 1185 . . .
.1185 . . . . . . 586 . . .586 , ,586 . . 586
30.6.09 3109
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .935 . . . . . . . . . 1159 . . .
.1159 . . . . . . 573 . . .573 . .573 . . 573
31.12.09 3042
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .915 . . . . . . . . . 1135 . . .
.1135 . . . . . . 561 . . .561 . .561 . . 561
30.6.10 2978
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 896 . . . . . . . . . 1111 . . .
.1111 . . . . . . 549 . . .549 . .549 . . 549
31.12.10 2916
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 877 . . . . . . . . . 1087 . . .
.1087 . . . . . . 538 . . .538 . .538 . . 538
30.6.11 2851
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 858 . . . . . . . . . 1063 . . .
1063 . . . . . . .526 . . .526 . .526 . . 526
31.12.11 2788
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .838 . . . . . . . . . 1039 . . .
1039 . . . . . . .514 . . .514 . .514 . . 514
30.6.12 2727
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .820 . . . . . . . . . 1017 . . .
1017 . . . . . . .503 . . .503 . .503 . .
503
31.12.12 2668 (66.7% of
carrying capacity)
The problem for the exterminators is
that the dogs can breed so fast - according to the Doris Day Animal
League one female dog and her offspring can produce 67000 puppies
in 6 years ! - that all they achieve is a temporary reduction in
the dog population. Every surviving bitch breeds. And no dogs are
vaccinated against rabies. With ‘neuter and return’ most of the
bitches wandering the streets don’t breed.
As most Romanian fertile bitches have owners or feeders it is
impossible to achieve a 76% extermination or removal
rate.
(b) ‘Catch and
Incarcerate’
This summarises the policy adopted in February 2004 by the
Municipality of Campina, who lost patience with FPCC because of the
high number of dogs on Campina’s streets and who could not
understand that these neutered and vaccinated dogs must be left in
place in order to prevent new fertile dogs infiltrating.
Campina asked the shelter in Bucov, near Ploiesti, which is
subsidised by Tierschutzverein Munich, to catch and remove the dogs
FPCC had neutered and returned, although all these dogs had been
adopted by residents according to the new Animal Protection Law. We
believe the Bucov dog catchers removed about 300 dogs, three of
which were inadvertently killed with tranquillising darts.
By removing and imprisoning animals in camps municipalities are
simply creating empty feeding territories which nature will soon
fill with new fertile dogs. So ‘Catch and Incarcerate’ makes the
problem worse, not better (see below).
In Romania, due to poverty and the abundance of community dogs,
there is little or no hope of rehoming these captured dogs. They
must either be kept and fed until their deaths in the shelter,
which is a pointless and very expensive exercise, or put to sleep
according to the law. Due to lack of funds, or due to corruption if
funds are available, the dogs in such shelters often starve to
death.
Why does Catch and
Incarcerate make the problem worse ?
Because nature ensures that every dog taken off the streets is
replaced by a new dog. Puppies, or dogs dumped from Bucharest or
other cities with extermination policies, which would have found so
little food that they would have died of illness or starvation if
territories were still occupied by their original owners, can now
occupy those feeding territories, survive and breed. So unless
every single female in a municipality and all areas within 7 km.*
of that municipality is caught, which is highly unlikely, the stray
dog problem will continue and the municipality will end up with
thousands of dogs incarcerated at huge expense in its shelter plus
the original number of dogs on the streets !
[* Studies by Help in Suffering in Jaipur India show that dogs will
travel up to 7 km. in search of food.]
Pitesti and more recently Campina are
proof of the futility of dog removal campaigns.
In the case of Campina the 300 neutered dogs removed by Bucov have
now been replaced by 300 fertile dogs, dumped in Campina from
Bucharest and surrounding villages, or which have infiltrated from
outside the town. Although some of these immigrants are dogs
neutered by FPCC the dumped dogs are all fertile.
Bucov and the Town Hall are therefore undoing all the good work of
FPCC over the last 3 years and are unwittingly ensuring that the
stray dog problem in Campina will continue for decades to come.
FPCC cannot afford to continue catching, neutering and returning
Campina’s street dogs, only for these dogs to be removed, put to
sleep or starved to death by Bucov.
When Campina municipality realises that Bucov’s dog catchers are
achieving nothing, we hope we will be permitted to restart ‘Neuter
and Return’ in Campina.
6. FPCC’s work so
far.
FPCC, which depends solely on donations from the public, and which
is principally financed by its Founder and Chairman, Robert Smith,
built an open plan shelter on land ceded by the Municipality near
the Doftanei river on the edge of Campina in 2001. Dr Radu Milea
carried out all operations and sterilisations during the first two
years and subsequently trained our current veterinary team. Over
4500 stray, semi-stray and owned dogs were collected, neutered and
vaccinated in Campina, Cornu and surrounding villages in the two
and a half years up to February 2004. We made no charge for this
service to owners or to the municipality (although we did charge
the municipality when it was necessary to euthanise sick, injured
or dangerous dogs and incinerate their bodies according to
environmental regulations).
Over 100 Campina dogs have been happily rehomed in Holland by PAWS,
who have also generously supported FPCC with materials and other
donations.
In April 2003 FPCC’s new shelter and neutering centre in Oradea,
sponsored by Battersea Dogs Home, Dogs Trust and North Shore Animal
League, began work, in a purpose built shelter on land leased by
the Municipality. A local charity, the Arca lui Noe association,
run by Mrs Gigi Bulz and her family, and supported by Narcis Fekete
and his wife Diana, pioneered the cause of animal welfare in Oradea
and did most of the groundwork for the project. The mayor, Mr Petre
Filip, understood the logic and effectiveness of ‘Neuter and
Return’ as opposed to previous policies of sporadic dog
extermination, and enthusiastically supported this joint
project.
From May 2003 to April 2005 our ‘SOS Dogs Oradea’ project has
neutered and vaccinated 2250 dogs, without charge to the owners or
municipality, and has rehomed over 500 of these dogs to families.
Although most of the other dogs have been returned to their local
communities, we still have over 100 friendly dogs waiting to be
adopted and advertisements with their photos regularly appear in
the local press.
We are very grateful to Battersea Dogs Home, Dogs Trust and North
Shore for their support of this project and hope it will become
only one of many successful Neuter and Return projects financed by
Western charities in Eastern Europe.
FPCC’s third project is in Mioveni, a small town of 37000 people
outside Pitesti, infamous for the extermination of dogs by the
management of the Renault-Dacia factory two years ago. Carmen
Arsene, the supervisor of AULIM’s shelter in Smeura near Pitesti,
asked us to help AULIM negotiate a Neuter and Return contract with
the mayor of Pitesti and to carry out a similar Neuter and Return
campaign in Mioveni. Contracts with both Pitesti and Mioveni were
signed early in 2004 and both projects are underway. FPCC has
bought land near Mioveni’s municipal rubbish dump where a permanent
neutering centre can be built if funding can be found. Up to April
2005 FPCC’s temporary Mioveni clinic has neutered and vaccinated
1030 dogs in 12 months, over 500 of which have been rehomed.
In Pitesti since January 2003 AULIM has collected 4050 dogs incl.
1800 puppies. All of these have been neutered and many have been
returned to their owners and/or territory and/or adopted, including
650 adults and 800 puppies rehomed abroad.
Because of the expense of maintaining shelters, and their
‘magnetism’ for dogs and puppies – i.e. people’s and
municipalities’ tendency to dump dogs on shelters – the most
cost-effective method of stray dog control is neutering by Mobile
Clinics. FPCC bought its first mobile clinic in August 2004,
generously sponsored by the Marchig Animal Welfare Trust. The
generator was donated by Mrs Christa Becker of Aktionsgemeinschaft
fuer Tiere Langenfeld/Monheim in Germany.
Vier Pfoten, an Austrian charity which has long been advocating
‘Neuter and Return’ in Romania and Bulgaria, pioneered the use of
mobile clinics in Romania and conducted a joint neutering programme
with us in Negru Voda in autumn 2003. Vier Pfoten’s expert vet,
Adriana, neutered 253 dogs in 10 days and trained our vets in her
highly efficient surgical techniques.
FPCC’s mobile clinic revisited Negru Voda in September 2004 and
neutered, vaccinated and returned 93 more dogs (61 females and 32
males).
FPCC’s mobile clinic then visited Tirgu Carbunesti in Gorj, where
Mrs Carmena Serbaniou arranged the project in cooperation with the
town’s mayor, Mr Pasti. Previously the municipality had tried and
failed to control the town’s dog population with the usual futile,
and now illegal, extermination methods. During the last two weeks
of September we neutered and returned 212 dogs (148 females and 64
males). A local animal lover, Mrs Ficiu, is monitoring the dog
population of Carbunesti and will deal with complaints about stray
dogs. We returned to Carbunesti in March 2005 and neutered 125 more
dogs.
Our mobile clinic has also visited Magureni, Floresti, Campulung,
Banesti and Ticleni and will neuter in many other towns in the near
future, after contracts have been signed with the municipality. It
is important that municipalities make written commitments not to
kill, mistreat or remove neutered dogs so that mobile clinic
campaigns are not sabotaged in the way FPCC’s work in Campina has
been [for sample contract please see annex].
7. School education
project.
FPCC, with the help of Dogs Trust and Mr Ray Griffin, a British
education expert, have developed a School Education Project,
targeted at 10-13 year olds, which is carried out in as many
schools as possible in towns where we work. The purpose of this
education project is to motivate children to care about animal
welfare, help us find fertile and sick dogs in their locality and
to teach children to understand the importance of neutering,
responsible dog ownership and rehoming. We hope to educate the
adult population through their children and to educate the
politicians via their parents. The education project is led by
Antonia Craciun. In Oradea a similar project has been launched by
Battersea Dogs Home and Dogs Trust, led by Mrs Paula Pop.
We are often asked why there are no stray dogs on the streets of
London or Paris whereas there are so many on the streets of
Bucharest and Ploiesti, despite these Romanian cities’ catch and
kill policies. The answer is not only economic development, it is
the education of the British and French populations to care about
animals and the promotion of neutering and responsible dog
ownership. The problem in Romania is not the dogs; it is the people
who allow their dogs to stray and breed and the politicians who
lack the political will, the understanding and of course the
funding to solve the problem.
A further factor is that in Romania very few people allow their pet
dogs to live inside their house, as most families in Western Europe
do. When a family bitch in W. Europe is on heat, it is kept inside
the home, and when taken for its daily walk, is kept on a leash. In
Romania most dogs are kept in yards or gardens, therefore most
Romanian dogs are accessible for copulation.
In Western Europe most citizens who find a dog roaming free will
collect the dog and if they cannot identify the owner from the disc
on the dog’s collar, will take the dog to their local shelter,
animal warden or to the police. This is virtually unthinkable in
Romania. The human population of Romania, as with most economically
underdeveloped countries, must be educated to accept responsibility
for stray dogs and for their environment in general.
Another misconception, usually by male dog owners, is that their
dogs should be allowed to enjoy sex; dogs do not enjoy sex, indeed
it is a quite painful and purely instinctive activity. It also
spreads vaginal and genital tumours. Sex is not fun for dogs!
If every shop or restaurant owner, every factory boss, every petrol
station attendant, every caretaker of apartment blocks, hospitals,
schools etc. in Romania took their local stray bitches to the vet
and paid for them to be neutered that would solve the stray dog
problem within 5 years. Animal welfare groups such as FPCC cannot
improve the living standards of Romania but we can contribute to
educating the next generation of Romanian dog keepers.
We would be delighted to hear from any schools interested in this
Education Project.
8. FPCC’s
methods.
The best way of catching a dog remains the cheapest: gaining the
dog’s trust, befriending it and picking it up. Ideally community
dogs should be cared for by a local animal lover, who may feed
them, and should then be collected by this animal lover and handed
over for neutering and vaccination, then returned to the
supervision of this ‘volunteer dog warden’ after
recuperation.
If it is not possible to catch a dog in this way, a catching cage
or catching pole with plastic covered thick lanyards can be
used.
Only as a last resort should a blowpipe or tranquillising gun be
used because these are (a) expensive (b) an overdose can kill the
dog, as illustrated by Bucov’s dog catchers in Campina (c) the dog
can run several hundred metres on an adrenalin surge before
collapsing, so has to be chased on foot, and may run across a busy
road or into woods and (d) in the case of a gun the loud bang will
frighten every living creature within several hundred metres.
As dogs sense fear or hostility in human beings it is very
difficult for municipal workers, who are not normally animal
lovers, to catch dogs without resorting to inhumane and expensive
methods. It is far easier and cheaper for animal lovers to catch
dogs. Unfortunately most municipal catchers use inhumane and/or
expensive methods to catch every single dog they take, in
contravention of the new Dog Law No. 155.
Dogs returned by FPCC to their communities are fitted with a
non-removable collar or earclip and an unique number is tattooed
into one ear under anaesthetic. A record is kept of every dog,
including the place and date of release.
9. Projections for
‘Neuter and Release’.
NEUTER AND RELEASE PLAN
FOR A TYPICAL MUNICIPALITY WITH
4000 STRAY DOGS (human population 60-80000).
Assumptions:
1. That the average life of a street dog which survives to breeding
age is between 3.5 and 4 years.
2. That the male:female population at birth and the death rate are
50:50.
3. That a well trained vet team can neuter 9 females and 1 or 2
males per day.
4. That recuperation facilities are available for 50 dogs per
clinic.
5. That all females have two litters per annum with 8 live births
per litter.
6. That 50% of live puppies dies before they can breed.
7. That only the same number of surviving puppies will live until
breeding age as older dogs which die during the same period for as
long as the carrying capacity of the area is full; and that the
others die of hunger, weakness etc.
8. That clinics practise early age neutering from age 3 months
upwards if necessary on litters of surviving puppies, rather than
releasing puppies un-neutered.
9. That the female dogs which die naturally (250 per half year for
the first 5 years of the project) do not breed in the half year of
their deaths, or if they do, that none of their puppies
survives.
10. That each clinic employs two dog catching/release teams at
night and one team during the day 6 days per week.
11. That dog owners who allow their dogs to stray, or who abandon
them, will bring them to the clinic for free neutering and
vaccination and will therefore not distort the diminishing
reproduction rate, or alternatively, that all of such abandoned
dogs can be picked up.
12. That priority is given to neutering females before males. The
neutering of males has limited short term impact on the
population.
13. That all surrounding municipalities follow the same policy to
the edge of the conurbation.
14. That 60% of females are caught and neutered in the first 6
months. That 80% of the remaining fertile females are caught and
neutered in the next 6 months. And that 90% of remaining fertile
females are done in the third and subsequent 6 month periods.
Results:
- Within 4 years the stray dog population is less than half the
present level.
- Within 5 years the stray dog population is reduced to 26% of
present levels.
- Within 6 years the stray dog population is virtually
eliminated.
If more females than 645 can be caught in the second 6 month period
- for example 725 females (90% of the remaining fertile females
incl. new puppies) - the process will be speeded up.
If the average life span of the female street dogs is 2.5 to 3
years rather than the 3.5 to 4 years projected the stray dog
population will almost die out within 4 years.
Life-span of street
dogs:
This is in practice probably varies, for dogs which survive to
breeding age, between 1 year and 8 years. Except for animals fed
regularly nutritious food by humans, i.e. semi-stray dogs, it is
very unlikely that a street dog will survive beyond 8 years, and
relatively few will survive beyond 5 years in the severe winters of
Romania.
SHKD’s records over 6 years of neutering in Istanbul show that
49.5% of dogs caught were between 3 months and 1 year old. W.H.O.
studies in Ecuador, Tunisia and Sri Lanka showed that the stray dog
population was 28% under one year old, 17% 1-2 years, 14% 2-3
years, 11% 3-4 years, 8% 4-5 years, 7% 5-6 years and 15% above 6
years old. Life expectancy of free roaming dogs in Zimbabwe was
estimated in 1987 at 4.6 years. These countries all have climates
more conducive to the survival of street dogs than that of
Romania.
The main source of healthy puppies on the streets is not feral
dogs. Wild dogs, for example living on a rubbish dump, do not
produce as many puppies well nourished enough to survive as dogs
with owners do. Most new dogs on the streets are the offspring of
dogs cared for by human beings – in other words Romanian street dog
populations are the direct result of human ignorance and
irresponsibility.
Dumped and
Abandoned dogs:
Dog dumping by both animal lovers and perhaps municipalities is the
greatest single threat to the success of a properly funded and
managed Neuter and Return project.
During the last 3 years FPCC has found newly dumped dogs, usually
from Bucharest or surrounding villages, on the streets of Campina
virtually every week. This is partly the result of animal lovers
bringing friendly community dogs to the ‘safe haven’ of Campina to
escape Bucharest’s dog exterminators and partly the result of dog
owners dumping unwanted animals and puppies for convenience. Many
of the foreign adult dogs which suddenly appear on Campina’s
streets are very friendly to humans, which means they are used to
human contact and have been ‘rescued’ from the clutches of
municipal dog catchers.
Oradea and Pitesti have also suffered from dog dumping in recent
months. It is more likely that animal lovers will dump dogs in
towns with humane dog control policies, as news of their shelters
or clinics spreads. This unfortunately sabotages those humane
projects.
As no town or village in Romania is an island and as there is no
practical means to prevent the dumping of dogs, it is clear that
Neuter and Return can only totally succeed in eliminating the
street dog problem if it is adopted throughout Romania, which means
its adoption and funding by central government and/or the EU.
Abandoned pets will continue to be a problem long after Neuter and
Return has finished, as indeed they are in Western Europe. However
former pets will be easy to catch as they are used to and even seek
human contact. People must be educated to collect them or report
them to the Police or their local clinic and municipal dog wardens
should bring them to the clinic. One hopes they can then be
rehomed. Even bitches on heat when abandoned are likely to be
caught by dog wardens or brought to clinics before giving
birth.
Dog owners who can or no longer wish to keep their dog should be
educated by publicity to bring their dog to their local clinic
rather than to throw it out onto the streets.
10. “Complaint
Fatigue” by municipalities.
Complaints from the public to municipalities are the main reason
for mayors embarking on misguided dog removal and extermination
campaigns. Even humane mayors who are animal lovers can only
tolerate a certain level of complaints and have to think of their
own political survival.
Our experience is that most complaints about ‘dangerous dogs’ are
the result of disputes between neighbours, especially around blocks
of flats, and of children baiting dogs, which then snarl or bite
back. Dogs won’t hang around an area unless food and shelter are
available. At the mayor of Campina’s request we investigated a
complaint from a hotel owner who said his customers were being
frightened away by a pack of vicious dogs. It turned out that his
own hotel manager was (without his knowledge) feeding two harmless
and friendly dogs.
It is however necessary to remove genuinely dangerous dogs, and as
a last resort put them to sleep; some dogs may be friendly towards
animal lovers but be a threat to people whose fear they sense.
Cases must be individually investigated and dealt with, preferably
by Animal Welfare Associations rather than by municipal workers.
The problem of packs of dogs intimidating people can often be
solved by removal of the pack leader or leaders.
11. The only
practical answer.
The only solution is private enterprise - public sector projects
financed and empowered by central or local Government but
implemented by a committed non-profit private organisation or
organisations in every town and rural area of Romania.
Public bodies are always too cumbersome, bureaucratic and
conservative to succeed in implementing ‘Neuter and Return’.
Officials usually lack the motivation radically to change the
status quo.
On the other hand private organisations like F.P.C.C., however
efficiently run, lack the finance and the authority to implement
‘Neuter and Return’ except for a few pilot projects.
Such a project must be centrally financed either by the Government
or by the EU. The recent Law no. 155, whilst well intended, has no
chance of solving Romania’s stray dog problem because no
municipality has the funding to carry out the law. There is no
point in passing laws which noone can afford to implement !
Furthermore the law has unfortunately given municipalities like
Campina the pretext to abandon Neuter and Return projects on the
dubious grounds that the Law prohibits unsupervised dogs on the
streets, though paragraph 17d of regulation no. 955 dated 15.6.04
goes some way to rectifying this error.
12. Dog Population
Management Board.
An organisation must be established to run Romania’s Dog Population
Management Project effectively and dynamically as private
businesses are run. A Chief Executive, experienced in managing
public service companies or projects, should be appointed. There
must be no question of corruption or political nepotism, so an
apolitical or foreign CEO should be considered. He or she should be
answerable directly to a Board consisting of a representative of
the relevant Ministries, representatives of Animal Protection
Organisations and of the sponsors. Commercial sponsors could also
appoint a member of the board.
The financial records should be audited by a firm of
internationally respected accountants who appoint a full time Chief
Accountant to eliminate any danger of corruption or financial
waste.
The Dog Population Management Board should ensure that funds are
distributed to municipalities to set up mobile or fixed neutering
clinics in association with local animal protection organisations
and that these funds are not wasted inefficiently or
corruptly.
Each municipality would have one or two neutering clinics supplying
free of charge neutering and vaccination to all residents and stray
dogs collected by residents. Each clinic must have recuperation
facilities for 5 times the daily neutering capacity and quarantine
facilities for 10 dogs. Incurable and dangerous dogs should be
euthanased humanely as per Law No. 155.
A public liaison team should field calls and complaints from the
public and publicise the project.
13. Local Neutering
Clinics.
Every municipality, which does not already have a clinic, must be
forced to make suitable land and/or a building available for a
neutering clinic such as illustrated. Alternatively it could
purchase a mobile clinic. The local municipality should provide
water, electricity and if possible gas.
Each clinic would have a manager responsible for supervising
personnel, record keeping and organising his dog catching/release
teams. Each clinic would need 2 vans (sponsored by advertisers)
with 3 dog catching teams. At night 2 dog catching teams would
operate. During the day one dog catching team would operate. The
other van would be used for supplies. Dog catching teams would work
outwards from their clinic until their whole catchment area has
been covered up to the edge of the conurbation.
‘Neuter and Return’ must be carried out like a military campaign,
street by street, house by house, factory by factory.
Having covered the main urban area, which will normally take 1 to 2
years, the dog catching and collection teams would concentrate on
surrounding villages.
14. Publicising the
Project and networks of local volunteers.
A budget should be allocated for advertising for local volunteers
and to publicise the location of clinics. Neuter and Return should
be advertised and explained to the public. A Public Relations
Bureau could be engaged to handle this.
A network of volunteer dog wardens should be established in each
clinic area. School children enthused by the Education Project
might also help. Their job would be to locate, feed, befriend and
catch street dogs, then to care for them after release, notifying
their local clinic of illnesses, injuries or complaints. Dog
wardens would help to recatch dogs for booster vaccinations. They
could also guard catching cages to prevent theft.
Weak, small or handicapped dogs would be held in clinics or passed
on to animal welfare associations pending adoption/rehoming or as a
last resort euthanasia.
Local newspapers should be encouraged to help with adverts for
rehoming dogs which cannot be returned to their community, for
example grown puppies with no home territory, or small or weak
dogs.
15. How long will
it take and how much will the project cost ?
If we take a putative town of 70000 inhabitants and 4000 free
roaming dogs, with an existing clinic including holding and
recuperation facilities, and assume that all vehicles, personnel
and equipment are in place, it will theoretically take only one
year to reduce the fertile female breeding population from 2000 to
161 dogs and after 3 years there will only be 5 fertile females
left to breed.
This of course presupposes that owners who allow their fertile
females to roam the streets cooperate and allow their bitches to be
neutered (or keep them inside their homes when on heat) and that no
new fertile females are dumped from outside the town.
There must be co-operation between municipal clinics so that spare
capacity in one municipality is used for collecting and neutering
dogs from neighbouring municipalities. Each province should also
have a number of mobile clinics, together with portable holding and
recuperation facilities, so that personnel and equipment can be
used efficiently.
There are plenty of European animal welfare associations who would
provide training to vets and dog catching teams and other advice
free of charge to the project.
One off capital expenditure:
Fixed clinic
Clinic building . . . . . . . . $
20000,-
2 vans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 32000,-
50 recuperation cages .$ 6000,-
6 catching cages . . . . . .$ 1200,-
Furniture . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 1000,-
6 catchpoles . . . . . . . . . $ 700,-
Vet equipment . . . . . . . .$ 4300,-
2 blowpipes . . . . . . . . . .$ 2000,-
Gloves, clothing . . . . . . $ 800,-
Other . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 1000,-
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $
69000,-
Mobile
clinic
Mobile clinic . . . . . . . . $ 40.000,-
1 van . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 16000,-
25 cages . . . . . . . . . . $ 3000,-
2 catching cages . . . .$ 400,-
Recuperation tent 7 x 7m .$ 1250,-
3 catchpoles . . . . . . . .$ 350,-
Equipmt + generator . .$ 2500,-
1 blowpipe . . . . . . . . . .$ 1000,-
Gloves, clothing . . . . . $ 500,-
Other . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 600,-
Total . . . . . . . . . . . .
.$
65600,-
Personnel required
in each clinic (Year 1).
Wage costs incl. tax and social
charges. .Mobile clinic.
Manager . . . . $ 250 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vet: $ 300
Vet . . . . . . . . .$ 300 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 2 drivers/helpers $ 100 each
4 drivers/helpers $ 100 each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
catchers/carers $ 120 each
3 catchers/carers $ 120 each . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 vet
assistants . . $ 150 each
2 vet assistants $ 150 each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Food
tickets . . . . . $ 360
1 cleaner . . . . . .$ 90
1 night guard . . $ 100
Food tickets . . . $ 500
Total : . . . . . . . . $ 2300 per month . . . . . . .
Total: . .$ 1520,- per month
Other monthly costs:
Fuel for vans . . . . . . $ 200 . . . . . . . . . . . Fuel . . . .
. . . . . . . . $ 200,-
Cleaning materials $ 100 . . . . . . . . . . . Cleaning materials $
100,-
Medicine/vaccines $ 3000 . . . . . . . . . . Medicine/vaccines $
2000,-
Dogfood . . . . . . . . . .$ 400 . . . . . . . . . . . .Dogfood . .
. . . . . . . $ 300,-
Phone incl mobiles $ 200 . . . . . . . . . . . .Mobile phones . . .
.$ 200,-
Other incl repairs . . $ 100 . . . . . . . . . . . .Other . . . . .
. . . . . . . .$ 100,
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 4000 . . . . . . . . . .
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2900,-
Monthly costs incl staff (year 1) $ 6300,- .
Monthly mobile clinic costs (year 1): $ 4420,-
Year
2:
2 drivers and 2 dog catchers are sufficient;
less fuel, dogfood, medicine, vaccines
Monthly costs (year
2) $ 5000,-
Monthly mobile clinic costs (year 2): $ 4420,-
Year 3: 1
driver, 1 dog catcher, 1 asst vet suffice; . . .2 catchers + 1 asst
vet suffice
less fuel, dogfood, medicine etc.
Monthly costs (year 3) $ 4000,- . . . . . . . . . . . . .Monthly
mobile clinic costs (year 3): $ 3600,-
ANNUAL COSTS per fixed clinic: . . . . . . . . . . . . .per mobile
clinic:
Year 1: Building + eqpmt $ 69.000,- . . . . . . . . . Clinic +
equipmt $ 65.600,-
Personnel + other $ 75.600,- . . . . . . . . . .Personnel + other $
53040,-
TOTAL: $ 144.600,- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . .TOTAL: . . .$ 118.640,-
Year 2: Personnel + other $ 60.000,- . . . . . . .
. . .Personnel + other $ 53040,-
Year 3: Personnel + other $ 48.000,- . . . . . . .
. . Personnel + other $ 43200,-
TOTAL COST OVER 3 YEARS:
FIXED CLINIC: US $ 252.600,-
MOBILE CLINIC: US $ 214.880,-
*********************************************************************
If we assume that there will be 300 such fixed clinics and 40
mobile clinics (one per province/ “judetul”) in Romania to complete
the project nationally the total cost over 3 years of solving
Romania’s stray dog problem will be:
approx. US Dollars 84.375.200,-
excl. the costs of the Dog Population Management Board
but less income from sponsorship and from sale of assets
and less the millions of dollars spent every year on the futile
killing of dogs.
This equates to about US $1,17 or Lei 35.000,- per Romanian citizen
per year.
*********************************************************************
‘Neuter and Return’ solves the stray dog problem for ever for an
investment of no more than $85 million over 3 years. The
never-ending catching, incarceration and killing of dogs by
municipalities at present costs much more than this over a ten or
twenty year period and is totally ineffective.
16. Commercial
Sponsorship.
A main sponsor should be sought to sponsor the whole project. This
could be a bank, a pharmaceutical or consumer products company or
one of the large holding companies with diverse interests. Their
name would appear on all publicity, on the vehicles and on the
clinics. Secondary sponsors such as dogfood manufacturers should
also be sought.
If the clinic buildings and equipment and the vehicles were all
sponsored this would save $ 16.2 million.
Many companies would be interested in sponsoring a socially
beneficial project with short term beneficial results for the human
(and canine) population of Romania.
17. Future use of
clinics/ dog control.
Once the number of stray dogs to be neutered diminishes (within 3
years) to about one per day, the local clinics should be converted
into commercial veterinary clinics leased or rented out by the
municipality. The clinics could be franchised to private vets on
condition that all stray and owned dogs continue to be neutered and
vaccinated free of charge or at cost price and that free quarantine
facilities are available to the municipality.
A licensing system should be introduced whereby all un-neutered
dogs be registered (possibly with microchips or discs) at their
local clinic and the owner charged a licence fee starting at $ 10
in the first year, gradually increasing to $ 50 per dog in
subsequent years. Neutered dogs would also be registered but free
of charge. Unregistered and un-neutered dogs picked up or brought
in would automatically be neutered before being returned to
claimants.
Local clinics could also be used as bases for the enforcement of
animal protection laws - bases for local ‘R.S.P.C.A’s’.
18. Licensing Dog
Breeders.
These should be licensed (free of charge) by the local veterinary
authorities, under supervision by local animal welfare
associations, who would ensure that no bitch has more than two
litters in her life-time, by having her neutered after her second
litter, and who would remove the licence of any breeder mistreating
or in-breeding animals.
19.
Pitfalls.
Failure to provide finance when scheduled.
Corruption by employees/supervisors (especially in
purchasing).
Misuse of vehicles. Diversion or theft of medicines/dogfood.
Obstruction by local officials/municipal vets.
Failure by municipalities to implement project despite availability
of finance.
Obstruction by politia sanitara veterinara.
Dumping of dogs from recalcitrant municipalities on those
implementing the project.
“Complaint Fatigue” by municipalities.
20.
Lobbying
To lobby successfully for Neuter and Return throughout Romania it
is necessary for animal welfare associations to work together and
to eschew the disputes and jealousies which characterise animal
welfare movements in most countries.
FPCC would be interested to hear from groups who would like to join
an umbrella Animal Welfare Organisation for the whole of
Romania.
To succeed it is necessary to work with politicians and officials
who may feel alienated by (what they consider) fanaticism or silly
sentimentality about animals.
21.
Conclusion.
Both dog haters and dog lovers have the same aim: to make the
streets of Romania like those of any British, French or German
town, with no stray dogs.
The only question is: how can this common aim be achieved ?
- Killing does not work and is in any case barbaric and now
illegal.
- Removal and incarceration, with or without euthanasia, is futile,
never-ending and unaffordable.
- ‘Neuter and Return’ is the only practical and permanent solution,
but it requires political will, short-term funding and efficient
implementation.
This Report was written by Robert
Smith and updated in April 2005.