Michael Markarian: Can you tell us a little bit about Danville as a community? What are some of the challenges for animals and animal lovers there?
Paulette Dean: Danville,
a city of about 48,000 on the North Carolina state line, is a city that
is struggling to redefine itself after the loss of the textile and
tobacco industries. It has the highest unemployment rate in the state,
and also struggles with low education and high poverty rates.
Animals
and animal issues have been low priorities in the past. The Danville
Area Humane Society operates the city animal shelter, and receives
about 5,500 dogs and cats each year, along with approximately 250 other
companion animals and livestock.
Perhaps
because of the problems that come as a result of poverty, there is a
severe pet overpopulation problem. Although the humane society has
helped 17,000 dogs and cats get spayed or neutered since 1993, the
numbers received at the shelter increase each year.
We
seem to have a higher incidence of animal neglect and abuse than
surrounding areas, although that may be because we have two
court-appointed humane investigators (a volunteer position in
Virginia). The board president and I have functioned as investigators
for many years, and we have a strong working relationship with the
police department and animal control officers. We investigate and
prosecute many cases each year, including starvation, hoarding,
dogfighting, and varying degrees of neglect.
MM: How did you approach the chaining issue and what has led to your successes?
PD: As
we investigated complaints of neglect, one thing became very apparent:
90 percent of the complaints received involve companion animals
constantly kept on chains. In this matter, we were "fortunate" to have
a gallery of hundreds of pictures that were taken of dogs on chains.
Seventeen
years ago when I began full-time employment with the Danville Area
Humane Society, we received a call from a man who said he had heard a
dog whining in the woods behind his house, but he had not heard the dog
whine for a couple of days. The animal control officer went to the
address, and found the body of a dog in the woods. The dog had once
been chained and evidently broke lose somehow, but still dragged the
chain. The chain became entangled in bushes, and the dog starved to
death. The animal control officer told me then that I should work to
get all dogs off chains.
In
1996, parts of Danville were flooded as a result of Hurricane Fran.
Then-Governor George Allen toured the area, and saw the bodies of two
dogs who had drowned as they were chained to their doghouses. He had
his driver stop and he knocked on the door to tell the woman he wanted
the bodies buried. He even stopped by later that day to make sure that
had been done.
The
task of getting animals off chains seemed pretty overwhelming at that
time. However, through the years that thought never left my mind
whenever we received a dog with an embedded chain in his neck (many,
many times each year) or when I saw for myself the chained dogs in
backyards with no shelter, food, or water. I knew something had to be
done.
Most
dogs we held for rabies quarantine after biting someone or attacking
another animal were dogs who were kept on chains. Make no mistake-the
problem was not just having dogs constantly chained. We also
investigated a few horrific cases of cats kept on chains. We knew that
any effort to get dogs off chains had to include all companion animals.
With
the support of the board (after all, the board president also functions
as a humane investigator; he was with me for the vast majority of the
cruelty cases), we held a summit meeting of sorts about three years
ago. We invited veterinarians, dog trainers, representatives of the
kennel club, and others we thought would be interested to define the
problems animals face. We showed pictures of a few of our abuse and
cruelty cases. From that meeting, we had the support of most of the
people who worked with animals; we all agreed the overpopulation
problem and the plight of chained dogs topped the list of problems
faced by animals.
Our
anti-chaining campaign was announced, with no plan of what we could do
about it. The newspaper did an editorial about how we may be sincere,
but we had not convinced the public. That we took as a challenge and a
lesson. We met with the editors of the paper (very nice people who
supported our work), and showed them pictures of our cases. We began to
issue more news releases of our court cases. We purchased ads in the
paper about the loneliness of chained dogs, and wrote articles for our
newsletter.
I
met separately with each of the nine city council members and shared
the pictures and stories with them. We proposed that an ordinance be
enacted to prohibit the chaining of dogs on unoccupied property. At the
city council, we testified about how people chained large numbers of
pit bulls in the yards of empty homes. That ordinance passed easily
for, as one council member said, "It is a no-brainer."
The anti-chaining campaign worked to address the problem
through public education and city ordinances.
MM: How did you continue your campaign after that first ordinance passed?
PD: Nothing
happened for a couple of years, and then this summer, we decided we
needed to reenergize the campaign. We issued a news release, inviting
members of the public to come to a meeting about our anti-chaining
campaign. We had a very nice turnout for that meeting.
We
told the attendees that the best thing they could do would be to call
city council members, and encourage their family and friends to do so.
We told them we would notify them when it was time to begin making the
contacts.
The
board of directors of the Danville Area Humane Society voted to commit
$10,000 to help build fences for dogs to get them off chains, with the
requirement that we also be allowed to spay or neuter the animals, at
our expense, for whom we build fences.
A
city council member happened to visit the shelter as we were bringing
in a dog we had just seized. He saw the embedded collar and the thin
body condition, and asked the city manager to please put a proposed
ordinance on the agenda for a work session of city council.
We
prepared a PowerPoint presentation, and went to the work session. We
asked for a three-hour limit in a 24-hour period, and told about our
$10,000 commitment. We talked about how this would help decrease the
number of unwanted births. With the media there, we showed the pictures
and told the stories. We also asked for delayed enforcement to give
people time to make other arrangements for their chained animals.
Council
members decided to advance the proposed ordinance, but they scheduled
two public hearings. We posted the dates on our website, so no one
could accuse us of hiding the truth from them. The editor of the
newspaper wrote a very strong editorial in support of the ordinance.
As
soon as the proposed ordinance was put on the agenda, we sent out an
email alert to the supporters. Council members later said that it was
apparent that the community was in overwhelming support. The newspaper
allows anonymous online comments, so we asked people to respond to any
negative comment.
We
had about 45 supporters show up for the two public hearings. For the
first one, we had asked strong speakers to speak up. I gave a brief
overview of my experiences with chained animals. I reminded them that I
had personally taken the horrible pictures that they had seen, and the
pictures were taken in Danville, Virginia. A veterinarian, an attorney
who had helped us with our civil custody cases and other supporters
told stories and gave facts. We thought it would be helpful to have a
teenager speak. The president of a local high school club agreed to
speak. Tragically, her father was killed three days before the public
hearing. I sent an urgent email to our list, asking them to help us
find another young person who could speak. One young woman stepped
forward. She was terrified, and spoke softly, but she begged the city
council to make Danville a better place to live-for the humans and for
the animals. She held them spellbound by her courage and her conviction.
A
couple of days before the second public hearing, someone wrote a letter
to the city council, bringing up the point that people who live in the
historic district are not allowed to have chain link fences for their
dogs. A motion was made to table the ordinance until that issue could
be resolved. Immediately after that meeting, a small group attended the
work session. Council members resolved that concern, and an amended
ordinance was submitted. Actually, the amendments strengthened the
ordinance.
However,
we sent yet another email alert, urging supporters to not give up the
battle. I heard from a few council members who said they had received
only two negative comments, but had been inundated with positive
comments.
A
week and a half later, the proposed ordinance passed. One council
member could not attend, but he asked the mayor to give his regrets and
assure the public that if he had been there, his vote would have been
"yes." When the mayor announced that and said the vote was unanimous,
we gave the council a standing ovation. It was apparent to everyone
that it was an ordinance whose time had come.
MM: In
the big picture what do you hope to accomplish for animals in Danville
and how does the newly passed chaining ordinance fit into that plan?
PD: We
want to improve the lives of animals in this area. It's that simple.
The newly passed ordinance will do that for hundreds of dogs.
However,
the ordinance has also had an unexpected result. About 10 years ago, we
strengthened our adoption guidelines. We knew that it would be a
controversial move since we have a high euthanasia rate, but we also
knew it was the right thing to do. We were laying a foundation for the
future. Adopted dogs cannot roam and be chained, and adopted cats must
be kept inside. Since this ordinance has passed, we have heard from
many people who know that we have the animals' best interest in mind
for all our decisions.
We
choose our battles wisely. We realize that we make many heavy-duty
decisions for the animals every day, and we strive to make sure they
are the right decisions. This ordinance has helped us make new friends,
and marshal our forces, so to speak.
MM: Most
shelter directors are exceedingly busy just doing their jobs at the
shelter, and I'm sure you're no exception. Why do you think it's
important for shelter directors to take the time to get involved in
legislation in addition to the day-to-day shelter work?
PD: Shelter
directors must get involved in all aspects of animal welfare in order
to successfully help the animals. Without proactive work, the daily
work of a shelter just puts a bandage on the problems. The only animals
helped would be the animals in the shelter. I used to say that once an
animal comes to our shelter, their problems should be over, and that is
a vital goal. However, as I became a humane investigator, it became
painfully clear to me that hundreds of animals never received at a
shelter were in dire need of intervention.
As
we seize animals who have been starved or neglected or even tortured,
and as we rescue animals who have been abandoned or have fallen into
storm drains or have been hit by cars, I breathe a sigh of relief for
that animal. However, I immediately begin thinking of all the animals
who need our help and cannot get it because we do not know about them.
MM: Do
you have tips specifically for shelter directors on how they can be
successful with local legislation in their own communities?
PD: Shelter
directors need to use the resources they have available-and the main
power they have comes from the stories of the animals received at the
shelter. Tell the stories, and show the pictures. Speak politely to
local legislators. Find ways to include supporters, and help them feel
that they can affect change.
MM: You've
said that if you can do it in Danville, you can do it anywhere. What's
the secret to passing progressive, animal-friendly legislation in a
community that has a more traditional animal use background?
PD: Be
consistent and be patient. However, the best way to help animals is to
choose a path and walk down that path diligently. Sometimes, I grow so
weary of having the same conversation hundreds of times with people who
claim they love their starving dog with the embedded collar or with the
person who wants to make some money by selling pit bull puppies, but
only "to good people who won't fight them."
Anyone
who works in animal welfare needs to keep one thing in mind. This is
the same thing I told our volunteers as we worked on this campaign: If
this ordinance passes, our individual lives will be the same. If the
ordinance does not pass, our individual lives will be the same. We're
working for the animals. When people realize they are working for a
cause that is greater than they are, miracles can happen.
Posted at 4:32 PM on Wednesday, December 16, 2009 in Citizen Advocacy.