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OSPCA informs Ontario government it will no longer enforce animal cruelty laws

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OSPCA to back away from enforcing animal cruelty laws
Ontario's animal welfare agency informs government enforcement will no longer be their mandate. The agency cites a number of reasons including a lack of resources and concern for the safety of their officers – Mar 5, 2019

TORONTO – For the first time in a century, Ontario’s animal welfare agency will no longer investigate and enforce animal cruelty laws.

In a letter Monday to Community Safety Minister Sylvia Jones, the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said it will not sign a new contract with the province after the current one expires at the end of March.

“The current model is just simply not working,” CEO Kate MacDonald told The Canadian Press in an interview. “This is a very significant shift in who we are and what we do.”

The letter, obtained by The Canadian Press, said the OSPCA will offer a three-month transition phase, by way of contract, until June 28.

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“During the transition period, we will not be accepting complaints or cases dealing with livestock,” said the letter signed by MacDonald and Catherine MacNeill, the chair of the OSPCA’s board of directors.

MacDonald said the organization will shift into a support role in animal cruelty investigations, providing animal shelter, forensic evidence collection and veterinary services.

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She said the OSPCA would like to see a model similar to that in New York, where the NYPD has an animal cruelty squad that leads investigations and works with the American SPCA, which handles similar support services.

“We expect to continue to be involved as a support to law enforcement agencies,” MacDonald said. “They’re going to need help and we’re the logical choice.”

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The minister of community safety did not return several requests for comment.

The OSPCA has police powers – it can enforce both provincial and Criminal Code animal cruelty laws – under the OSPCA Act that became law in 1919.

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Its role came into question in early January when an Ontario court found the OSPCA’s powers to be unconstitutional and gave the government a year to remedy the situation. The judge said the province erred when it gave police powers to a private organization without imposing accountability and transparency standards on the agency. The province appealed the decision.

MacDonald said the court’s ruling was the “catalyst” in its move away from animal cruelty investigations.

“The recent decision has helped us to see, truly, that enforcement is a function of government,” she said, adding that community members concerned about animal cruelty should contact their local police force or animal control units.

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MacDonald said the agency’s 65 enforcement officers will be offered jobs on the organization’s expanding animal rescue arm.

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A scathing 2016 report by Kendra Coulter, a labour studies professor at Brock University, found that the majority of the OSPCA officers were poorly paid, worked in the field alone often facing dangerous circumstances, and were responsible for extremely large geographic regions.

Coulter said Monday that there are many reasons a government should fund and operate animal welfare law enforcement, including transparency and accountability.

“But the government has not yet shown any leadership on this issue,” she said. “We are in a time of troubling uncertainty. We need clarity from the government, promptly.”

The Ontario Provincial Police said animal cruelty enforcement is not a “core function of policing” and municipalities are the ones responsible for animal control.

“If there’s criminality, we can look after that – we will not ignore complaints of animal cruelty,” said OPP spokesman Bill Dickson.

Coulter said the NYPD-American SPCA model is a good one to aspire to, but noted that it required plenty of planning, including a four-month pilot project and significant resources from both sides.

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“There is no plan in place, no public announcements, there’s been little to no communication with stakeholders,” she said of the situation in Ontario.

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Some animal rights groups applauded the move by the OSPCA.

“Law enforcement by private charities is no longer appropriate in 2019, and vulnerable animals in Ontario deserve a robust, well-resourced public system,” said Camille Labchuk, executive director of Animal Justice.

Lynn Perrier, the founder of Reform Advocates for Animal Welfare, said she wasn’t surprised at the news.

“They haven’t been doing their job for ages – at least it’s official now,” she said. “They have now made an easy path for the government to restructure the animal welfare system in Ontario so our animals will be protected. Let’s hope they don’t have to wait long.”

The OSPCA first talked about transforming its operations about a year ago. In October, management told frontline officers it planned to pull out of investigating cruelty complaints involving horses and large farm animals, trying to farm those out to the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. Frontline officers were also told they would no longer euthanize dogs involved in attacks as required by law.

The province gives the OSPCA $5.75 million annually, but the organization has long complained the funding is not enough to carry out enforcement duties.

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