Please consider adopting this holiday season

Posted December 24th, 2013 in Rescue, Shelters by Josh

Merry Christmas. Please consider adopting this holiday season.

For individual dog information go here to match video images with album pictures.

Dogs in this video are currently at the Carson shelter, located at 216 W. Victoria St., Gardena, CA 90248. Phone# 310-523-9566/527-5158.

Fake outrage and disproportionate action

Posted December 21st, 2013 in Rescue, Shelters by Josh

On December 19th I posted a photo that I had taken a day prior at the Carson shelter. It showed the dead carcass of a large dog laying across the top of 1 of their 3 intake cages, with 2 other dogs filling the neighboring cages after just being surrendered or picked up as strays. As expected, this immediately drew the ire of most people. You can see the photo below…

intake2

I posted the picture for 2 reasons. 1) Because it was highly unacceptable and spoke to many things that so often define the attitudes of select individuals that work at the shelter. And 2) As a social experiment of sorts. I knew full well what this picture would do, as I see similar reactions all the time.

Keep in mind, I was only at the shelter to visit with the dogs and photograph them for eventual networking. I do this because I want their adorable faces to be seen, and I want people to know that they are there and exist, and I want people to consider saving a life and adopting their next pet and family member from a shelter.

As I posted the picture of the dead dog I was also in the middle of editing and then uploading the many photographs I’d taken of the shelter dogs… This is always a process, as on any visit I come home with over 50 different dogs that I’d met that day. Instead of mass-uploading the pictures untouched I try to personally edit each photograph and then add an embedded informational tag that includes all of the relevant information for that specific dog. This takes me many hours, so the album began filling up throughout the day. By the end of the afternoon my new Carson shelter album consisted of a total of 69 pictures of 48 different dogs.

So back to my 2 reasons… The 1st should be obvious, as the placement of a dead corpse in the intake area is pretty damn unacceptable. Dead dogs shouldn’t be sitting out in the presence of other dogs or kids, both of whom were there on Wednesday to witness this.

Carson’s intake area is literally right as you enter the gate of the actual kennel facility, which lies directly behind the office and administrative staff, and numerous families with children were forced to walk right by this dog. Just as important are the dogs sitting next to the body, which were just surrendered and very likely already scared to death. In my opinion this type of stuff shows a lack of care and respect for the “sheltering” profession, the visiting public, and especially the animals themselves.

Some proposed the thought that maybe a member of the public simply stacked the animal there and left. My response to that would be that regardless of who put the body there, they were obviously instructed where to leave it by someone on the staff. A person just doesn’t drive a dead dog all the way to the shelter just to leave it anonymously on an intake crate. If they happened to be a concerned citizen they would have first went into the office and asked an employee what to do with the body. And if it wasn’t a concerned citizen then why would they even drive a dead dog’s body anywhere in the first place? That doesn’t make any sense to me personally. We can sit here and guess all day about who put it there–whether a member of the public or an AC worker or a staff member–but the entire circumstance just says a lot about a lot of things, none of which are good.

My 2nd reason for posting the picture is ultimately the reason why I now write this post. Almost 3 days after both the picture and my album were posted there’s things that have happened (and not happened) that just leave me shaking my head. As I write these words the picture of the dead dog has received 301 comments, been shared 804 times, and had a “total reach” (which Facebook classifies as “the number of people who saw your post”) of 35,860. By comparison, my Carson shelter album has received 6 comments, been shared 77 times, and had a “total reach” (throughout many different postings) of under 5,000. If I added up all of the comments on all 69 photographs inside of the album they would not equal the 301 comments that are currently on the single picture of the dead dog atop the intake cage. For someone that goes to the shelter to bring you the faces of these amazing dogs, in hopes that they be seen and considered, this is endlessly frustrating. Discouraging is a better word for it, especially when viewing the absolute frenzy that’s so often whipped up by pictures such as that of a dead dog. Many times it’s not even thoughtful commentary or action either, but rather some paragraph of curses and/or already answered questions. People threaten to do this or that, ideas are thrown about, but very few people ever do anything.

Further, there are more comments on the dead dog’s photo that are specifically criticizing me, the person who took the photo, and for “not doing anything” for the dog, than there are total comments on my Carson album’s link. There are photos inside of this album that, after almost 3 days, have not received a single lick of interaction at all (tag, like, share, comment). These are living dogs that depend on the networking! All of this matters to me, as this is how Facebook functions and the interaction is needed in order to push and promote these photographs into the viewable space of people’s Facebook walls. The algorithms are already less and less featuring fan pages, so minimal acts could have an effect, especially when added up. Yet live dogs are going basically ignored by the majority of people while so much enthusiastic traffic is being driven to me over 1 photograph, which is of a dog that is not alive.

As you can tell, I do not know how to deal with this. Other than voice my frustration in the most constructive way that I can. Many of you may not find it constructive. I apologize. I’m trying to be honest, while not being too critical, while also taking on a topic that demands I think critically. This is not directed at anyone specific, and I appreciate any help that can advance these dogs into a good home. But please consider the observation I’ve made.

Much of this same topic could be applied to the recent breed-discriminatory language coming out of Pasadena as well. You’ll see so many people against it online, up in arms, aghast over the gull of certain politicians, yet I’ve been the only public speaker on the topic at the last 3 City Council or relevant Committee meetings. This is the time to come! Not the hour before they vote! I only get 3 minutes to speak each week. No matter how good (or bad) you think I am at speaking on behalf of all of our dogs, I only get 3 minutes per meeting and that barely allows me to scratch the surface. This issue is so much bigger than that. Please help me oppose discrimination and please help me promote and network these amazing shelter dogs.

Thoughts after Riverside County officially votes to join the wrong side of history

Posted November 8th, 2013 in BSL News, Discrimination, Media, Prejudice, Shelters by Josh

…Where to start on my experience from October 8th’s Riverside County Board of Supervisors meeting, where they oversaw a 5-0 vote in favor of breed-discriminatory legislation… This decision came after multiple hours of egregious and blanket vilification, and preceded a media campaign that continued marginalizing people’s dogs at the expense of the “stated” objective of the new ordinance. Coincidentally, this law goes into effect today, November 8th, 30 days after the vote.

I guess I will start at the end of the meeting. Right as the vote came down it was immediately passed and then members of the media began scattering to get people who were “for” the ordinance on camera. I was standing in the back, to the side, because I was videotaping the entire meeting. Seconds after the vote came in I could feel people watching me. I’d say there were about 100 people in the room, 125 tops. I was just standing there thinking how pathetic and depressing it is to know that witch hunts are still not only carried out, but cheered. Numerous people were glaring at me, some even pointed (as I was looking back at them), others redirected their looks as soon as they saw me look back, and others whispered to the person next to them, who then looked at me. Not that I’m in any way special, but I had just given an impassioned public comment on behalf of Pit Bulls a little while earlier, so perhaps I was a target of their curiosity in that moment. My point here is that the “us” vs. “them” mentality was taking over. It was as if some of these folks were real proud of themselves, and not only that, but looking to gain power over me somehow because of this “defeat.” They were looking for a reaction, and some clearly took joy out of seeing this result happen. It was certainly in the air, and it kind of speaks to the vitriolic nature of someone that wants to blame an entire group of anything for the acts of the very few.

Rewind 8 hours and I had left my place at 6 am because I was driving from Redondo Beach and I wanted to get there with plenty of time to spare. I also knew that the 91 was in my near future, a very congested highway experience. The meeting itself ran late and media was out in force as the Supervisors went 1-by-1 through their line items. Finally the Pit Bull-related ordinance was up and everyone in the media stood, cropped and zoomed, and pushed record. They were all here for the Pit Bull. Had it been for 20 other breeds who are larger, more powerful, just as “potentially” (insert here), it wouldn’t have mattered. But since this fiasco involves the words “Pit” and “Bull” here they all were, adding to the circus.

It started with a “presentation” by Robert Miller, the Director of the Riverside County shelters, and Dr. Allan Drusys, their head veterinarian.

Mr. Miller starts presenting stats from the “licensed” dog population. He claims that Pit Bulls represent 9.75% of that population. He claims that there are “currently more than a half of million licensed dogs in our county.” If we just take the lowest end of his rough estimation we get at least 500,000 dogs, right? 9.75% of that population would be 48,750 Pit Bulls. So if, for example, he wants to cite 5 “maulings” that have happened within the county and blanketly attribute them to Pit Bulls, I’d then immediately want to ask him about the other 48,745 who have done nothing. Keep in mind that this number is actually MUCH higher, because he is only pulling data from “licensed” dogs, which admittedly represent a minimal fraction of the county’s total dog population.

For example, using the above calculation 5 out of 48,745 dogs is 0.0001025% of the “licensed” Pit Bull population of Riverside County. That means that 99.9998975% of the “licensed” Pit Bulls of Riverside County have not mauled or maimed a person. If the number 5 changes–to 4, or 8, or 10–the clear percentages don’t change. You get the point.

Also please note that back in April of this year Miller made this statement: “Right now, in this county (Riverside), there are tens of thousands of Pit Bulls, unaltered Pit Bulls, intact Pit Bulls.” So that, on top of those that are unlicensed, on top of those mentioned above that are coming out of the licensed population. This just continues to illustrate how many completely innocent Pit Bulls there are in Riverside County.

They then show visual maps proclaiming to represent all of the dog bites in the county (not sure where they are getting these numbers, as there is no legitimate database for actual dog bites) and by their own map dog bites by “other dogs” substantially outnumber those that are alleged to be by Pit Bulls. Again, keep in mind that their visual indicator representing a “Pit Bull bite” is a pushpin, which is about 5x larger in scale than the purple dots meant to represent bites by other dogs. Even with this visual trickery it still shows a clear unevenness. Amongst all of this, they never explain how they’ve gathered these numbers, nor can they explain what does and what does not represent a “Pit Bull cross” dog, as Dr. Drusys calls them.

Dr. Drusys says that the shelter impounds “about 4,000 Pit Bulls per year” and that they “represent 20% of all the dogs at the department.” Their displayed chart shows that around 3,000 of those dogs (or 75%) are euthanized at the shelter. Drusys then says that there are “some very nice dogs in that population” that are euthanized, but “the problem is that people don’t necessarily want to adopt them.” I will touch on this point in a second. He talks about “factors that negatively influence people not to adopt these animals,” pointing to a few things that could be factors with ALL DOGS (ala food aggression), but fails to point out any factors that his own statements and actions (or those of Robert Miller, the Board of Supervisors, or especially the media) may outright create or perpetuate. Hmm… That’s conveniently outrageous. He then says that “only very infrequently do patrons come into the shelters and adopt a 2, 3, 5-year-old Pit Bull.”

Okay, what really gets under my skin is the disingenuousness represented in these cowardly statements. FACT: The Riverside County shelter has not 1 but 3 entire buildings that are OFF LIMITS to the public. I have been told numerous times by trustworthy rescue folks who frequent this shelter that it is within these HIDDEN FROM PUBLIC VIEW buildings where most of the dogs deemed to be Pit Bulls are held. Not held for a day or 2 and then moved to the public adoption space, but held for the entirety of their stay. This means that these dogs are never even seen by the visiting public, making their chances for adoption zero. And yet Robert Miller and Allan Drusys want to claim that no one wants to adopt them? And while attempting to bring attention to their low adoptions rates? What a crock of you know what.

Further, the “Reported Dog Bite Cases” chart that they throw on the screen shows a literal decline every year, from 2008-09 through 2011-12, with 2012-13 rising slightly to meet the number from 2010-11. This number is still substantially lower (35-40% lower) than that of 2008-09. The doctor begins fumbling his words and says that he “needs a little more time” to convince his self that that is the trend. Um, okay. I point this out not to claim validity over their numbers, because I have no idea how they are even getting their numbers, but simply to point out that they are using these things as their evidence! The point is that this “evidence” should bring up more questions that far outweigh the definitive statements that they want people to mindlessly swallow.

Robert Miller chimes back in to say that spay and neuter would now be a condition of licensure, never acknowledging that this will actually cause fewer people to license their animals than already do currently (most dogs still go unlicensed), while at the same time giving the impression that it is the county’s goal to increase licenses. Pretty interesting. He then claims that they will provide a “process of appeal” to the breed identification component, but fails to explain that “process” (the identification or the appeal) in any way whatsoever.

Miller then moves on to the “concerns” portion of the slideshow and states upfront that the issue is “more of a population-based problem.” He says “the cost for the taxpayers to house this 20% of the dog population is the greatest problem.” Funny that he doesn’t critique his own performance as head of the shelter, or his stuffing most Pit Bull-type dogs away from public view, or his preference to vaguely disparage Pit Bulls in erroneous ways. He also says nothing about “the cost for the taxpayers” to carry out this proposed law, to institute a system that will attempt to identify these dogs, to allocate time and staff from an already “understaffed” and “overworked” personnel, and to deal with citizens who will undoubtedly have their due process rights violated in a number of ways.

He then notes the issue in Rialto where a “Pit Bull,” according to whomever, gave scratch-like abrasions to the legs of 2 children and was shot dead by a neighbor. This was reported by the media as a “mauling.” He makes no mention that this dog was OUT RUNNING LOOSE, the real problem. He continues citing “the press” as evidence that these types of incidents are happening more and more.

Mr. Miller goes on to claim that dog bite statistics “are tracked nationally.” No they are not. This is a blatant lie, and they most definitely are not tracked by breed. There is absolutely nothing Robert Miller could genuinely produce to back up this statement.

From there he begins vaguely making statements about bites, and the severity of such bites, giving the impression that you could essentially pick any Pit Bull bite out of a lineup of bites. This is absurd and exactly the type of all-encompassing garbage that takes the emphasis away from individual instances and puts it on totality demonization.

Crazier, in an effort to paint this vastly uneven picture, he claims that of all of the licensed dogs in the unincorporated areas of Riverside County, “only 5% represent Pit Bulls.” This goes against his own slideshow, where just 10 minutes earlier it said that 9.75% of all of the licensed dogs in the unincorporated areas of Riverside County represented Pit Bulls (see 1:20 of the above video).

Robert Miller is clearly a liar who can’t even get his faulty statistics straight during his 20-minute propaganda presentation. He then doubles down on the disgusting claim that no Pit Bull over a year-old is ever adopted by a willing public, while being the sole individual in charge of holding them in private cells until they are egregiously killed. What a piece of work. He continues harping on the kill-rate, a number he was presumably hired to lower, yet takes no accountability for being a slimy hatchet man whose actions universally seal the very fates he now complains about. Wipe your brow, nervous Robert, as you’ve brought shame on your person and you know you’ll ultimately receive the bad karma that you deserve.

At this point Supervisor John Benoit calls Miller’s argument “compelling,” and cites his biggest concern as being that “Riverside County had to pay to kill 3,000 innocent animals last year.” Um, isn’t this in some form or fashion Robert Miller’s incredibly massive failure as a shelter director? That argument can easily be made, even if no one on this Board wants to hear it. It’s just funny (and sad) that this never crosses Benoit’s mind, as he cites it as his biggest concern. He outright makes the statement that the negative attributes of some of the Pit Bulls isn’t the compelling argument. Comically he recognizes the “publishing of one breed’s killing numbers” on their website as “discriminating” (which it is), yet recognizing nothing they (the Board of Supervisors) have done leading up to this moment, nor what they are doing at this moment as being discriminatory. Pretty breathtaking.

Supervisor Jeff Stone takes over and within his communication with Dr. Drusys, sees Drusys claim that “society is to blame.” This statement, although true, isn’t examined any further, other than to wrongly validate Stone’s vague perception of a Pit Bull. Stone then 180’s on Benoit’s statement, citing it’s sad they’ve killed 3,000 shelter Pit Bulls, but that “the paramount importance of this ordinance is that we need to protect the public from these vicious animals that have been engineered to cause bodily injury.” Shortly thereafter he refers to them again as “vicious animals that jeopardize the health and safety of our residents.” Totally shameful stuff by Stone and a clear indication of what this ordinance is really about.

On to the public comments…

Above Dr. Kristopher Irizarry, who has a PhD in genetics and genomics from UCLA, talks about how his group has published 2 papers on visual identification vs. DNA identification. He states that visual identification is “horrendous.” He then asks for more details on how the identification process will play out, and if it’s visual, will the owners of the animals then incur the costs of the DNA identification test in an attempt to refute the visual claim coming from animal control. Irizarry also notes Elaine Ostrander‘s 2010 study which showed that “the morphological appearance of a dog is controlled by 50 genes, out of the 20,000 genes that make up a dog’s genome. And so when you say a dog looks like a Pit Bull you’re really saying it has 4 or 5 genes that affect its physical shape, its head-shape, its snout, and it has no basis whatsoever on its behavior.” He ends his comment by saying that “3 or 4 generations that you breed from a dog, you’re normally going to have like 12.5% of the DNA from that great-great-ancestor, so most dogs that look like pits are crossed with other things, and even the DNA test, but it’s always the pit that it’s attributed to if it’s a bad thing, even if it’s 75% lab.”

A representative from PETA then comes forward and throws Pit Bulls completely under the bus by supporting the proposed ordinance, as she begrudges them in mass, and while lying about the “success” of similar ordinances. This is no surprise to anyone that knows anything about PETA, as Ingrid Newkirk (their founder and president) has for years lobbied to phase Pit Bulls out of existence by any means necessary. This is routinely masked in doublespeak as to pose as compassionate. See here, and here, and here, and here, and here, and here, and here, and here, and all throughout here.

This woman’s stats that she presents relating to San Francisco’s ordinance are a common talking point that can be refuted simply by looking at the actual numbers… She claims that “21% fewer Pit Bulls had been impounded” since the passing of San Francisco’s breed-specific mandatory spay and neuter, and that “the number of Pit Bulls euthanized had reportedly dropped 24%.” No timetable is clearly noted to accompany her statistics. To the contrary, Brent Toellner of KC Dog Blog actually did public record requests in order to get the hard numbers, and he compares the 19 months prior to the law going into effect with the 19 months after the law went into effect. They show that during the 19 months prior that the kill-rate for Pit Bulls was 56%, and that they represented 33% of the total intake. Pit Bulls represented 61% of all dogs killed that entered the shelter. During the 19 months after it showed that the kill-rate for Pit Bulls was 58% (an increase of 2%), and that they represented 26.5% of the total intake (a decrease of 6.5%). Pit Bulls represented 58% of all dogs killed that entered the shelter (a decrease of 3%). The city’s recorded bite numbers (from all dogs) also showed a 13.4% increase over the same 19-month period following the law going into effect. These numbers do not vibe with what PETA claims.

Here’s further evidence, showing bite numbers not being positively effected, pulled from separate reports done by Dr. Terry Houston. The 1st report, which was done and given to the San Francisco Animal Control group prior to their passing of BSL, includes this adamant paragraph…

The data from the City of San Francisco indicates that mandatory spay/neuter of any specific breed based on reported bites to the city is not an effective method of minimizing dog bites. The risk from an intact dog for the moderate/severe bites shows that reproductive status is not a risk factor. The high portion of males as victims in reported bites also would indicate that bites are very much a human factor. To minimize dog bites the issue has to be addressed to all dog owners, not just particular breeds. Training and socialization of the dog are important factors to help minimize the risk of a dog bite.

Above is my public comment, and the many presented points are detailed here. Also worth note is that the media never covers any of these points, nor do they feel as though they are worthy of pointing out when discussing public safety. Pretty darn absurd.

These are all of the other public comments that were given. A lot of good stuff in there from responsible dog owners coming out on behalf of all of our dogs. “Fear-based law”? That’s absolutely what this is. This same commenter mentions Elle, a Pit Bull Terrier, who a day earlier had won 2013’s “American Hero Dog” from the American Humane Association. She also talks about being specific vs. generalizing. The 2nd commenter admits that she was frightened by Pit Bulls prior to actually meeting one. She’s since adopted a Pit Bull and clearly loves her dog as a member of her family. Zia Bossenmeyer, a member of a local spay and neuter organization, details why she is against the ordinance and explains its impact on low-income communities. “Well-intentioned but misinformed.” The only thing that I’d disagree with is that many of these Supervisors are not “well-intentioned” at all. Another commenter makes the point that these dogs are often stolen because so many will “go with anybody.” Comments against the ordinance continue asking for rationality.

Beaumont City Councilwoman Brenda Knight (13:09), who constantly comes out to push BSL/BDL onto other counties and cities, drops one of the most laughable statements of the entire session… “These are verifiable, it’s from DogsBite.org.”

Um, yeah. That website is run by a woman who has made it her life’s work to flagrantly demonize the Pit Bull Terrier at all costs. Her name is Colleen Lynn, and she is on the record stating that she wants all Pit Bulls dead. This language from Lynn has been evasively softened more recently, and depending on who she’s talking to, because she must’ve learned that most people don’t care too much for control-freak authoritarians. Regardless, her website is the main hub for anti-Pit Bull propaganda and cherry-picked “statistics.” Not much of a “source” to anyone genuinely trying to pay attention to, and understand, any part of this issue.

Knight says the following: “Pit Bulls made up less than 5% of the total U.S. dog population. There were 38 U.S. fatal dog attacks. Despite being regulated in military housing areas and over 600 U.S. cities, Pit Bulls contributed to 61% of these deaths.” This comes directly from Colleen Lynn’s website.

First off, this claim that “Pit Bulls” make up less than 5% of the total U.S. dog population is complete rubbish. Low-end estimations of 4-6 million dogs divided into 72 million dogs comes out to over 5%. These are all estimates of course, and no one has exact numbers on anything, because so many dogs go unlicensed. But to not even be able to represent the basic estimates correctly is pretty silly. So that’s first. Then we get into the domain of “what is” a Pit Bull. If, when a dog attacks, any dog that’s not a Chihuahua is called a “Pit Bull-mix” by these same folks, then why doesn’t that type of careless tallying go both ways when calculating how many “Pit Bulls” exist in the country? Yeah. That’s inconvenient. That would easily double (or more) that estimation. Yet these people parrot this notion that Pit Bulls make up less than 5% of any dog population. A complete and utter fairytale on every level. Next, they note 38 fatalities and then want to drop percentages like the identification of the dogs involved have been in any way scientifically validated. They haven’t. Most “statistics” that DogsBite.org exploit are purely pulled from media accounts, which oftentimes lack all traces of actual evidence. Yet words are reported, and repeated, as fact. This is unreliable. That’s the only fact there.

But back to Brenda Knight… She’s the same woman that back in April said that Pit Bulls “bite like sharks.” Literally everything that she says is the most exploitative, vague, and all-encompassing crap that you could say. These Board of Supervisors ate it all up.

The next commenter follows suit, calling yard (“resident” dogs) and chained dogs “family Pit Bulls.” Wrong. He then notes an attack where dogs were loose, even saying the word “loose,” but doesn’t find any issue with the fact that they were loose, only that they were claimed to be Pit Bull mixes. He also doesn’t have any problem with the breed that the media claimed that the involved dogs were mixed with (in this case Australian Shepherds).

The last woman to speak tragically lost her granddaughter to a dog attack in 2003. She said that she was “mauled to death” by a “baby Pit Bull.” She then outright admits that “the babysitter left her for 3 hours.” The babysitter was “running errands.” If you read the above article you will find that while the babysitter was gone this 2-year-old child made her way into the front yard, and then was met by the loose or chained dog that was in this vicinity. She then basically claims, and definitely implies, that Pit Bull owners care more about their dogs than their children and other people’s children. Nonsensical and completely unfair. Clearly this woman doesn’t care much about the fact that her 2-year-old granddaughter was left alone for 3 hours, and that that’s what allowed this to happen, or find that relevant. If she does then she doesn’t inform the Supervisors.

By watching the video, are you noticing any common denominator from these commenters? Holding posters and pictures of injuries, alongside the most vicious picture of a dog that they can find. Yeah. All while I actually held up the existing Riverside County dangerous dog law that already exists (that’s breed-neutral and goes completely unenforced), and the Board of Supervisors could care less about that.

It honestly begs the question… Is this about actual public safety or simply expediting the killing of innocent animals while you breathtakingly betray the public’s trust in the process? And done while claiming to want to lower shelter kill-numbers but knowing that they will undoubtedly rise; and while calling those already killed Pit Bulls “innocent,” but then on a dime calling them “dangerous” and “vicious” in any other context; and while violating state law’s principled protection against breed discrimination, while your own words and the media’s coverage flagrantly discriminates against breeds that you have generically deemed problematic but can’t even identify. Incredible.

In the above video Dr. Allan Drusys attemps to respond to myself and Dr. Irizarry’s major concern about breed identification. He begins by citing the study by Victoria Voith, the same study that we both brought up in our public comments, and proudly states that many of those tests occurred at their shelter! LOL. That isn’t something to be proud of, considering that the study found that animal control officer’s MISIDENTIFIED impounded animals over 70% of the time! Yet he proudly admits the link and no one draws the parallel or shows further interest in actually looking at the study.

Drusys then makes many statements throwing shade on the DNA-testing process, saying oftentimes the results “defy logic.” He says that some of the breeds listed on the test they had never heard of, “let alone seen at one of our animal shelters.” Um, how would you know to see it if you haven’t heard of it, and ultimately who’s fault is that? Yeah, none of that seemed to matter much. Drusys says that “breed identification genetic testing isn’t an absolute either.”

Following this he admits in many ways that the identification is all done visually, then ignorantly claims that there’s a “consensus,” and then draws an asinine comparison to pornography! Dr. Drusys said that “no one can define it, but everyone knows it when they see it.” This, along with many of the emotionally-driven, problem- and solution-allergic public comments, certifiably stamps this entire proceeding as an absolute shit show.

Drusys then says that the appeals process is outlined in the ordinance. No it isn’t. Read the ordinance, there is nothing outlined at all. Wilder, they actually put in print that the burden of proof is on the owner of the dog to prove that whatever dog in question isn’t a Pit Bull, rather than the burden of proof being on Riverside County to prove that their dog is a Pit Bull. That is incredible. Constitutional law quite clearly shows that this country’s legal foundation is based on things being the other way around. Just look at the insane “Section 6” of this ordinance… You can’t take someone’s property, call it a “Pit Bull,” have that sole determination be your “proof,” and then force the property owner to prove that their dog isn’t what you say it is.

Riverside County Ordinance 921

That is obvious precrime, made famous by the movie Minority Report. This county is openly criminalizing even being a Pit Bull, and by visual assertment only, and then all dogs they deem to be “guilty” of being Pit Bulls are just that, guilty until proven innocent of not being Pit Bulls. The document outright states that the “owner has the burden.” So illegal, and stupid. They will undoubtedly be sued.

Further, nowhere in the ordinance does it even non-lazily define what makes a “Pit Bull,” or what percentage of whatever noted breeds then justifies a “Pit Bull.” 50%? 25%? 1%? There is nothing in any kind of detail at all, no attempt was even made. The document even refers to American Staffordshire Terriers as “American Stafford Terriers.” This is worth noting because it displays that whatever button-pusher wrote this document doesn’t even know what they are talking about on that basic level. Then the Dr. says that the appeals process would rely on the same DNA-testing that he minutes earlier said “isn’t absolute” and many times “defies logic.” Again, I point these things out not to validate the art of DNA-testing, because it seems to have its flaws (big or small, I don’t know, I am not a scientist), but to rather highlight the hypocrisy of a system that won’t take serious any “proof” that a DNA test may provide when inconvenient to their intent, or how it reveals an identification rabbit hole, but will still then turn around and use these same DNA tests if challenged on an identification appeal.

The point is that Pit Bull-type dogs CANNOT BE SCIENTIFICALLY IDENTIFIED, as much of that process is subjective, and much of it currently is purely done visually, and none of it aims to focus on the acts of the individual dog but rather how they all look instead.

It then comes out that who will be the first line of identification will be the “referring veterinarian.” So if a dog is already licensed then it will apparently be the listed breed on its rabies certificate that will first determine what breed it is. Doesn’t matter if it’s wrong, doesn’t matter if the previous owner is mistaken, and none of the problems outlined in the prior paragraph (all of which apply under this scenario as well) seem to matter at all to these folks writing and passing the ordinance.

What does seem to repeatedly matter to Robert Miller is the “outcome” statistics, as he cites again the inability of Pit Bulls to be adopted. No mind paid to his untransparent stashing of Pit Bulls, villainizing of Pit Bulls, or categorical failure as the director of numerous shelters. Miller then brings up L.A. City and L.A. County, and their mandatory spay and neuter laws, both of which go COMPLETELY UNENFORCED, yet that gets no mention. Drusys then says that the Pit Bulls are the largest group of “easily definable” dogs. Ha! Miller then again claims that most of the dogs are “self-identified,” ignoring the fact that the same list of problems exists with that premise.

THIS WAS AN UTTER FAILURE OF EXPLANATION IF I’VE EVER WITNESSED ONE. A MASSIVE FAIL.

Finally the vote comes down and it is an egregious 5-0 vote which patently ignores common sense, defies logic, and does everything short of spitting in the face of the many passionate public speakers that came out to raise points and make it known that they don’t approve of the demonization of Pit Bulls, or entire groups of anything, for the sins of the extreme few.

I want to notate many of the statements made in the above clip, which again, clearly show the (hidden in plain view) purpose of this ordinance:

Supervisor John Tavaglione: “I am sick and tired of debating this issue, because I have seen scores and scores of deaths and maiming of individuals, of all ages, as a result of Pit Bull attacks.”

Supervisor John Tavaglione: “I heard the young lady say we are sensationalizing. Well, if you talk about a 2-year-old innocent boy, who was pulled out of his bedroom, by 2 or 3 dogs, that actually there were 7 that I understand, in the yard, in Colton. Mauled to death. His face ripped off. And then the man who had to leave to babysit his grandchildren, where I wish I was today, he mentioned that 2-year-old boy. And also the 8-year-old James Hernandez, who still sits at Loma Linda University, who was out proudly riding his bicycle, which he just learned to ride without training wheels in a cul-de-sac in Corona, who was attack by 2 Pit Bulls who broke loose out of their yard. Dug a hole under their chain link fence and attacked him. You talk about an 87-year-old lady in Jurupa, just west of us, last year who simply went out to get her mail and was attacked by a Pit Bull roaming the streets. You talk about another elderly man who was in a wheelchair just this last year, sitting on his porch, who was attacked by his own family Pit Bull, and died. Is that sensationalism? I don’t think so. That’s death and maiming.”

Supervisor John Tavaglione: “I’ve been told by people that they’re afraid to walk their own pet dogs, small dogs, in their own neighborhoods. Or for mothers to walk their children in strollers in their neighborhoods, because they know there are Pit Bulls and people who walk their Pit Bulls. They’re fearful of walking their dogs and children in their neighborhoods because they’ve heard of all of these stories. Isn’t that horrible? It’s a horrible way to live.”

Supervisor John Tavaglione: “These Pit Bulls, and mixes, a lot of people don’t understand this, their bites are 2,000 pounds per inch. Their jaws apply a pressure of roughly 2,000 pounds per inch and they don’t let loose. Versus other dogs? 750 pounds per inch.”

Supervisor John Tavaglione: “It’s time to say enough is enough. Stop the killing, or at least stop the process that will stop the killing and maiming. I’m tired of seeing innocent people hurt.”

I’d like to directly address Supervisor Tavaglione… “Have the will”? You think what you’ve done is courageous? You think what you’ve done is leadership? What you’ve done is easy. What you’ve done is prejudicial through and through, and wrong at every end. This shows no will, or courage, or leadership, or desire to improve public safety. You, like the purporters of the sham data that you repeat, have no desire to improve public safety or help our fellow citizens. You’d rather tear down millions of dogs (and their owners) than focus on the individual incidents and the situations that repeatedly lead to these incidents. Loose dogs? You don’t care. Non-existent supervision? You don’t care. Criminal behavior and unspeakable treatment of dogs? You don’t care. It is people like you who literally disgrace public office and what it should mean to be in the position that you are in. You are a joke. Where do you get off implying that Pit Bull owners want to see innocent people hurt? Or anybody hurt, innocent or not? You are such an asshole. I think very little of you at this point and yet I don’t have any desire to see you hurt. Imagine that! I desire to see you gain some rationality and drop your (admitted) 19-year grudge against millions of innocent dogs. I desire to see you gain some perspective and focus on the circumstances that create these horrendous outcomes, rather than scapegoating groups in mass and grandstanding on the top of a select number of maimed and dead victims. You are a very sad and nasty person, truly.

Supervisor Jeff Stone: “What I’ve learned over the many decades is that the genome of the Pit Bull has been manipulated to create a very vicious animal with a catastrophic bite.”

Supervisor Jeff Stone: “One of the speakers mentioned that Pit Bulls represent less than 5% of the dog population in the United States but are responsible for over 61% of the dog mauling deaths. I think that’s a startling statistic.”

Supervisor Jeff Stone: “I think that if 1 life can be spared through this ordinance, that it’s 1 life worth saving.”

Supervisor Jeff Stone: “If you look at a little baby tiger they’re a very innocent, lovable cub. But it’s not something that you want to raise as a pet because when they grow older they have this instinct to want to kill.”

Supervisor Jeff Stone: “I believe that there could be a gene for aggressiveness or viciousness in dogs.”

Supervisor Kevin Jeffries: “The type and the length of the attacks by Pit Bulls, just incredibly vicious.”

Supervisor Kevin Jeffries: “I hope and pray that the cities that make up the bulk of the population in this county follow suit so that we can save even more lives.”

Supervisor Marion Ashley: “We heard a lot of testimony out there saying ‘we don’t need this ordinance,’ and the more I heard, just smoke and mirrors. And based on some of their comments there is no problem. That’s all smoke and mirrors as far as I’m concerned.”

Supervisor Marion Ashley: “The reality of these vicious bites, these vicious attacks, is with us, it’s all around our districts. No one is making this up. This is real.”

Supervisor Marion Ashley: “This definitely should be a model ordinance for other counties to follow, and also cities within our county, the Inland Empire, and cities throughout California. If they need a model ordinance well hopefully this will be a good place to start.”

^So California, do you think any of this has to do with “spay and neuter,” or “bringing down a shelter’s kill numbers”? Are these not disparaging remarks meant to demonize the Pit Bull?

Supervisor Ashley called the many great comments and points made by numerous folks that showed up in support of their dog (and yours) “smoke and mirrors.” Nice. He said that defenders of Pit Bulls didn’t recognize that there was a problem. I can only speak for myself, but I laid out problem after problem, and right in front of Mr. Ashley, who sat literally right in front of the podium that I stood at. If he tuned me out from 5 feet away then I’d hope that at some point he’ll actually take the time to read those problems again. They were there. They are there. They will forever be there, in almost every dog-caused human fatality, and no matter the breed.

A relevant point that bears repeating: What is a detriment to public safety is people who allow their dogs to roam freely and without supervision. That’s irresponsible. What is a detriment to public safety is people who chain or confine their dog to a specific area, unsupervised, and then allow children to enter that premises, unsupervised. That’s irresponsible. Show me an “attack,” in your county or elsewhere, that doesn’t fit 1 of those 2 scenarios. It’s hard to do. Yet you choose to ignore these facts to focus on the appearance of a dog instead of the behavior of its human.

^How in the world is that smoke and mirrors? How is pointing out that Riverside County ALREADY HAS a breed-neutral dangerous dog law on the books, and that it obviously and routinely must go unenforced, smoke and mirrors? My God, the Supervisors are astonishingly poor listeners to simply discard those points of contention or pretend that they don’t exist. It’s an embarrassing display of ignorance and arrogance. Is that the takeaway? My takeaway is that this Board of Supervisors had their minds made up on how this vote was going to go, and long before this dog and pony show played out for the media.

Before I wrap this extremely long entry up I’d like to say something to the California rescue and advocation community… Where are you? I personally know countless certified Pit Bull rescues in this state and only 1 of you sent a representative to these meetings, to speak truth, to advocate on behalf of the dogs. I have no idea who or how many of you were advocating behind the scenes, through email, etc. But why not go as well? Why not send someone, a volunteer, anyone? Is it honestly the spay and neuter component? Is it too politically incorrect to oppose an attempt at further spay and neuter, even as you see it disgustingly dovetailed in disguise with nasty and untrue rhetoric that consistently paints millions of dogs as monsters? My God. Where are you? This is breed-specific, or rather breed-discriminatory legislation in its finest form. And what’s just as bad is the steaming pile of disingenuousness marinating off the top of this heap of nonsense, and on your watch. This is a definite precedent-setter. This is right out of the pages of DogsBite.org and other bigotry-fueled hatemongers, who have readjusted their ends to fit more “acceptable” language, even as their goals remain the same. Those goals seep nastily through the coverage of this monstrosity. They seep nastily out of the mouths of these Supervisors. Do you have a TV? A computer? Do you not see and hear the narratives? Are you deaf, blind, dumb? Silence and/or inaction is an act, just like doing something or saying something is an act. The dogs deserve better.

As everyone was filing out of the room the cop who was stationed in the back for the entirety of the meeting came walking by me to leave. We had been standing probably 10 feet from each other the entire time, never speaking other than to initially say hello and then to have him tell me to keep my conversation quiet during the meeting. He was an older gentleman than me, maybe in his late 60’s. At one point I had the notion to mozy on over to him and ask him what he thought of all of this insanity. His poker face was on and any time that I found myself looking in his direction I could never really tell. But as he headed toward the exit he put his hand on my shoulder, leaned in and said, “You did a good job Mr. Josh. You were very articulate and passionate, and I was impressed.” I told him that I appreciated that and he was out the door. Hopefully he knows that all of our dogs are truly innocent until proven guilty. Do you?

If you’d like to contact the Supervisors individually and continue this dialogue in your own way then please do so…
District 1, Kevin Jeffries: district1@rcbos.org | 951-955-1010
District 2, John Tavaglione: district2@rcbos.org | 951-955-1020
District 3, Jeff Stone: district3@rcbos.org | 951-955-1030
District 4, John Benoit: district4@rcbos.org | 951-955-1040
District 5, Marion Ashley: district5@rcbos.org | 951-955-1050

Please send this email out to those representing the L.A. County DACC

Posted October 11th, 2013 in Discrimination, Prejudice, Shelters by Josh

Dear SwayLove.org supporters: Please send this email out…

To: gmoreno@animalcare.lacounty.gov, areyes@animalcare.lacounty.gov, mmayeda@animalcare.lacounty.gov, rreid@animalcare.lacounty.gov

Subject: Dianne Prado

Can someone please give us an update as to what is going on with her volunteer position? She’s been suspended from the shelter since 8/5, while the shelter continues to lack volunteers and while tons of potential future volunteers sit in the pipeline because of the apathetic nature of someone’s staff, who can’t be bothered to schedule more trainings. She comes home and is in tears about this issue almost every night. What needs to be done? Dianne has told you that she won’t sign that selectively enforced document that essentially justifies your in-house breed-discrimination. Does this mean she is terminated as a volunteer? Is she going to sit in limbo for months? She already has, will it be 2 more months? 4? 6? DOES ANYONE AT L.A. COUNTY ANIMAL CARE AND CONTROL CARE, AT ALL?

Thank You.

For those who would want background on this issue, please read here: http://www.swaylove.org/this-is-extremely-wrong

San Bernardino City police harass shelter dog networkers

Posted October 7th, 2013 in Shelters by Josh

Do you like animals? Do you go to a kill shelter and visit them? Do you give them treats? Do you take photographs and video of them in order to try and save their lives? Do you also shine light on the mismanagement of the shelter system? Do you use your 1st Amendment to give your own testimony? Well criminals, the cops may be poking around your area soon!

A response to the picketing of L.A. County shelter workers

Posted October 2nd, 2013 in Shelters by Josh

How about they fire Marcia Mayeda (Director of the web of L.A. County pet-killing facilities), then divvy up her massive salary (over $150,000/yr) between shelter workers that actually give a damn and programs that could be created that those shelter workers could then run in order to help save their impounded dogs? Further, I guarantee that many of the shelter workers out there on the picket line yesterday could honestly care less about animals and should be doing something else, anything else. How about they also get rid of Gil Moreno (Carson shelter) and other uncompassionate managers, bring on driven people from outside of the system for half or even a third of the money, then give them bonuses from L.A. County that would be strictly based on performance to fill the salary gaps?

When puppies are killed the Carson shelter always cries “parvo”

Posted September 25th, 2013 in Shelters by Josh

6puppies

The woman who took these photos updated her thread that all 6 of them were killed this morning because they had “parvo.” 3 of the 6 ID#s were A4632094, A4633095 and A4632097. She also mentioned that when she called 2 days ago she was told that they were exposed to parvo but had all tested negative. Now here they are dead, killed under the guise of having parvo.

Newsflash: The Carson shelter says that every puppy they kill has “parvo.” This is a given. It’s not even a legitimate statement, rather a dubious claim meant to justify their lazy tactics of murdering innocent puppies that they’d rather not waste any energy on networking or securing rescue for. Why would they do any of that? They think so little of rescues and the process that’s involved that they don’t even have a rescue coordinator, a position that most kill shelters have, even if just for looks. They haven’t had one for about 2 years now and the last woman to hold the position wasn’t at all qualified, shocker.

I would suggest that people do public record requests for the medical paperwork, and then publish the results that you get back. At the very least it shows that people are engaged and it tells them they are being watched. Were tests even given? Or were blocks just filled out, copied and pasted to give the appearance that tests were given and that all the puppies tested positive? There’s no way to know, and this shelter knows it. They don’t have to document in any fashion whether a test was given, or what the results were, that would then coincide with any piece of information that actually tracks back to something. They can simply fill in a box, but this is all done on the honor system. The Carson shelter has no honor.

How about some energy be put forth in trying to find out how these dogs were actually exposed to parvo in the first place? How about some energy be put forth in trying to better the sanitation realities that allow such diseases to spread, if in this case such disease even existed? Instead, this shelter basically functions under carte blanche, acting in any way that they see fit. I am the unofficial oversight. You can be the unofficial oversight. If we aren’t then they have none. Those in “official” positions could patently care less.

What is this and how is it helpful?

Posted September 5th, 2013 in Shelters by Josh

L.A. County has been touting their “new” website for awhile now but I must say that it looks and functions a lot like their old website when it comes to the art of actually displaying the dogs. The only thing different about this website seems to be the color of its framework.

Why are we still getting results like this?

lacountywebsite

If you can’t see this clearly enough it displays no picture where there should be a picture displayed. And it starts not 1 but 5 template sentences and then fails to finish each line with any speck of descriptive text whatsoever. This specific post fails to list a name, age, sex, type of dog, sterilization status, which shelter they are at, what day they were impounded, what day they are to become “available” and finally their current kennel number.

It looks like this: “and I’m approximately . I am . I have been at the since . You can visit me at my temporary home at .”

It should look like this (see below): “My name is _____ and I’m an approximately 10 month old female Pit Bull. I am not yet spayed. I have been at the Carson Animal Care Center since September 3, 2013. I will be available on September 11, 2013. You can visit me at my temporary home at C325.”

lacountywebsite2

Individual notes should come below this, they hardly ever do.

So why is such a lack of minimal effort put forth, for even the most basic of duties? How does a dog or cat’s picture fail to make it onto the website? Truth be told, many animals do not get their pictures put on this website at all. But further, how is the blank template uploaded with no descriptive information? Who’s job is it to enter this information? How are they failing to do a basic thing that every impounded shelter animal deserves to have? What is this and how is it helpful?

Be an adversarial journalist

Posted August 21st, 2013 in Inspiration, Shelters by Josh

I don’t want to delve into the political arena too far on this page, but I heard Glenn Greenwald mention a phrase this morning that essentially sums up perfectly what I try to do with my website… “Adversarial journalism.”

…They (establishment journalists) believe in subservient journalism, not adversarial journalism. I only believe in the latter. If you want to start criminalizing journalism, it means that you’re asking, as a citizen, to be kept ignorant and to allow people in power to conceal what they’re doing behind a wall of secrecy and to have no accountability or transparency. Journalism is not a crime and it is not terrorism.

Greenwald’s talking about the political system and the national security apparatus, I’m talking about the “sheltering” system and all of their backwardness from over in my little pocket of the world. They are both empires that routinely go unchallenged. Be an adversarial journalist.

This is extremely wrong

Posted August 14th, 2013 in Discrimination, Prejudice, Shelters by Josh

*This was originally written on 8/5 and not posted until now because of Dianne’s first meeting with Gil Moreno, which hadn’t happened yet. He is now attempting to make her sign a “letter of expectation” in order to continue as a volunteer. This document apparently took many days to be doctored up by L.A. County’s administration department and was finally ready on Monday. No other volunteer is being asked to sign this. She has not seen a copy of the “letter of expectation” and her request to see it prior to their second meeting (which is tomorrow) was denied. The dog, referenced below as being in the play yard when Dianne was approached by Sgt. Webb, was killed days later. Dianne was also effectively barred from this weekend’s adoption events that she had signed up to work.

So today my girlfriend got notice that she was suspended from volunteering at the Carson shelter, pending a meeting with shelter manager Gil Moreno. This comes a day after getting in trouble while we were both onsite at the shelter and doing our normal routine of taking dogs back to the play yard and shooting videos of them for the purposes of networking them online. On top of that, another volunteer was also suspended and told to leave the shelter today. This girl is a 17-year-old high school student and one of the best volunteers that the Carson shelter even has. Their crimes? Taking dogs into the play yard. Being friendly with one another and making appearances in my videos. Dianne being my girlfriend. Sydney being an ally of my girlfriend’s. Yes, it’s that ridiculous.

This is the straight facts, no filter: The Carson shelter and manager Gil Moreno have instituted a shelter-specific policy that no “dominant breed” dog can be taken out of its kennel unless it has first passed a temperament test. This also doubles as an adoption policy, meaning no “dominant breed” dog can be adopted without first passing a temperament test. All non-“dominant breed” dogs do not even require that they be temperament tested. What is a “dominant breed”? Any dog that they say fits the bill, select staff members are the judge and the jury. All dogs then deemed by staff to be any part Pit Bull are classified as “dominant breed.” Not only is this breed-discriminatory legislation (which is against state law) on an in-house policy basis, but there is zero oversight and Mr. Moreno is essentially able to get away with each unjust “policy” that he decides on a whim to put into place. What this means is that the majority of all Pit Bull-type dogs are placed in their kennels and never taken out again until they are walked to the back to be euthanized. The Carson shelter does not do mandatory temperament testing of “dominant breed” dogs. They say they cannot due to not having enough staff. Yet, this shelter refuses to allow the volunteers the opportunity to help with testing, be trained on testing and ultimately alleviate some of that claimed burden by giving the tests themselves. What this means is that no “dominant breed” dog is even given a temperament test unless they first receive an interested party. What this means is that any “dominant breed” dog that doesn’t organically gain interest from a member of the adopting public will never receive a temperament test. What this means is that during their stay at the shelter those dogs are then banned from ever leaving their cage. No volunteer is allowed to socialize them, walk them, interact with them, run with them, play with them. Nothing. All of this pays no mind to the portion of this situation where the dog then has to pass the temperament test if it’s lucky enough to get one given to it in the first place. The discrimination and backwardness that goes hand in hand with the way these tests are so often given is a whole different topic entirely. Not to be forgotten, for those “dominant breed” dogs that do get scheduled for temperament tests it can routinely take this shelter 5-7 days to get around to administering them. So as a wanted dog sits in its cage waiting to be temperament tested, other dogs absolutely die for the excuse of “space.” Many dogs also often get sick while waiting, and these scenarios give rise to miscommunication and mistakes.

This was yesterday…

I was sitting in the empty play yard alone, waiting for Dianne to bring back another dog, when Sgt. Webb approached me and just started staring at me through the fence. Feeling awkward, I told him that a volunteer was coming right back and he just sort of gave me a nod and walked over to the side, out of view. As soon as Dianne could be seen approaching with another dog he reappeared and cut her off. Dianne motioned for me to come out of the cage, so I just walked out and went about my business walking through the runs.

Apparently Sgt. Webb asked which dog Dianne currently was handling and then went back to check its temperament test results. While he was doing this Dianne began playing with the dog in the play yard. He came right back and demanded that she immediately take the dog out of the play yard and put it back in the kennel because it had “failed” its temperament test. Dianne, feeling disgusted, went into advocacy mode for the dog that was happily sitting patiently by her side. She asked him, “Does he look aggressive to you?” She’d just been playing fetch with him for the last 10 minutes, and he was awesome! The dog was incredibly friendly and playful, and was doing great out in the yard. Sgt. Webb still claimed that he was aggressive and that she was violating policy by having him out of his kennel. A testy exchange ensued and Dianne came to find out that the dog was failed after an AC officer took him out of his kennel and he went to lunge at the front of the neighboring dog’s cage. That’s as far as the temperament test went. They put the dog back and failed him without even conducting the test. This dog had 2 different IPs (interested parties) on his file and they were very likely called back and told that he had “failed” his temp-test and was now unavailable for adoption.

Long story short, Dianne told Sgt. Webb that this was what was wrong with the Carson shelter. That they were routinely killing friendly dogs and that it was inhumane for them to never be able to be walked or interacted with. She was upset, tearing up as she spoke and internally furious. Sgt. Webb told her that she could ask Gil to have him re-tested tomorrow, and that he would update the dog’s notes and say not to euthanize him for 24 hours.

Dianne did just that, emailed Gil when she got home, and she was promptly rebuked when her request for a re-test was denied without explanation. She was then told that she was suspended until he could speak to her in person for violating the play yard protocol. She told him that she’d be at the shelter twice tomorrow, dropping and picking up a pair of dogs, but he said that he couldn’t meet with her then. Actually, he couldn’t meet with her until at least Wednesday. She then let him know that she’s pretty busy at work but could come in on Friday. Gil said that he wouldn’t be in on Friday, and oh yeah, he won’t be in on Thursday either. It needs to be Wednesday at 3pm. No regard for the fact that Dianne works 12 hours a day as a non-profit attorney in downtown Los Angeles. Apparently phone or email communication about this situation wouldn’t suffice either. Worse yet, Dianne was set to volunteer at 2 different offsite adoption events this weekend (1 which she arranged herself for the shelter with a PetSmart manager) and now can no longer attend. Gil Moreno is actually blocking someone who works all week at their own job from volunteering 10-15 extra hours of their weekend time in order to get his shelter’s pets adopted. Yes, that’s Gil.

So she is being dually punished: First for taking dogs out that haven’t passed their temperament tests (even though they’ve never been given one), and second for allowing me to physically be in the yard with the dog without getting a “puppy pass” for each dog that she gets out.

A puppy pass is when you go to the front desk and ask to see a specific dog, and they in turn tell you yes or no and then grant you a pass. This is done for “liability” purposes. Instead of dealing with the individual red-tape of it all, I asked Gil back when this first became an issue if I could just preemptively sign away my liability for all future dogs… I was told that I could not. I tried to then get further clarification in an attempt for a more workable solution. I sent Gil 3 emails regarding numerous outstanding issues… One on 7/2, another on 7/8 and then another on 7/16. He did not respond to any of them.

From 7/2:

“You can’t place volunteer networking holds on dogs outside of their 5-day holding period.” – Myra to Dianne today… Is this a new rule that is just now being implemented? Because both holds Dianne has place prior to this attempt have been on dogs outside of their 5-day holding period. Ruby being a prime example. And speaking of Ruby, why have you so coldly blamed Dianne for Ruby’s hold miscommunication, while “taking full responsibility” to others and putting out a letter to them in response? You haven’t even acknowledged any of this to Dianne, and she was the prime person affected by Ruby’s death. You can call me if it’s easier for you to respond that way.

From 7/8:

I’ve been waiting for a response to my last email, sent this past Tuesday, and it’s really important that there’s some clarification made on the portions of these policies that are not being consistently upheld… I understand that you are busy, and my emails are definitely not your top priority, but there are people wanting to understand these policies so that they can then try to use them for the benefits that they were supposedly created to offer. That’s important. Please let me know if I can come in at any point this week and meet with you for 10-15 minutes. I know you work during the top of the week, so just let me know what is easiest or if that would be possible or helpful… I’m actually coming in in about an hour anyways, so if today works at all give me a call on my cell phone.

From 7/16:

I’m still waiting on replies to my last 2 emails, sent on 7/2 and 7/8. Dianne’s also still awaiting some kind of a reply regarding Ruby and what happened with that. You took 10 days to do a side investigation and then came back with a snippet of info that all parties were aware of from the beginning. You’ve also ignored all else that’s been stated on the topic and even your own past words to her. Are we able to engage you or aren’t we?

Is email a good form of communication, or phone, or onsite at the shelter? I’ve asked and been ignored. Dianne sees you at the shelter but we are two different people. You’ve dodged the Ruby topic and Dianne has just been graceful about it. I have no such desire to be graceful. You killed an incredible dog this morning that was afraid of its shadow and as sweet as could be. All these dogs go down, while numerous dogs with sketchy temperaments remain. If it’s pointless to come to you to get your side or something then just let me know and I won’t bother with it. But there’s tons of questions that people have about blunt policy, easy stuff it’d seem, and you have no desire to clarify anything. This is causing confusion, which only gets more dogs killed. It would be nice if this was something you acknowledged at some point.

Since I could potentially do videos of 10 dogs in 1 day, it didn’t make sense for me to go in and congest the public lobby line further for 10 different puppy passes! A few weeks later Dianne was told that Gil apparently said that it would be okay if I got 1 puppy pass and then wrote the ID numbers of all of the dogs that I was in the yard with. This was never communicated by Gil directly to me or Dianne, but rather through another person. I didn’t take it that serious as he didn’t even take the time to let us know, plus, I’ve learned that with Gil you need to get stuff in writing. He is prone to changing something at his discretion and then blaming you for it. So we continued doing things as we were doing them. If he didn’t take 10 seconds to write Dianne or myself an email regarding this change to his puppy pass expectations then I doubt he’d of honored it anyways. We’ve learned that the hard way.

The racket of the yard play and puppy pass mess is that 90% of the dogs Dianne was taking out to the yard weren’t being temperament tested, so they were being shunned by everyone and disallowed from ever leaving their kennels. This wasn’t a situation where the shelter staff was temperament testing 98% of all dogs and Dianne was bucking the system to take out the 2% that weren’t being tested. Not at all. No Pit Bull-type dogs were voluntarily being given temperament tests, yet they can’t leave their cage without first passing one. This is extraordinarily unfair. The in-house policy that Carson has instituted is unjust, so we simply treated it as an unjust policy. Dianne was going to continue taking the time to interact with these dogs, show them love, let them play, let them run around and stretch their feet, let them put a toy in their mouth and feel like the center of attention for a few minutes. This was the right thing to do. So Gil’s first going to blame Dianne for having me back there shooting video of the dogs, trying to get them adopted. He then pulls the puppy pass stuff, trying to make the repetitious hoop-jumping unbearable. Then he allegedly just wants 1 list of all the dogs we took out. Okay… But what happens to that list? Of course he would use that list to then cross-reference the dogs Dianne took out vs. the dogs that have or haven’t been temperament tested. Dianne would then be punished for each dog that she took out that hadn’t been temperament tested and the puppy pass list would be his self-implicating proof. See how that works? Gil Moreno also targets dogs that we’ve taken video of, so as we are trying to help them he is putting an X on their back. The double-edged sword. That may sound like a bold accusation but just read through this website a little further.

Evidence of how great Dianne is out in the yard, and how great the dogs are too…

















^That’s who they are suspending.

Don’t these people want to save dogs? Huh? Huh? Suspending Dianne, who is one of the most outgoing and engaging volunteers that they could ever hope to have. She promotes the hell out of dogs. She will talk to anyone and really knows how to strike a chord with each different person. That is one of her gifts. And they are shitting on it at the expense of dog’s lives! And suspending Sydney, who is an amazing volunteer that will go out of her way to be at all of the adoption events and who carries herself much like Dianne when it comes to interacting with the dogs. She takes them out and makes them feel loved and wants to do more than she is allowed to do. She is 17 years old! She makes flyers for the rabbits and snakes that come into the shelter. She takes photos of the dogs and tries hard to network them privately. She is 17 with an awesome spirit and they are trying to kill it like they kill the dogs! How dare you penalize her because you have a vendetta against other people.

Gil Moreno, you are an awful human being. Awful.