July 7, 2006
Council takes another
kick at bad canines
Kilabuk wants wandering
mutts shot and shipped to dog-eating countries
JACKIE
WALLACE
Three weeks ago Sheamus
Armstrong was working in his yard in Apex when he heard a child screaming.
His neighbour's dog was
attacking a five-year-old boy.
"So I picked up a
stick and ran up to help him," said Armstrong. "When I got within
100 feet the dog took off." The child was taken home by a group of friends
and later needed stitches.
"This dog is always
barking," said Armstrong. "It's tied up for the majority of its life,
but it broke its chain this time. It was a good thing I showed up because the
dog was being quite vicious."
The dog days of summer
are here and once again there are rumblings about dangerous canines roaming
Iqaluit's streets.
At a city council meeting
on June 27, Councillor Nancy Gillis expressed concern that there had been several
recent incidents of people being attacked by dogs.
"We go through this
every summer and it's got to stop," said Gillis. "I don't want to
have to deal with somebody else's dog. That's why I don't have a dog."
Gillis is annoyed by the
number of dogs wandering the streets without leashes, even when they are with
their owners. She is also concerned that sled dogs are breaking their chains
in areas where they are kept because they are not properly fed or watered and
are coming into town. She suggested a solution might be to require that sled
dogs be penned.
Councillor Simanuk Kilabuk
suggested shooting all loose dogs and sending their meat to places where people
eat dog meat.
But according to Tyson
Kalluk, Iqaluit's animal control officer, concerns about problem dogs are overblown.
"There are times when you get two or three dog bite reports, but a lot
of them are caused by kids taunting the dogs," he said. "I would say
that the amount of dog attacks is still relatively small."
Kalluk estimates the dog
population of the city to be between 300 and 400, including sled dogs, and of
these he says about three-quarters are registered.
Paul Crowley, who keeps
11 sled dogs in a designated area by the stream, said his and other animals
nearby are "well looked after and well fed." Sometimes the chains
do break, but it happens very infrequently. I am surprised it is an issue,"
he said.
Crowley thinks the perception
that sled dogs are dangerous is a case of mistaken identity. "A lot of
stray dogs are actually huskies and aren't necessarily sled dogs," he said.
"Generally it's not the sled dogs causing a problem."
But Armstrong isn't comforted
that dogs are registered. "There are quite a few vicious dogs in Apex,"
he said. "Most dogs are tied up, but a lot of them are vicious. They're
mostly kept as guard dogs."
He worries about his young
daughter's safety and says his girlfriend is terrified to walk around without
him because she is afraid of being attacked.
Councillor Brad Hall thinks
there is a lesson to be learned from the unpleasant scene that Armstrong witnessed.
"It's a word of warning to all dog owners who have their pets chained up
to ensure that the chains are reinforced properly."
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