Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac

The Canadian Press, 09 May, 2016 10:48 AM
  • Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac
A small but dedicated group of animal lovers is determined to continue rescuing pets from a potential "mass grave" in the abandoned homes of Fort McMurray, Alta., despite having been kicked out last week.
 
Members of the group said that by Sunday afternoon, they'd received thousands of emails from evacuees of the northern Alberta wildfire whose pets were left behind.
 
Sam Sansalone, who's based out of southern Alberta and is a member of the Facebook group Fort Mac Fire - Pet Rescue, where many of the efforts are being co-ordinated, said group members rescued about 230 pets on Wednesday and Thursday.
 
But on Thursday, and again on Friday, police kicked them out, he said.
 
He said authorities told them that the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo was taking over pet rescue duties, and there was a risk that people working independently might loot houses under the guise of attempting to rescue pets.
 
Sansalone said he understands that concern, but that official resources are spread too thin, and civilians should be allowed to help.
 
 
Plus, Wood Buffalo's rescue effort didn't start until Saturday. Sansalone said he was worried that would be too late for many of the pets.
 
"This is a mass grave, in basements, in crates," he said.
 
He said that now, his group will try to work with local authorities. He said they're hoping to speak with RCMP at the scene and get approval to join the official rescue efforts.
 
Tim McHaffie arrived at a road block outside of Fort McMurray after a two-hour drive Sunday. He was with a group of about 15 other prospective pet rescuers that came from the Facebook group.
 
McHaffie said there were still a few barriers to getting into the town, and into people's houses, but he was hopeful that officials would eventually let them through.
 
Alberta premier Rachel Notley told a news conference that it was unsafe for people other than first responders to enter Fort McMurray, but emergency personnel were already helping rescue animals.
 
She said first responders were giving food and water to the pets left behind by evacuees, and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals was attempting to rescue what pets they could.
 
 
She said the SPCA was asking pet owners to register their pets online, to give permission for the official rescue team to enter their homes.
 
McHaffie said that if his group does get through, he said it was important that everyone understand what they might find.
 
"It's been days now. How long have these animals been there without food and water? There's a good chunk of them that's probably not going to be living."
 
"Once this is done, people are going to sit down and they're going to have a big cry," he added. "But the job's the job. You've got to get it done."

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Home Sales Hit Record For April, Prices Soar From Year Ago

Vancouver Home Sales Hit Record For April, Prices Soar From Year Ago
The board says sales totalled 4,781 for April, up 14.4 per cent from 4,179 in the same month last year.

Vancouver Home Sales Hit Record For April, Prices Soar From Year Ago

B.C. Mountie Says Sexual Harassment Settlement Still Means RCMP Need Policies

B.C. Mountie Says Sexual Harassment Settlement Still Means RCMP Need Policies
A British Columbia Mountie whose sexual harassment lawsuit against the RCMP prompted similar cases across the country has reached an out-of court settlement with the force.

B.C. Mountie Says Sexual Harassment Settlement Still Means RCMP Need Policies

Gut-Wrenching Images Of Urban Climber In Fredericton Spark Concern

Gut-Wrenching Images Of Urban Climber In Fredericton Spark Concern
18-year-old Noah Kingston says his recent death-defying stunts as a so-called urban climber in Fredericton — all captured in jaw-dropping videos posted on social media — are just the beginning.

Gut-Wrenching Images Of Urban Climber In Fredericton Spark Concern

Calgary Landlord 'Shocked' To Find Unattended Senior In Rental Home

69-year-old woman was taken to hospital for a checkup after she was discovered by the landlord in the northeast-area residence on Monday.

Calgary Landlord 'Shocked' To Find Unattended Senior In Rental Home

St. Louis Jury Awards $55 Million In Johnson & Johnson Cancer Suit

St. Louis Jury Awards $55 Million In Johnson & Johnson Cancer Suit
The jury deliberated eight hours Monday before ordering the company to pay $55 million to a South Dakota woman who blamed her ovarian cancer on years of talcum powder use.

St. Louis Jury Awards $55 Million In Johnson & Johnson Cancer Suit

Nova Scotia Nursing Home Staff Off Due To Injuries From Violence Rising: Board

Nova Scotia Nursing Home Staff Off Due To Injuries From Violence Rising: Board
Stuart MacLean says statistics from his office show there were 40 nursing home workers who ended up off work and receiving payments due to injuries in 2015.

Nova Scotia Nursing Home Staff Off Due To Injuries From Violence Rising: Board