Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Animal Protection Group Urges B.C. Vet Association To Ban Cat Declawing

The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2018 12:01 PM
  • Animal Protection Group Urges B.C. Vet Association To Ban Cat Declawing
VANCOUVER — The society that protects animal welfare in British Columbia is looking to the leadership of Nova Scotia's veterinarians as it calls for a ban on feline declawing.
 
 
The B.C. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals wants the province's college of veterinarians to declare declawing unethical  — similar to a ban announced by the Nova Scotia Veterinary Medical Association last month.
 
 
The society says it has been on record for nearly two decades as opposed to medically unnecessary procedures such as declawing, tail docking, ear cropping and devocalization.
 
 
Emilia Gordon, the society's senior animal health manager, says veterinarians in B.C. care strongly about animal welfare and would welcome an opportunity to lead the way on the issue.
 
 
Nova Scotia was the first Canadian province to ban declawing, but a news release from the society says the practice is already prohibited in Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Brazil, the United Kingdom, many parts of Europe and some cities in California.
 
 
Gordon says studies show declawed cats are at higher risk for biting and aggression, are more likely to have trouble using the litter box, and have a significantly increased chance of back pain.
 
 
"Declawing a cat does not just remove the nails. It removes bones of the toes, comparable to amputating all of a human's fingers at the last knuckle," she says in the news release.
 
 
The Canadian Veterinary Medical Association released a position statement last year opposing feline declawing as an "ethically unacceptable" practice, Gordon says.
 
 
She believes a similar position by the College of Veterinarians of British Columbia would be a significant step forward in the humane treatment of animals in the province.
 
 
If a ban were imposed, anyone performing the practice and causing distress to an animal could face animal cruelty charges under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, the society says. 

MORE National ARTICLES

'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club

'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club
Jodi Moskal, an electrician who also ran for the provincial Progressive Conservatives in a byelection last year, has been researching clubs in Winnipeg that once allowed only men but changed to admit women.

'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club

Ottawa Man Charged With Assault On Plane In Flight: Thunder Bay, Ont., Police

THUNDER BAY, Ont. — Police say an Ottawa man has been charged after an Air Canada flight was diverted to Thunder Bay, Ont., because of an unruly passenger.

Ottawa Man Charged With Assault On Plane In Flight: Thunder Bay, Ont., Police

Girl Dies After Being Pinned Between Vehicles While Picked Up From School

Girl Dies After Being Pinned Between Vehicles While Picked Up From School
TORONTO — Grief counsellors were at a north Toronto school Tuesday to help students and staff cope with the news that a five-year-old girl had died after being pinned between two SUVs.

Girl Dies After Being Pinned Between Vehicles While Picked Up From School

Beer Canada Calls On Feds To Axe Increasing Beer Tax As Consumption Trends Down

Beer Canada Calls On Feds To Axe Increasing Beer Tax As Consumption Trends Down
A trade association for Canada's beer industry wants the federal government to stop its plan to annually increase a tax on the alcoholic drink.

Beer Canada Calls On Feds To Axe Increasing Beer Tax As Consumption Trends Down

'I Fell, I Cried:' Asylum Seeker Suffers Severe Frostbite After Crossing Border

'I Fell, I Cried:' Asylum Seeker Suffers Severe Frostbite After Crossing Border
WINNIPEG — Kangni Fiowole-Kouevi says he wasn't sure he had made it to Canada when — overcome by bitter cold and barely able to use his hands — he took a risk and dialled 911 on his cellphone.

'I Fell, I Cried:' Asylum Seeker Suffers Severe Frostbite After Crossing Border

Ice Dancers Tessa Virtue And Scott Moir Will Carry Canadian Flag At Pyeongchang Olympics

Ice Dancers Tessa Virtue And Scott Moir Will Carry Canadian Flag At Pyeongchang Olympics
OTTAWA — Ice dance darlings Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir will carry Canada's flag into the opening ceremony at next month's Winter Games in South Korea.

Ice Dancers Tessa Virtue And Scott Moir Will Carry Canadian Flag At Pyeongchang Olympics