Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Government Brings In New Regulations To Cut Back On Police Dog Bites

The Canadian Press , 27 Nov, 2014 03:38 PM
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government has introduced new rules for the training and deployment of police dogs months after a report singled out dog bites as the leading cause of injuries.
     
    Attorney General Suzanne Anton says the standards emphasize proper training and spell out permitted uses of the dogs, with an effort to make sure the animals aren't used improperly.
     
    In June, the Pivot Legal Society released a three-year study that concluded police dogs are the leading cause of injury by RCMP and municipal forces in B.C.
     
    The study found most B.C. police forces train service dogs with a method called bite-and-hold, as opposed to the other leading technique that simply sees the dogs circle and bark.
     
    Pivot staff lawyer Douglas King says standards, such as not deploying a dog after an elderly person or a youth, which the Pivot study found was common occurrence, are common sense.
     
    The regulations don't come into force until September next year, but King says he hopes police forces begin phasing in the standards to better protect the public before then.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Murder Suspected After Charred Human Remains Found In Langley

    Murder Suspected After Charred Human Remains Found In Langley
    Mounties say they were called to a street (in the 24700 block of 64 Avenue) in Langley on Tuesday morning for a reports of a possible body.

    Murder Suspected After Charred Human Remains Found In Langley

    Murder Suspect's Story Changed About Why He Dumped Girlfriend's Body: BC Crown

    Murder Suspect's Story Changed About Why He Dumped Girlfriend's Body: BC Crown
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A man accused of beating his girlfriend to death with a hammer has changed his story about what he planned to do with the body, a Crown lawyer has suggested.

    Murder Suspect's Story Changed About Why He Dumped Girlfriend's Body: BC Crown

    Surprisingly Canadians 'Relax And Rest' During Their Commute

    Surprisingly Canadians 'Relax And Rest' During Their Commute
    Canadians actually enjoy their commute and find it relaxing. That's the conclusion of a finding that runs contrary to the popular vision of commuters as harried and fed up, if not enraged.

    Surprisingly Canadians 'Relax And Rest' During Their Commute

    Clayoquot Sound Activists Head To B.C. Pipeline Protest Site To Be Arrested

    Clayoquot Sound Activists Head To B.C. Pipeline Protest Site To Be Arrested
    BURNABY, B.C. — Activists who were part of the Clayoquot (clah-CWOT) Sound anti-logging protests in British Columbia in the early 1990s say they plan to be arrested at an anti-pipeline protest near Vancouver.

    Clayoquot Sound Activists Head To B.C. Pipeline Protest Site To Be Arrested

    New Research Says Overhauling Canada's Tax System Would Create Fairness

    New Research Says Overhauling Canada's Tax System Would Create Fairness
    OTTAWA — A new research paper for the C.D. Howe Institute says Canada can help combat rising income inequality by taxing people separately for their paycheque and investment income.

    New Research Says Overhauling Canada's Tax System Would Create Fairness

    Mall Shooter Admits Multiple Bail Breaches: 'It's Something I Ended Up Doing'

    Mall Shooter Admits Multiple Bail Breaches: 'It's Something I Ended Up Doing'
    TORONTO — The man who killed two people at the Toronto Eaton Centre admitted this morning to regularly breaching his bail conditions.

    Mall Shooter Admits Multiple Bail Breaches: 'It's Something I Ended Up Doing'