Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec Bill Calls Animals 'Sentient Beings' And Includes Jail Time For Cruelty

The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2015 06:42 PM
  • Quebec Bill Calls Animals 'Sentient Beings' And Includes Jail Time For Cruelty
MONTREAL — Proposed Quebec legislation would impose heavy fines and jail time for serial animal abusers and go so far as to criminalize flushing live goldfish down the toilet.
 
"If you have a goldfish you have to take care of it," said Quebec Agriculture Minister Pierre Paradis, who tabled the legislation Friday. "Don't get a goldfish if you don't want to take care of it."
 
The bill states that "animals are not things. They are sentient beings and have biological needs."
 
For many people, that might seem obvious, but in Quebec an animal currently has the same legal rights as a piece of furniture.
 
"The biggest change (in the bill) is that up to now, an animal in Quebec is considered as a movable, like a piece of equipment," Paradis said. "It goes from that to being a sentient being."
 
Paradis believes his bill will transform Quebec from the jurisdiction with some of the least strict animal-welfare rules in North America — it is considered the puppy-mill capital of the continent — to one with some of the toughest.
 
He said he was inspired by Manitoba, Ontario and British Columbia, which he noted have the strongest animal-welfare laws in the country.
 
Paradis also looked to France, which updated its own laws last January to change the status of animals to sentient beings from their prior status of movable property.
 
The bill has separate rules for pet owners, farmers with livestock, owners of pet shops, or people who sell animal-based products such as furs.
 
Pet owners "must ensure that the animal's welfare and safety are not compromised," meaning domesticated animals have to receive "care that is consistent with (their) biological needs," the bill states.
 
Farmers must guarantee that their animals are "treated with dignity as much as possible" from the moment they are born to the day they are slaughtered.
 
But farm animals don't get the same protection as pets. They must be treated "in accordance with generally recognized rules," the bill reads.
 
That, says the head of animal advocacy for the SPCA in Montreal, means chickens, will still be allowed to be kept in enclosures no wider than a sheet of paper — called battery cages — for their entire lives.
 
"Whatever the (food) industry does on a wide scale is exempt," said Alanna Devine.
 
"I don't know if this means they'll be treated with dignity and respect."
 
She said the bill is unclear regarding the status of many wild and exotic animals and those found in zoos.
 
Devine's interpretation of the bill is that someone who shoots a squirrel in a park, for instance, is not covered in the legislation.
 
Despite wondering about how the bill be enforced, Devine called the legislation a "positive step."
 
Paradis said there will be no new money for inspectors but that his department has enough people to ensure the bill's provisions can be enforced.
 
The legislation gives inspectors the power to demand to see an animal if they have "reasonable cause" to suspect the pet is being mistreated.
 
They can also obtain a warrant from a judge to enter a home and seize animals.
 
First-time offenders face fines as low as $250 and as high as $250,000.
 
The fines can double and triple for repeat offenders. Judges will have the discretion to sentence serial violators of the proposed law to jail for up to 18 months.
 
Devine agrees with the fact that even goldfish owners should be subject to the law.
 
"We know scientifically that fish are sentient and can feel pain," she said. "If animals are capable of suffering then they should be included (in the bill)."

MORE National ARTICLES

Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals

Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals
Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, a person of Indian origin, has commemorated the 170th anniversary of the first arrival of East Indians in the island nation, saying that ethnic Indians were a privileged lot.

Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals

Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory

Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory
Montreal's fashion sector is trying to regain some of its lost glory as designers, manufacturers and other players in the apparel industry unite in a bid to expand the city's sartorial footprint.

Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory

Activists Using Social Media To Fight Jihadists

Activists Using Social Media To Fight Jihadists
MONTREAL — A Montreal-based human rights think-tank wants to fight jihadist groups on their own online turf, saying it's time to push back against the propaganda.

Activists Using Social Media To Fight Jihadists

How Old-fashioned Volunteer Armies Use New Technology To Focus Campaign Efforts

How Old-fashioned Volunteer Armies Use New Technology To Focus Campaign Efforts
OTTAWA — Some 3,500 Liberal volunteers knocked on more than 200,000 doors in 190 ridings across the country last weekend.

How Old-fashioned Volunteer Armies Use New Technology To Focus Campaign Efforts

Canadian Journalist On Trial In Egypt Tries To Separate Himself From Employer

Prosecutors are set to begin closing arguments Monday in the retrial of Mohamed Fahmy on widely-denounced terror charges.

Canadian Journalist On Trial In Egypt Tries To Separate Himself From Employer

Millionaire British NRI Hotelier Ranjit Singh Power Murdered In Punjab Over A Property Dispute

Deputy Commissioner of Police told that his friend and business partner, Baldev Singh Deol, and hisdriver strangled Power at Anandpur Sahib in Ropar

Millionaire British NRI Hotelier Ranjit Singh Power Murdered In Punjab Over A Property Dispute