Earlier this Fall, an owner of a junkyard asked for help in removing a group of feral dogs from his property. He was reluctant to ask Detroit Animal Control due to their policies. After weeks of planning and acquiring necessary equipment and supplies, volunteers from four suburban Detroit rescues came together today to begin this rescue. The first dog rescued from this situation is Shawn, a 6-8 month old female shepherd mix.
Detroit has a significant stray and feral dog population. Conservative estimates put 15,000 of these dogs within city limits, however estimates have ranged as high as 100,000.
Current laws and ordinances in Detroit make it difficult for Metro-Detroit dog rescues to act effectively as a group to tackle this issue. Dogs and other companion animals are considered property by law. Stray animals are to be treated like any lost item of value: turned over to law enforcement so the owner can locate and collect them. Unlike a lost wallet or watch that should be held for six months before considered abandoned, the maintenance of these animals require daily care and financial resources. Animals are held for a mandatory four business day "stray hold". If the animal's owner comes to retrieve it, the owner must pay an impound fee to release an unlicensed animal. The fate of uncollected animals is determined by space constraints, available resources, and a seemingly arbitrary set of policies determined by the shelter manager on duty.
These laws were enacted to protect owned dogs from being stolen and to hold owners of unlicensed animals responsible for letting an animal run at large. The assumptions behind these laws are that most animals are owned and their owners have an interest in finding them.
As the years pass and the stray problem in Detroit gets worse, this approach becomes complicated. A significant percentage of dogs are not (and have never been) owned animals. Some feral packs have become a public nuisance by raiding garbages and dumpsters, roaming the streets, becoming territorial of the abandoned houses they use as shelter. Some dogs end up acting on their predatory instincts for acquiring food and hunt small animals, including cats and small dogs. A few of these individual dogs are truly dangerous to humans and anti-social. These dogs have learned that humans are unpredictable, hurtful, unsafe creatures. When met with stress, they conclude their best option is to fight.
With each news story about the incompetency and policies of the Detroit Animal Control, Detroit citizens become more aware of the lack of resources they have for humane solutions. Metro Detroit animal rescues can only act when requested by the property owner and few have the resources to safely trap, secure, assess, and potentially rehabilitate a stray or feral dog. Rescuers themselves are unsure of their jurisdiction, rights, and limits under the law in their abilities to respond when requested.
The animal welfare community is seeking people who live within Detroit city limits to become active in addressing this issue with City Council. Interested parties can contact Save Ace: Advocates for Change and Education
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