137 dogs seized from home outside Winnipeg were largely in distress, unsanitary conditions: province - Action News
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Manitoba

137 dogs seized from home outside Winnipeg were largely in distress, unsanitary conditions: province

The Winnipeg Humane Society says it's"bursting" with an overwhelming numberof animals in its care afterthe province seized more than 130 dogs from a home outside the city last week.

Humane society says intakes frozen as it's 'bursting' with more than 600 animals in its care

A black and brown chihuahua looks to the camera in front of a beige background.
A chihuahua is seen in a file image. Over 100 mainly small-breed dogs were seized from a home outside the city last week. (Lesia Kapinosova/Shutterstock)

The Winnipeg Humane Society says it's"bursting" with an overwhelming numberof animals in its care afterthe province seized more than 130 dogs from a home outside the city last week.

Manitoba's veterinarian and animal welfare office removed 137 dogs after searching a home north of Winnipeg on Aug. 1, a provincial spokesperson told Radio-Canada on Tuesday.

Many of the dogs were in distress and unsanitary living conditions and needed medical attention, the spokesperson said.

The dogs were seized under Manitoba's Animal Care Act and taken into protective custody. None of the animals were euthanized.

Jessica Miller, CEO of the Winnipeg Humane Society, says the organization is caring for many of the seized dogs.

She could not offer many details about the dogs as the province's investigation continues. However, she said they are a mix of adults and puppies, and they're all small breeds, though not allthe same breed.

A woman with medium-length, dirty blond hair and wearing a black dress speaks at a podium.
Jessica Miller, CEO of the Winnipeg Humane Society, says the number of animals seized in Manitoba this year has already surpassed 2022 and 2023 totals. (Corentin Mittet-Magnan/Radio-Canada)

"Large removal of animals be it from backyard breeders, puppy mills, whether it be a mental health situation puts a tremendous strain on our shelter," Miller said at a Tuesday morning news conference.

"We've been at capacity for so long, almost since post-COVID."

The humane society has frozen intakes of animals because it has more than 600 in its care, with nearly 300 in its shelter, Miller said.

"This not only stretches the space of our shelter, but our staff's capacity," she said. "Staff are working extra shifts, coming in on days off they worked all weekend this long weekend."

It also forces the organization to deal with animals in ways it prefers not to, she said. While the humane society prefers to give each animal its own space to sleep, eat, play and relieve itself,it has had to place two or three dogs in a single cage.

Milleris asking the public not to call or email the humane society about the dogs as they are not ready to be adopted yet.The humane society'swebsite and social media accounts will be updated when the animals are ready to be fostered or adopted.

The humane society is asking the public for donations as it continues to feed, shelter and care for the dogs.

Last week's seizure comes just months after the City of Winnipeg's Animal Services Agency took 68 Maltese dogs from a home in the city, bringingthem into the humane society's carelast May. Miller said two subsequent seizures pulled in a total of 110 animals.

The societyreceived around 550 animals that were seized under theAnimal Care Actin each of 2022 and 2023, she said.

"In 2024, we're already at 678 animals."

Miller says while a variety of factors are at play, backyard breeders are one of the biggest, as small dogs became in demand and highly profitable when people were stuck at home during pandemic lockdowns.

'Unsustainable and sad'

"I think what we're finding now is there's no market for this, so we're seizing a lot of these animals that have nowhere to go," she said.

"We're seeing them dumped on the side of the highway, because some backyard breeders are not selling them."

For backyard breeders to continue to produce more animals when the humane society is "bursting" creates a situation that is "unsustainable and sad," she said.

The organization hopes to work with the province to strengthen licensing regulations and stop backyard breeders, Miller said.

In the meantime, she urgedManitobans to adopt animals and not to buy them online.

"People need to adopt and not shop it's just not the time for that."

Anyone with animal welfare concerns in Manitoba can contact the province's animal care line at 204-945-8000, toll-free at 1-888-945-8001or by email at animalcare@gov.mb.ca.

Winnipeg Humane Society 'bursting' with animals in care after 137 dogs seized from home

28 days ago
Duration 1:55
The Winnipeg Humane Society says it's "bursting" with an overwhelming number of animals in its care after the province seized more than 130 dogs from a home outside the city last week.

Corrections

  • We initially reported that the Winnipeg Humane Society received 256 dogs seized under the Animal Care Act in 2023, based on information from the society. In fact, the number seized was around 550, the humane society later said.
    Aug 06, 2024 3:41 PM CT

With files from Radio-Canada's Mario De Ciccio