20 Feb 2019

Advocates seek govt help for animal welfare after busy summer

5:34 pm on 20 February 2019

As animal welfare officers come under increasing demand, some animal advocates are looking to the government for help.

After being stabbed in a vicious attack in his Waitati paddock at midnight on Sunday, miniature horse Star recovers with Otago Equine Hospital veterinarians Peter Gillespie and Stephanie Bransgrove.

After being stabbed in a vicious attack in his Waitati paddock at midnight on Sunday, miniature horse Star seemed to recover but later died. Pictured with Otago Equine Hospital veterinarians Peter Gillespie and Stephanie Bransgrove. Photo: Otago Daily Times / Gregor Richardson and Peter Gillespie

It has been one of the busiest summers on record for welfare officers at the SPCA, while the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI), the police and SAFE have all reported increases in the number of reported animal abuse, neglect and abandonment incidents since 2016.

MPI responded to 839 complaints about the welfare of animals on commercial farms and lifestyle blocks - up six on 2017; 1200 complaints were made or referred to the police, who have recorded an increase of 100 complaints every year for the past three years.

SPCA chief executive Andrea Midgen said she thought the increases were most likely due to the increasing awareness of animal welfare issues, with "more people willing to report things that don't seem right."

But she said it was putting a lot pressure on SPCA resources and staff were unable to respond to every reported incident. Some centres received up to 50 abandoned kittens a day.

"We have to triage our calls and prioritise them ... because there's just not enough of us to go all around the country."

She said the organisation did not have enough resources to cope, which was a funding issue.

The SPCA received about $400,000 a year from the government but Ms Midgen said it cost them $42 million to operate.

SAFE follow up and refer animal welfare cases, and its chief executive, Debra Ashton, said she too was "quite concerned" about the upwards trend and the capacity of organisations like the SPCA to cope.

But her proposed solution goes beyond extra funding. She said SAFE would not even need to be part of the picture, if the system for reporting animal welfare issues was working.

"We're actually calling for an independent body to be set up, possibly by the commissioner, that has regulatory and enforcement capabilities," Ms Ashton said.

"Complaints should be going directly to a body that deals with them quickly and really gets them addressed."

She said there was about one animal welfare inspector in New Zealand for every 7,000,000 animals and that was not working.

But MPI said it did not think change was needed.

In a statement, spokesperson Peter Hyde said he disagreed with animal to inspector numbers as a formula for resourcing given that MPI's job was to hold people responsible.

He said MPI's animal welfare inspectors played a vital role in detecting and dealing with reports of the ill-treatment of production animals, providing advice to the farming community as well as gathering evidence where an issue was dealt with by way of an investigation and any subsequent prosecution.

"Animal abuse is committed by people, not by the animals, and as such MPI investigates the liability of the people in charge of the animals.

MPI had sufficient resources to deal with offenders, he said.

"Any enforcement agency could make an argument for more resource. Like all other agencies, including the SPCA, we make the most of what we have by assessing potential risk to animals and prioritising resource."

Ms Ashton said she has begun talking to the SPCA about the ideas and would be taking them to the government.