joeanne
Well-Known Member
Its irrelevent WHY they were fenced in, the point is the RSPCA fended his fields in instead of having the animals removed as he was in BREACH of the ban that the RSPCA went to great lengths to secure!
Its irrelevent WHY they were fenced in, the point is the RSPCA fended his fields in instead of having the animals removed as he was in BREACH of the ban that the RSPCA went to great lengths to secure!
I think a lot of it comes from the organisation's selectiveness in deciding which cases to get involved in and their apparent preference for the high profile issues. There has been a lot of stick after a recent case where even the judge expressed surprise at the RSPCA's extravagant and cavalier use of funds in a straight forward open and shut case involving the Heythrop Hunt. Law broken, issue taken to court, villains pleaded guilty and paid the fine. "Seemples" - but the RSPCA had used over £300,000 quite unnecessarily on the case and tried to claim it back from the HH. Judge didn't allow it as costs can't exceed the amount of the fine.He said that he found the £300k the RSCPCA had spent on the case to be "staggering". Even some of my most rabidly anti-hunt friends have been shocked at the RSPCA's performance in this case.just wondering why the sudden outrage of the RSPCA?
i understnad they arnt perfect but they have helped alot of animals.
having lived in the middle east where there are is no such thing as animal protection organsisations i find it a bit sad that they are being attacked. i lived in a place where horses would stand in the 50 degree sun with no food or water, covered in ticks and what would be done? nothing....when dogs were drivin out to the desert and dumped, left to fry in the heat and nobody cares. even animals such as tigers, lions and cheetahs and kept in peoples gardens suffering from malnutrition and going mental and again nothing is done.
also i kind of feel sorry for the people who volunteer their time with the best intentions of helping these animals. it is after all the people in the more authoritive positions making the wrong decisions, it must be a bit dishearting seeing all this rspca bashing going on.
anyway please dont attack mejust wanted to say it could be ALOT worse without the RSPCA than with.
Unfortunately the RSPCA even think they have free rein to do as they wish!I think the sad fact of the matter is OP that it is human nature to want to jump on bandwagons and form opinions based on hear say and with very little direct fact or knowledge of matters.
Of course there will be issues with any organisation, but similarly to the NHS, when press and media become involved to any great extent, people are bound to automatically believe it is true and then you get the likes of public forums, where nobody really knows who anybody else is, yet are willing to take their say so on matters, without actually establishing the facts first. A wave of hysteria then follows, which again is human nature.
The sad fact also is that a large amount of stuff which I see posted on here is vastly misinformed about the RSPCA - ie a lot of people believe that the government have afforded them powers, and you can tell these people over and over that they actually haven't, and they don't have powers, but they won't believe you, because they naturally believe the majority and the hype. People also don't have much of an idea of how the law works and how things need to be done in order to stay within the law, so they truly believe that the RSPCA have a free rein to be able to do as they wish in certain circumstances, but that simply isn't true.
Then of course, you get those on forums and in the press who are scorned and very bitter about the RSPCA due to 'personal experiences' they may have had of a close encounter involving their own animals.![]()
Agreed, my house is a home for waifs and strays and if I saw an abandoned cat that was starving it would be coming straight home. If I couldn't take it in personally I would drop said cat in to the local vets or rescue centre myself. Over the years I have had a collection of grateful animals including horses who have arrived like this. How anyone can leave an animal in distress is beyond me! My own dealings with the RSPCA inspectors have been positive. However I did sadly help out in a case where they didn't get there quick enough to a group of starving horses. We did manage to remove the few that were surviving but the whole problem of proving owner ship was hard. RSPCA inspectors and indeed WHW have often got to make very tough calls. We had another horse dumped in one of our fields a who had been owned by the gypsies. It had a prolapsed anus and it was very infected. Only real choice was to PTS as horse was on her way out, but RSPCA couldn't do that as owner couldn't be found and police were required to get there. In the end as horse was in a bad way I called our own vet and told vet it was one of ours and do it now. Doing things by the book isn't always what's right for the animal. I do think the political prosecutions are stupid and a waste of money. In an ideal world the animal inspectors need to be government run and linked to the police. In America inspectors have more power and are state run. That way welfare cases can be dealt with alot more effectively.
A once great charity reduced to a polictical plaything and a gravy train by its leadership!! hopefully they will be held to account and this once great force for good will rise again...just wondering why the sudden outrage of the RSPCA?
i understnad they arnt perfect but they have helped alot of animals.
having lived in the middle east where there are is no such thing as animal protection organsisations i find it a bit sad that they are being attacked. i lived in a place where horses would stand in the 50 degree sun with no food or water, covered in ticks and what would be done? nothing....when dogs were drivin out to the desert and dumped, left to fry in the heat and nobody cares. even animals such as tigers, lions and cheetahs and kept in peoples gardens suffering from malnutrition and going mental and again nothing is done.
also i kind of feel sorry for the people who volunteer their time with the best intentions of helping these animals. it is after all the people in the more authoritive positions making the wrong decisions, it must be a bit dishearting seeing all this rspca bashing going on.
anyway please dont attack mejust wanted to say it could be ALOT worse without the RSPCA than with.
just wondering why the sudden outrage of the RSPCA?
i understnad they arnt perfect but they have helped alot of animals.
having lived in the middle east where there are is no such thing as animal protection organsisations i find it a bit sad that they are being attacked. i lived in a place where horses would stand in the 50 degree sun with no food or water, covered in ticks and what would be done? nothing....when dogs were drivin out to the desert and dumped, left to fry in the heat and nobody cares. even animals such as tigers, lions and cheetahs and kept in peoples gardens suffering from malnutrition and going mental and again nothing is done.
also i kind of feel sorry for the people who volunteer their time with the best intentions of helping these animals. it is after all the people in the more authoritive positions making the wrong decisions, it must be a bit dishearting seeing all this rspca bashing going on.
anyway please dont attack mejust wanted to say it could be ALOT worse without the RSPCA than with.
Brilliant attitude. You're a Can Do kind of person who takes action instead of wringing your hands and blaming someone else.
If more people had your approach, the animal welfare charities wouldn't be chasing their tails.
I'm not advocating people become mini rescues, but you do what you can when possible before reaching for the phone.
Who says a stay cat is a stay cat? Just because a cat turns up does not necessarily mean it doesn't have an owner. No charity would just take in healthy stray cats, they are all full to the brim with ones that were taken in injured, pregnant, old, kittens, ill etc. There just isn't the space (nor the homes to rehome them to) to start taking in healthy animals.
My problem isnt with the RSPCA for what they do it is how they do it.
I have 2 dogs and 2 cats at home, I am a carer so I am in and out of the house all day. I had a letter left threatening to take my animals away as I had gone on holiday and left them.
Firstly I was at work I am out for up to two hours at a time and then I have 30 mins to get to my next person, in that 30 mins I go home let my dogs out and check all the animals have food and the house is not too hot/cold
Secondly they had left no calling card saying they had visited before I got said letter.
I contacted them and made an appointment to come round, one of my dogs is a lab x collie female and tends to lose weight before coming into season, which she was due and with her being very active she is always on the thin side even though she is fed a working dogs food. My other animals are in good condition but when inspector came out he told my I was abusing my animals and that he expected my to sign them over, I refused.
I had senior inspector out who also said he thought i should sign over my lab mix or would face prosacutionagain i refused but did produce vet statement about my dogs weight (had snooty neighbours accuse me of neglect so got it to shut them up) after that I was left in peace.
It seemed to me that they let it go because I had proof that would stand up in court if they confiscated my dog, I could be wrong about this though.
My animals are healthy and happy surely if i abused them that wouldnt be the case, but the inspectors didnt seem to care about that
Poor cat. Was no one prepared to offer the cat a home ?
I don't think I could ever not take a stray cat in either permanently or at least until I found a new home for it.