competitiondiva
Well-Known Member
Fenris whilst in some areas you some speak sense and I have no problem with. In others you are naive and illinformed.
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What services would you like to see the PDSA freed up to do? as mentioned somewhere above?
If there was a government funded animal NHS if only for the animals of pensioners then the PDSA would be freed from providing for those animals and able to use their funds to provide for different but perhaps equally needy people and their animals.
You do of course realise in your wisdom that many people that use the PDSA's goodwill and funds are actually sat at home drinking heavily, smoking heavily, playing on new xbox's with all the latest games?
There needs to be an organisation, as the RSPCA does, taking those people to task and seeing that they start setting their priorities straight.
Yep and some of them no doubt are the biggest culprits when it comes to the indiscriminate breeding of Staffordshire Bull Terriers and such like who end up putting extra strain on the charities in the UK, not forgetting the abundance of healthy dogs put to sleep every day.
You do of course realise in your wisdom that many people that use the PDSA's goodwill and funds are actually sat at home drinking heavily, smoking heavily, playing on new xbox's with all the latest games?
There needs to be an organisation, as the RSPCA does, taking those people to task and seeing that they start setting their priorities straight.
So how on earth is the RSPCA going to know who is sat at home drinking and smoking heavily whilst playing on their new xboxs? and how are they going to take them to task and get them to buck up their ideas.
But you make it sound like all people who visit the PDSA are all shysters this is clearly not true. How do you know the xboxs are not presents from someone else.
I think you will find the PDSA would take someone to task if an animal was brought in that was clearly neglected.
Here is a thought.
If the police can recruit volunteers to walk the street when they dont have the manpower. Why cant the RSPCA.
If they were careful with selection and training perhaps these people could do the first checks. Obviously not when it was in someones home.
Be honest, any one of us could probably check a horse in a field and report back on whether it needed attention. If it did then the inspectors are called in.
Same with collecting wildlife (small) and dropping it at the RSPCA.
It would weed out the hoax and downright stupid calls at least. Perhaps free up the inspectors to do more for the really needy cases.
I bet they would get thousands of people willing to help.
If there was a government funded animal NHS if only for the animals of pensioners then the PDSA would be freed from providing for those animals and able to use their funds to provide for different but perhaps equally needy people and their animals.
They used to have inspectors who dealt with complaints (all) and also a number of collections, and collection officers who solely dealt with collections. They thought it would be more efficient to do what the police have done and retrain the collection officers to become Animal Welfare Officers (AWO's) in order for them to concentrate on the low level complaints and collections whilst freeing up the inspectors to deal with high level complaints and prosecutions. This is the structure that the RSPCA currently operate under on the ground. But the sheer volume of calls coming in, in comparison with the amount of officers on the ground (taking into account maternity, paternity, sick leave, secondment etc etc) means that it does not work as effectively as the police who have hundreds and hundreds of officers in each region.
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Thats interesting, so in theory the cases where people are complaining about inspectors might actually have been dealt with by the Animal Welfare Officers.
I dont think their current structure would stop them using more volunteers. Certainly they need to do something if their resources are so stretched. It would be better to tell people who ring they cant deal properly with the case, than promise to investigate and then not, or take too long.
If people were aware of this they would have the chance to try other charities or the local authority instead.
They used to have inspectors who dealt with complaints (all) and also a number of collections, and collection officers who solely dealt with collections. They thought it would be more efficient to do what the police have done and retrain the collection officers to become Animal Welfare Officers (AWO's) in order for them to concentrate on the low level complaints and collections whilst freeing up the inspectors to deal with high level complaints and prosecutions. This is the structure that the RSPCA currently operate under on the ground. But the sheer volume of calls coming in, in comparison with the amount of officers on the ground (taking into account maternity, paternity, sick leave, secondment etc etc) means that it does not work as effectively as the police who have hundreds and hundreds of officers in each region.
QUOTE]
If an AWO comes across something that is potentially a case - or looks serious - they should hand it promptly back to an inspector to deal. The sheer amount of serious complaints made per day means unfortunately, as with every other charity which has field officers (but a bit worse because the RSPCA deal with all animals AND collections of wildlife), that not every complaint can be seen to immediately or even within a few days. It is a case of prioritising on the information given - and even then it is very difficult becaus so many sound so bad. An individual officer covers an area specifically designated to them, which can be anything between 50 square miles to 250 square miles. So one inspector may have an area which is highly populated over 50 square miles in which they can drive from job to job quickly, whereas the rural inspectors (where the horsey complaints quite often are) can have an area of 250 square miles to cover and takes all day to get to one to the other and deal. It really is down to staffing and funds. If there were more staff - like the police, then I have no doubt whatsoever that the system you suggest would work very effectively.
Here is a thought.
If the police can recruit volunteers to walk the street when they dont have the manpower. Why cant the RSPCA.
If they were careful with selection and training perhaps these people could do the first checks. Obviously not when it was in someones home.
Be honest, any one of us could probably check a horse in a field and report back on whether it needed attention. If it did then the inspectors are called in.
Same with collecting wildlife (small) and dropping it at the RSPCA.
It would weed out the hoax and downright stupid calls at least. Perhaps free up the inspectors to do more for the really needy cases.
I bet they would get thousands of people willing to help.
I didnt say less prosecutions, there are loads of ways they can save money, they are a huge organisation with perhaps too many chiefs and not enough Indians.
Dobiegirl. So recruit more inspectors.... But then don't pay for the prosecutions which result from having those inspectors.... Unfortunately it's a catch 22!! If the rspca didn't pursue this case, then who will? If no-one then what's the point in having the law.... If the law has been broken then the perpetrator imo should be held accountable...
For heaven sake just give up the RSPCA are crap,they keep asking for money but it's not spent where it is needed and the worse thing they ever did was going on tv as they came over as real bullys on people that should have needed help and now they have gone policitcal. Why should I spend my hard earnt money, helping them waste thousands.
1life, how do you know they had been left alone for a long weekend?
When I go away I have a lady go in twice a day to feed my cats and check all is ok. It costs a tenner a day but is much kinder than sticking them in an enclosed cattery when they are used to 24/7 freedom .