|
See Spot
Die"!
by John Dorschner, Miami Herald staff writer.
There are a hundred million
dogs and cats in America. We cuddle them, talk to them,
make them part of the family. Every year we buy them $5 billion
worth of food, not to mention collars, bowls, flea spray,
vaccinations and little pink sweaters... We love our
pets. Except, of course, when we have to move, or get tired
of walking them, or sick of paying the vet bills. Then we
abandon them. By the millions. We tell ourselves they'll find a new
home, but the truth is, when we drop them off at the animal
shelter, we drop them off to die. So many unwanted pets, so
few homes for them. They get handed over to the dog pound,
abandoned in parking lots, let loose in parks, or simply
allowed to drift away from home and never searched
for: mangy mutts, elegant purebreds, pit bull pups, fluffy kittens,
dogs that look like Rin-Tin-Tin, and Lassie, and Toto. People take
their cats to the shelter and say they want to get rid of them
because the pets don't match the colors of their new decorating
scheme. They want a new cat, one that's color-coordinated. Some
people go on vacation and drop off a pet; they don't want
to spend the money on boarding; they say they'll pick up a new pet
when they get back. The result: four out of five pets are left
unclaimed. Those unclaimed are given a lethal injection of sodium
pentobarbital. Then they are thrown into a large plastic hamper,
wheeled outside and tossed like bags of garbage into an incinerator.
Nationwide, between 12 million and 20 million unwanted pets are
killed each year. The numbers are inexact, because this is one
subject few want to research. Man's best friend has become
man's biggest victim. When people get tired of their pets, most
don't want to deposit them at the animal shelter; they know what's
likely to happen to them. And so they engage in a quiet little
fantasy, imagining they're a Robert Redford, climbing to a
mountaintop to release an eagle. They're not abandoning Fido --
they're setting him free. Often they choose parks or affluent
neighborhoods. Perhaps some wealthy family will pick him up. Or
maybe old Fido will revert to the wild, learn to fend for
himself, catching squirrels and whatnot. But pets are not wild
eagles. Animal control officers know that a roaming dog is much more
likely to be squashed by a speeding car than to learn to live in
the wild. The Service has trucks that do nothing except travel the
country, picking up tens of thousands of dead dogs and cats that
survive forage through garbage cans and alleys, desperately
trying to avoid starvation. In the Dade, Florida, animal shelter,
for example, where 25,000 dogs are killed each year, the
situation is typical: the shelter is dreadfully overcrowded, four or
five dogs locked in a run intended for one. It is primitive --
concrete and wire mesh, with screening on the outside walls to
allow in whatever breeze exists. Each day, the barking of 300-plus
dogs reverberates like the pounding din of jackhammers. The stench
of urine permeates everything, despite the dedicated efforts of the
shelter workers. It is here that most of the dogs and cats of Dade
County spend their last five days. And so the dogs wait. And wait.
The hound from the day-care center spent most of the time lying on
the floor, its snout in a puddle of urine and water from her three
cell mates. A few feet away, Chica, the beautiful vizsla with fleas,
was squeezed into a run with three mutts. She sat by the door,
looking expectantly at each visitor who wandered by. The grumpy
chow from Kendall was in a run with a massive red Doberman that had
killed a poodle. The smaller chow stayed silent at the back of
the run, huddled against the wire mesh. The little bearded Tramp sat
at the back of a run, with three larger mutts, his shoulders bent
forward, intimidated by this turn of events. Max, the boxer, was
given his own cage. Boxers are prized dogs, and it was assumed
someone would adopt him. Not so the pit bull pup from the park: As
with all pit bulls that enter the shelter, his card was stamped NOT
ADOPTABLE. It was a death sentence. The Shelter is always
overcrowded, and each morning a sheet is prepared, a simple white
piece of paper. On it is a list of tag numbers -- the tags the
officers put on the animals -- and the notation, ER. ER stands for
Euthanasia Run, the run where the dogs are placed a few hours
before they are executed. The execution chamber is at the end of the
corridor, close to the incinerator. It's the size of a small
bedroom. A wall-unit air conditioner rumbles and rattles, its
noise blending in with the constant yapping of dogs. The bare
fluorescent bulbs in the ceiling cast a raw, stark light. The
floor is concrete, sloping toward a central drain, to collect the
urine and water. Jessica slipped a white lab coat over her red
T-shirt and joined Lily, a feisty woman with glasses and
short curly hair. Lily's the vet-tech; she's been there 14 years.
Her job is to handle the needles, Jessica's to hold the dogs.
Jessica began bringing in the dogs, attaching their leashes to
the screens of the cages. The dogs yapped loudly, expectantly. For
the first time in days, something was happening and they
were excited. As the dogs arrived, Lily prepared the tray.
It consisted of a half-dozen plastic bottles, each six inches
high, filled with a turquoise liquid. On the side was the word
POISON, printed in red, flanked by two red skulls and crossbones.
Inside was sodium pentobarbital. For euthanasia of animals. For
veterinary use only. The brand name: Fatal-Plus. Lily filled a
series of needles with six cc. of Fatal-Plus and placed them on the
tray. Then she slipped on a pair of thin plastic gloves, the kind
surgeons and dentists use. When they were ready, Jessica shut the
metal doors, so outsiders couldn't see in. She spread a section of a
newspaper on the two-by-four-foot, stainless steel table. A red pad
had been placed under the table so that the table was precisely the
same height as the gray plastic hamper next to it. Jessica grabbed
the first mutt -- a knee-high gray-black guy -- and lifted him to
the table. She leaned forward, her chest on the back of the mutt,
forcing him down on the table, front paws straight out, her arm
wrapped gently around the dog's head. Lily took a ragged yellow
sponge out of a plastic bucket and sponged off the right paw,
flattening the hair so she could find a vein. "Okay," said Lily,
stepping forward with the needle. She searched for a vein, then
plunged in the needle. The mutt tensed at the prick of the needle,
scanned the room frantically for a few seconds. Then his head
slumped onto the table. Within 10 seconds, he was dead. Jessica slid
the dog back into the plastic hamper. It landed with a heavy
thwupppp. And so it went. Get up on the table, hold tight, inject,
and thwupppp. Lift up, hold tight, thwupppp. Lift up, hold tight,
thwupppp. Sometimes, especially with the big muscular dogs, Lily had
trouble finding the vein. Some dogs panicked at the prick of
the needle, struggling desperately in Jessica's grasp. One large
black dog struggled, breaking loose from Jessica's strong grasp,
jumping on the floor. The dog dashed frantically around for a few
moments, then its rear legs collapsed. It rose, took a few
steps, collapsed again as the Fatal-Plus seeped into its brain. With
some of the larger dogs, especially the obedient German shepherds,
Jessica lifted the front paws up, so that they rested on the table,
the rear haunches on the floor. Lily injected the animal, then
Jessica tugged at its leash, pulling it off the table, trotting
ahead of it five or six steps to the outside door. "Come on,
boy, come on, boy," she said, gently, swinging open the door and
getting another six steps out of the dog, until -- a few feet from
the incinerator -- the dog suddenly stopped, falling over on its
side, dead. Obedient to the end. Meanwhile, next door, in the vet's
lab, the vet had the hound from the day-care center on his scale.
He was examining her, but when he saw her teeth, he shook his
head. "Eight years," he scribbled on the card. "No person is going
to adopt a dog so old." An assistant trotted the dutiful, anonymous
hound back to Run 9. And the vet was right: The hound was too old.
Several days later, she was injected with Fatal-Plus. No new owner
stepped up to adopt the chow. He, too, met with Fatal-Plus. So
did the pit bull pup found in the state park. So did the two
black Lab-mixes picked up at the South Dade nursery. As for Chica,
the beautiful viszla with fleas: She was adopted, but escaped from
her new home. She just fled, said her new owner. "Volo como
una paloma." She flew like a pigeon. Could she still be running
the streets, foraging for food, desperately seeking her original
owner? Was she hit by a car? Or was she picked up a second time
by Animal Services and put back in the shelter? All we know is that
for Chica, as with most dogs and cats, the odds are horrendously
against her. "Dogs and Cats Leave Pawprints in our
Hearts."
Please.... do not breed or buy dogs and cats
from backyard breeders and
petshops!
|