‘Consultation’ far from serious
(Letter to editor published in Yukon News - May 26, 2008)

This is my take on the Yukon Animal Protection Act review “consultation” meeting.

The meeting was well attended by those concerned parties, myself included, who wished to submit their
personal views about what the ‘new and improved’ act should look like.

Unfortunately, however, the real consultation was apparently done long before (outside of the public eye)
in private meetings with approved stakeholders (“key stakeholders”) such as the dog mushing, trapping,
big-game outfitting lobby groups, and others who exploit Yukon animals for entertainment and financial
gain (there was little or no involvement by actual important players, such as Yukon First Nation
governments).

The meeting was a tightly controlled, patronizing exercise involving a show of hands (agree/disagree)
where attendees hurriedly commented upon, and voted on a series of seemingly random proposed laws
and amendments.

This took up most of the three hours before time expired around 10 p.m. as the Canada Games Centre
was closing for the evening.

Many people left throughout the meeting. Some of these people may have hoped to submit public
comments to the panel as I had hoped to, but did not see the likelihood of that happening.

The people who stayed to the end were forced to blurt out their most important opinions when they were
even remotely related to any of the laws under consideration.

This caused some heated exchanges among the various proponents at times, which was unfortunate and
unnecessary, had a proper forum been arranged.

My proposed submission pertained mainly to the welfare of sled dogs in the Yukon.

Near the end of the meeting, as time was running out, I and a fellow animal advocate needed to express
our remaining vital concerns about sled dogs to the panel.

In relation to a proposal that public animal welfare authorities, including Yukon government employees
(possible Yukon animal protection officers) be immune to lawsuits brought about by their legal actions in
the line of duty, my colleague asked a question along the lines of “what if the government itself is
sanctioning animal cruelty?”

The individual tasked with guiding the consultation process, Ken Kilpatrick, asked for a specific example of
such a situation.

The dog-mushing industry and Yukon Quest were given as prime examples around which animal
exploitation and cruelty (apparent culling of otherwise healthy unwanted dog and puppies; real exposure
to death, suffering and injury for dogs used in the Quest) can and does occur.

This was not well received by Kilpatrick and the meeting moderator.

We were informed that the meeting was not the place to express these concerns (sponsorship of Yukon
Quest with public money, promotion of Quest in Yukon classrooms, government promotion of sled-dog
tourism industry) and that we should contact our territorial politicians.

We should have expected such a reception seeing that Kilpatrick chose to wear his finest Yukon Quest
polar fleece vest for the occasion.

He is also a licensed veterinarian who apparently has close ties to the Quest (listed as on-call vet for 2008
race).

We departed with a bleak outlook for the hopes of much-needed regulation of the Yukon dog-mushing
industry and protection for sled dogs being included in proposed legislation.

Tragedies, if not outright crimes such as the one that helped kick-start the need for enforceable animal
protection laws — the shooting of scores of dogs in April 2006, by a transient Dawson-area resident
described as a ‘dog hoarder’ or collector — can still take place in the Yukon in the future.

It was made apparent at the meeting that it is not considered inhumane, nor will it be a criminal act, for
society to euthanize unwanted dogs, or control dogs considered to be pests, by gunshot — a longstanding
Yukon and northern tradition.

An analogy to this would be the Western powers going to war over the invasion of Poland and then
handing the star-crossed country over to the good graces of the Soviets at war’s end.

When it comes to the welfare, rights and protection of Yukon animals, many dogs in dog yards
throughout the territory (and other animals) will remain ‘out in the cold’ as a result of this exercise in
‘window dressing.’

Terry Cumming
Whitehorse