@pursuitofprog @Dr_Dan_1 There is still a need for monitoring breeders, importers, and dangerous owners. Identify problem owners and breeders so they are held accountable. Presently a ban from keeping or breeding is difficult to enforce people move areas and continue again.
@KathrynLeo55265 @pursuitofprog @LBC@Justice4TLS Trainers certainly are unregulated, there are also some behaviourists who are also unregulated. The industry has some experts but those given the spotlight are ones with high followings not necessarily training and certification. Also the education side is also unregulated.
@venompilled @pursuitofprog As these “owners” have proven they will move from one breed to another they’ll do it again. If you have something in place to trace any offences committed by the dog/owner. You can euthanise the dog, look if the rest of the litter has problems and ban owner/breeder.
@jpurle@Leon_SFrench @pursuitofprog @jason_manc Use biometric data of the dog registered from the breeder, keep a record of the breeder with their NI number. Track how many litters they breed, types, quantity. The dog can then have this information updated at a vets on change of owners etc.
@jpurle@Leon_SFrench @pursuitofprog @jason_manc Agree with your point regulating ownership would certainly be complicated, take with microchips largely ineffective because we have no centralised database. Same with breeding licenses you can still sell without a license so people do. A centralised monitoring system is necessary
@Dr_Dan_1@Conservatives Unfortunately Dan they want quick fixes, on pet theft they would have to try to deal with the offenders. Many appear to lack the motivation to actually address the broader problems, whether its animal breeding, pet theft, dangerous dogs, cases of animal abuse.
on breed bans you are will only mitigate part of the problem until you monitor dogs from birth to death. Where you can recognise problems with owners and or dogs so people can see who the bad owners are actually ban and stop them breeding more dogs. #bbcanyanswers
@_sdtofficial completely agree, until we have a way to accurately track breeders or owners who perpetuate dangerous practices we won’t solve anything. Also a ban will do is shift it elsewhere and as they are a mix it will just encompass mastiff, bulldog etc mixes as well.
1/ A new breed ban won’t solve dog attacks firstly the #xlbully is a mix not a breed. That withstanding problem owners, breeders will move onto a new breed as they did from other breeds to the XL bully. Those facing the consequences are the dogs and good owners.
3/ We need a system to monitor this, we need more knowledge so we can look at wider problems that perpetuate these issues so we can deal them. Then we need regulations. You can’t solve the problem by looking at it from the outcome rather than the cause.
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