Montreal

Mount Royal goes to the dogs in annual anti-cruelty walk

On a chilly Sunday morning hundreds of people and dogs took to the trails of Mount Royal for a good cause. The annual Walk Against Animal Cruelty, hosted by the Montreal SPCA and AnimaPlus, raised about $50,000 for the Montreal SPCA.

Fundraiser supports Montreal SPCA's overworked inspections unit

Annual Snout & About fundraiser for the SPCA will help fund their investigations unit.

8 years ago
Duration 0:58
The SPCA says the event is always a success.

On a chilly Sunday morning, hundreds of people and dogs took to the trails of Mount Royal for a good cause.

The annual Snout & About walk against animal cruelty, hosted by the Montreal SPCA and AnimaPlus, raised about $50,000 for the Montreal SPCA. They are aiming to use it on their inspections team.

The SPCA had volunteers along the route to offer dogs water if they needed it. (Elysha Enos/CBC)

Inspector Elyse Hynes said the SPCA is actively seeking a new inspector to add to their five-person team.

"We're overloaded with cases. We can't respond as quickly as we would want," Hynes told CBC.

"Sometimes we can't get to complaints that aren't labeled 'urgent' for a week or two. And security is expensive."

The inspectors work on about 60 active cases per week.

Pit bull advocates on site

Pit bull advocates on site said they want owners punished instead of breeds. (Elysha Enos/CBC)

The young organization Québec Pit Bull was at the event as part of their partnership with the SPCA.

Founder Dana Hyde said rather than have the province put through anti-pit bull legislation, it should look at dog owners.

"If you're walking your dog without a leash, it's caught loose in the streets, or it bites, the owner should be fined," Hyde said. "Punish irresponsible owners."

She added that in places like Ontario where pit bulls have been banned for more than 10 years, dog bites have gone up. They are just coming from other breeds now.

She said that she isn't worried about a provincial ban on the breed. But individual cities, like Laval, may be able to put through breed-specific bans.