Ambulance Trucks Jigsaw. Ambulance Trucks Memory. Ambulances Slide. Bouncing Babies. Car Toys. Car Toys Season 1. Car Wash. Car Wash Salon. Cartoon Ambulance Puzzle. Cartoon Ambulance Slide. CDrone Survival. City Ambulance Simulator.
City Ambulance Simulator pop! Dotted Girl Ambulance For. Drunken Duel. Duck Shooter Game. Dumb Ways Jr Zanys Hospital. Gun Strike. Hit Em Up. Hit Targets Shooting 2. Kogama: Clash Royale -. This reduction is down to the prevention work done by our officers - our ability to serve statutory notices means that in most cases, people have acted on the improvement notices we have served in the first place.
This means animals' lives are being made better more quickly and owners do not end up in court - it's a win-win for animals, people and the justice system. It's clear that the way in which the Scottish SPCA operates enables animals to be helped more quickly, and that owners take their concerns more seriously.
We're confident that our new TogetherForAnimalWelfare strategy will enable us to do the same across England and Wales.
Read about our other bold ambitions for animal welfare in the run-up to For more detailed information on our TogetherForAnimalWelfare strategy and to watch our new film, read our strategy now. Keep up to date with our latest stories about animal rescues, animal welfare and much more. Take a look at some of the great ways you can support our vital animal welfare work. Share this Hi Mike! Find out more about our new strategy For more detailed information on our TogetherForAnimalWelfare strategy and to watch our new film, read our strategy now.
As I have said in phone conversations, I would have taken the crow to my local vet for a proper assessment. The crow may still have had to have been destroyed, but I would have known that this was the right action to take. I addressed this point in my previous letter, dated 4th May I agree that not every animal can be saved, but that crow could have been.
As you have said, his injuries were not life threatening. I work with death on a daily basis, so I know how difficult the decision is to humanely destroy an animal. I have absolutely no problems with an animal being put down when necessary. The challenging option, and the ethical option, was to take the crow to be assessed properly and to be given a fighting chance to live, even if that life had to be in a sanctuary.
You may not approve of sanctuaries, but surely the crow should have been given the chance to try living in one? Corvids are bright, inquisitive and sociable animals so after some time in captivity you would see if the choice to live in that environment was right for the crow or not.
It is a real shame you have not heard of Corvid Aid, they do a lot of excellent work rehabilitating wildlife, and could offer your organisation some advice on how to correctly assess and assist injured corvids.
While I admire the training your staff undertake, 9 months of training and a quick examination in the back of a van is not comparable to having an animal checked by a qualified vet or someone who has years of experience of caring for corvids, such as Corvid Aid. I would still like to know where, when and how the crow was killed. I would hate to think that he was killed right outside my home after I entrusted him into your care. In my phone conversation with Chief Inspector MacIntosh, he made a fuss of how much it would cost for me to help the crow myself.
As I mentioned in my previous letter, my cat was not offered assistance by your staff when he was injured, so I am well aware of the cost and effort of re-cooperating a severely injured animal. If this is true then why have Anne Edmunds and yourself repeatedly mentioned your centre in Fife which is nearly an hour and a half from here? It would take 35 minutes to get to Hessilhead from Dumbarton - surely after days of being left outside and a night in my home, that 35 minutes would have been worth it?
Instead, why not accept that my complaint is valid, and that your organisation failed to do what was in the best interest of this crow? My issue with how your organisation treated this poor bird will not go away, but a review of your policies regarding these cases would prevent such unnecessary tragedies from occurring again.
In case it was lost in the post, please find another copy of it enclosed for your reference. Your original letter did not reach me. I have checked through all of my correspondence from you, as you suggested, and you have not addressed the aforementioned questions in any of them.
As these questions have failed to be addressed during our communications to one another these past months, I am left with doubt as to if you will ever answer my queries fully and honestly. Furthermore you have also completely failed to acknowledge the very serious allegations your Chief Inspector McIntosh made regarding the Hessilhead Wildlife Trust. I would be grateful if you would confirm or deny what he told me. I am frustrated that the Scottish SPCA cannot accept their failings, and instead seek to blame others for their poor behaviour.
And I am saddened as this is not the first time they have acted in ways that do not benefit animals, nor will it be the last.
But I cannot keep quiet, and I hope that I can encourage others to step forward and point out their flaws. I am not sure how others feel about this situation, and it would be unfair for me to assume that you are as disappointed in the Scottish SPCA as I am. In sharing this correspondence, I hope that you will think carefully about which charities you support. Do they do what you expect them to do? Episode guide. A stunning combination of environments characterises this series blending the beauty of the Highlands and Islands with the gritty, tough urban streets of Glasgow and Edinburgh.
Read all A stunning combination of environments characterises this series blending the beauty of the Highlands and Islands with the gritty, tough urban streets of Glasgow and Edinburgh. SSPCA: On the Wildside follows the daily lives of inspectors and ambulance drivers working across Scotland as they rescue and protect an extraordinary variety of wildlife, livestock and domesti Read all.
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