
The Witness A personal transformation took over my life in 1988, when I was a witness, through a small porthole window, of an animal shelter gas chamber doing its savage business. Two of the employees began pulling and tugging larger dogs toward the chamber -- this, in itself, was savage. The eyes of the dogs were full of fear as they were shoved into a large cylinder with another six dogs, all types. Next, five puppies were placed in the chamber. Noise. Yelling. Fighting. All scared, they shivered again and again, their eyes huge, their nostrils flaring. They were completely bewildered. One dog in the chamber, a male chow mix about one year old, started snapping at the puppies. All the dogs and puppies were in a desperate struggle, and the gassing had yet to begin. Then a button was pushed, and the two employees walked away as the chamber machine began pumping out streams of carbon monoxide. The little puppies started to paw at the glass window. After one full minute they started to whine and then produced a piercing squeal. Then the larger dogs started a high, mournful wailing, then a deeper howl that rose in great desperation for 45 seconds. That morning of my witness, the time from inception of hell for the dogs and puppies, to the completion of their cries of desperation, was between two and six minutes. As the employees walked away, I knew it was my love, my honor, my devotion to animals that I must not blink and watch every second, every animal struggle to avoid death. However, tears from my heart did overwhelm me that tragic morning, and the final insult was having to load the bodies of the dogs and puppies into a pickup truck and haul them to a local garbage dump. |

Wide Disparity |

As we can see below, many rural communities are trying to stop the stressful process of the gassing of animals whether in the best gas chambers that still force attendants to put up to 8 dogs on top of each other as they are wheeled around the shelter collecting them,and then wheeled into the gas chamber room; as the Utah County Mayors, myself and animal control officers witnessed at the Utah County Animal Shelter 4yrs ago when Lte. Morgan arranged for the Animal Task Committee to
compare Gas Chamber euthanization with the Humane and Stressless Euthanization by Injection and held individually by the employees of the Salt Lake County Animal Shelter. Hopefully we can educate the decision makers here in Utah County with all the findings to date about the reason why the Humane Society of the United States and the American Humane Association feel that Gas Chambers are not humane.
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In 2004, 6-8 million lost and unwanted dogs and cats entered animal shelters throughout the US. Only half made it out alive: the other 3-4 million were euthanized. That's nearly a quarter million animals a month, 405 every hour, one every nine seconds. In human terms, this is proportional to losing the entire human population of Los Angeles every year.
More than 12 million cats and dogs enter U.S. shelters annually, an endless tide of incoming animals. Few of these animals will be reclaimed, and many shelters lack space to keep even most adoptable animals. Of lost cats that end up in shelters, only 2% will be returnedto their homes. Dogs have it better, because they are more likely to bewearing rabies or identification tags, but even so only 16% will bereclaimed. On average, only about 1/3 of animals put up for adoption at
shelters will actually find homes. For the rest, euthanasia.
However,millions of healthy, friendly animals also end up in shelters. California banned the use of CO gas chambers for euthanasia effective January 1,2001. Many injection givers initially resisted the change, because injection requires two workers and extended physical contact with the animal, but once they understood the process, they realized it is better for the animal, and actually less stressful for them. For some animals,the gentle touch of a shelter worker during the euthanasia process may be the only real affection they have ever had. The lethal injection technique allows the worker to comfort the animal and experience closure of the death process. Abuse of the chamber is common. While shelter policies commonly require physical separation in individual cages and close observation of the process, in many cases animals are simply shoved into the chamber, the door sealed,the button pushed, and the employee walks away. The sponsor of the bill in Tennessee that would mandate lethal injection said of the gas chamber that it "results in a slow, painful death." Ronald R. Grier and Tom L.Colvin's 1990 Euthanasia Guide for Animal Shelters recommends that all animals should be tranquilized before placement in the chamber --something that is virtually never done in practice.
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The Last Stop
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The Human Toll
"Some days we can be euthanizing all morning and you look at the pile of animals that nobody wants and it hurts." But then they remember the ones who lived, the ones who found wonderful homes. It is sometimes a dirty job, but it does have its rewards.
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