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Home / Northern Advocate

Watchdogs to take FNDC to task on dog control improvements

Mike Dinsdale
By Mike Dinsdale
Editor. Northland Age·Northern Advocate·
20 Nov, 2023 04:00 PM4 mins to read

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About 40 people, many with dogs, were protesting against the Far North District Council’s dog control system in Kaikohe on Thursday. Photo / Mike Dinsdale

About 40 people, many with dogs, were protesting against the Far North District Council’s dog control system in Kaikohe on Thursday. Photo / Mike Dinsdale

Activists protesting the council’s dog control policy are delighted with Mayor Moko Tepania’s vow to improve the system, but say they’ll be making sure the system that is “not fit for purpose” gets better.

About 40 people, many with dogs, protested outside the Far North District Council (FNDC) offices on Thursday over what they say is a dog control system that is not running effectively and is not fit for purpose, with far too many dogs getting put down.

The protest was organised by Bay of Islands Watchdogs co-ordinator Leonie Exel and Bay of Islands Animal Rescue founder Summer Johnson, after years of frustration with the way the FNDC ran its animal control. Both made presentations to the subsequent council meeting to outline their concerns to councillors.

While they were outside the council chambers ahead of the meeting, they chanted “dogs’ lives matter” and Tepania came out to talk to them and hear their concerns.

He promised those protesting that he heard their concerns and will work to make the system better. He told them he had heard them and would do what he could to improve the council’s dog management system, but acknowledged it was not an easy task.

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Far North Mayor Moko Tepania speaks to Bay of Islands Animal Rescue founder Summer Johnson and  Bay of Islands Watchdogs co-ordinator Leonie Exel during the protest. Photo / Mike Dinsdale
Far North Mayor Moko Tepania speaks to Bay of Islands Animal Rescue founder Summer Johnson and Bay of Islands Watchdogs co-ordinator Leonie Exel during the protest. Photo / Mike Dinsdale

“If I’m honest, I’m so happy to have our Far North whānau come here to show their dissatisfaction [with the dog control system]. It should be the community here pushing us to get things right,” he said.

Tepania said he had a dog in the whānau and understood how much they meant to people.

He said the Far North had one of the lowest dog registration rates in the county, but possibly one of the highest number of dogs, with up to 12,000 in the region.

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Tepania acknowledged the wandering dog issue was widespread in the Far North, and had been for some time, but vowed to try to turn the situation around.

He said there had been two fatal dog attacks in the region in the past 18 months or so and he did not want to see that happen again, and education on good pet ownership was crucial.

Exel said she was encouraged by the mayor’s response to their concerns, but would only believe that the system would change when it happened.

“It’s great that Moko has listened to us, as we did not feel the council has been listening to us previously, and we’ll be watching to make sure he lives up to the commitment,” she said.

Exel said she and others had been complaining for years about the council’s dog management system and it was important that the mayor had heard their concerns and given a commitment to look into the problem and hopefully improve it.

People protesting the Far North District Council’s dog control system made up the majority of the public gallery at Thursday’s full council meeting in Kaikohe. Photo / Mike Dinsdale
People protesting the Far North District Council’s dog control system made up the majority of the public gallery at Thursday’s full council meeting in Kaikohe. Photo / Mike Dinsdale

“It needs improving, and it needs improving now.”

Johnson told the councillors that her’s and other animal rescue groups in the Far North saved the council a lot of work and resources, but they had no staff and little funding.

She said in the past year FNDC pounds had taken in 517 dogs, but her group had rehomed 969 in the same time. As well, the Donna Doolittle Animal Rescue centre in Kaitāia had rehomed hundreds more.

Boult Campbell took his pet Duke to the Far North District Council’s Kaikohe office on Thursday to show his support for the protest against the council’s dog control system. Photo / Mike Dinsdale
Boult Campbell took his pet Duke to the Far North District Council’s Kaikohe office on Thursday to show his support for the protest against the council’s dog control system. Photo / Mike Dinsdale

Johnson said this took some of the pressure off the council’s two dog pounds, and if the two groups were not there, all those dogs would have gone into the council’s pounds and most of them would likely have been put down.

She said the FNDC had the highest dog euthanisation rate in the country - 21 of the 28 dogs in the Kaitāia pound were killed in September this year - and the council had to put more money and resources into staffing the dog management team, desexing, education for dog owners and prosecuting bad dog owners whose animal attacked or continually roamed.

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Protesters against the Far North District Council’s dog control system took their message to the council on Thursday
Protesters against the Far North District Council’s dog control system took their message to the council on Thursday

The Far North has the highest rate of dog-related injuries in the country. Dog-related injuries had cost New Zealand $15.8 million in the year to June 30, ACC figures reveal - an an increase of almost 50 per cent from five years earlier.

The Far North District leads the way when it comes to dog attacks, with 427 ACC claims in the 2022-23 year or 5.88 dog-related injuries per 1000 people per year, which is more than double the national average and much higher than for Whangārei and Kaipara district councils.

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