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Animal services for the Township of North Dumfries are provided under contract by the Humane Society of Kitchener Waterloo Stratford Perth (KW Humane Society). If there is a concern about an animal, the following information can provide assistance.
Contact the Ontario Animal Protection Centre at 1-833-926-4625 if a pet, farm animal, or wild animal in captivity is in distress of being neglected. This includes animals that:
Are injured, in pain, sick, suffering, or abused
Lack proper care, water, food or shelter
KW Humane Society
The KW Humane Society shall respond to calls for small wildlife in distress or deceased, within 45 metres (150 ft) of a residence on private property (not to include nuisance calls) for the following:
Small wildlife or domestic animal that is in need of assistance, injured, or dead
The Kitchener Waterloo Humane Society will accept stray cats or small domestic pets if space and resources allow. Residents MUST call the Humane Society in advance at 519-745-5615. When space is not available, cats may be placed onto a waiting list and brought into the centre as space becomes available. We would also encourage residents to contact other local humane societies to inquire about assistance.
Sick or injured dogs or small wildlife
911 (Emergency)
Call 911 in an emergency when any life is in immediate danger, such as when there is:
An act of animal cruelty underway, such as beating or torturing of an animal
An animal left unattended in a hot or cold vehicle
In accordance with the Dog Owner's Liability Act, it is prohibited from owning, breeding, transferring, importing, fighting or abandoning pit bulls. However, for Ontario residents who owned a pit bull prior to the changes coming into effect in 2005, the Act contains a grandfathering clause that allows pit bulls to remain in Ontario provided the owner can prove the pit bull was in Ontario prior to August 29, 2005 or born within 90 days of August 29, 2005.
A kennel is a place where dogs are housed, groomed, boarded, bred, trained, sold, or kept and shall include a doggie daycare. Any owner, tenant, or occupant of a property shall not keep, own, or harbour more than three (3) dogs per dwelling unit. Any person who has more than three dogs must apply for a kennel licence. Refer to Animal Control By-law for more information.
A new kennel application must be approved by Council. All new kennel applications are subject to 250 m circulation to surrounding properties and a Public Meeting with Council for approval. Contact the Clerk for more information on this process.
In Ontario, Wildlife Rehabilitators are authorized by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry to provide temporary care to sick, injured and abandoned wildlife until they can be returned to the wild. Rehabilitators provide a significant amount of time and resources to do this work. Every effort is made by Wildlife Rehabilitators to ensure wildlife in their care do not become tame.
Report any abnormally-behaving wildlife to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry at 1-888-574-6656 and contact the Region of Waterloo Public Health at 519-575-4400
If a person comes into direct contact with a rabid or potentially rabid animal (domestic or wildlife), immediately call the Region of Waterloo Public Health at 519-575-4400 to report and seek direction
Contact the Kitchener Waterloo Humane Society to trap and/or remove small wildlife (ex. skunks, raccoons, foxes) that exhibit rabies
Domestic animals should be kept on a leash or monitored by their owners to minimize risk of exposure to wildlife. The most important thing you can do to protect your pet is to have it vaccinated. All pets over the age of three months must be immunized against rabies. It's the law and failure to vaccinate your pet can result in a fine of $110 per day.
It is recommended that those working in high risk occupations for animal exposure (e.g. veterinarians, animal control offices, etc.) receive a rabies pre-exposure vaccine
To protect yourself from rabies:
have your pet immunized against rabies
don't approach or touch unfamiliar animals, even if they seem friendly
don't touch sick or injured animals
do not feed wild or stray animals
For additional information on rabies, contact a Public Health Inspector at the Region of Waterloo Public Health at 519-575-4400 (TTY 519-575-4608).
2023 Rabies Vaccine Baiting Notification
In 2023, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF) will once again be conducting Oral Rabies Vaccine (ORV) bait distribution and trap-vaccinate-release (TVR) programs in Ontario. Baiting and TVR operations will begin June 19 and will continue until the end of October. TVR operations in St. Catharines will begin May 1.
Per the attached map, rabies vaccine bait distribution will be conducted in rural areas with MNRF aircraft and by hand in urban areas by MNRF wildlife technicians. These are the details of bait distribution and vaccination work in 2023 (dates are subject to change depending on weather conditions):
Grey shaded areas will be completed with a combination of Twin Otter airplane and Eurocopter EC130 helicopter in mid-late August.
Urban hand baiting, including the use of temporary bait stations, will occur in the brown shaded areas starting June 19 and continue through to the end of October.
Live trapping and vaccinating wildlife (trap-vaccinate-release) will occur in the areas surrounding Hamilton, Niagara, St. Catharines and Welland shaded in yellow starting June 19 and will continue through to mid-October. TVR operations in St. Catharines will begin May 1.
Preventative baiting of the purple shaded area in eastern Ontario will take place in mid-August by Twin Otter airplane and will take one day to complete and hand baiting in the dark purple shaded area of the city of Cornwall will be completed in early August.
In addition to the activities mentioned above, MNRF may conduct localized rapid response baiting and trap-vaccinate-release measures, which would take place in the event of a raccoon or fox strain rabies case outside of the planned baiting area.
The ministry is committed to the research, surveillance, control and elimination of the outbreak of rabies in southern Ontario to prevent the disease from spreading. Since the start of the rabies outbreak in 2015, the first of its kind in over a decade, MNRF has taken quick action to protect communities, distributing 8.2 million vaccine baits by air and ground. Rabies cases have decreased by 90% since 2016.
In keeping with current World Organization for Animal Health guidelines, the 2023 rabies control zone has been reduced as some areas have had no reported cases in over two years. The control zone encompasses an area within approximately 50 km of positive cases that are less than two years old (positive cases since July 1, 2021).
Any warm-blooded mammal can contract rabies. If a human contracts rabies and does not receive treatment, the disease is fatal.
Ontario’s rabies vaccine baits have been tested to ensure they are safe for wildlife, people, and pets. However, eating a vaccine bait does not replace the regular rabies vaccination provided by a veterinarian for pets. If a pet has eaten a bait and the owner is concerned, they should contact their vet as a precaution.
Ontario’s rabies control program is a joint effort that receives important input and contributions from a variety of partners across the province. Partnerships with provincial ministries, federal agencies, regional health units, municipalities, wildlife rehabilitators, licensed trappers, wildlife control agents and Indigenous communities are all key to the continued success of Ontario’s rabies control program.
For further information about rabies in Ontario, please visit Ontario.ca/rabies or contact the ministry’s rabies information line at 1-888-574-6656.
Should you have any questions or concerns about the information provided, please contact me at 705-313-2043 or by email at Larissa.Nituch@ontario.ca
Larissa Nituch
Rabies Science Operations Supervisor
2022 Rabies Vaccine Baiting Notification
The Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry will be conducting oral rabies vaccine (ORV) bait distribution from June 27 to the end of October 2022.
Per the attached map, rabies vaccine bait distribution will be conducted in rural areas with MNRF aircraft and by hand in urban areas by MNRF wildlife technicians. The following provides details of MNRF bait distribution in 2021:
Grey shaded areas will be completed with a combination of Twin Otter airplane and Eurocopter EC130 helicopter. Twin Otter flights will occur from August 15 through to August 21, with Eurocopter EC130 flights occurring August 22-26.
Urban hand baiting, including the use of temporary bait stations, will occur in the brown shaded areas starting June 27 and continue through to the end of October.
Live trapping and vaccinating wildlife (trap-vaccinate-release) will occur in the areas surrounding Hamilton shaded yellow starting May 2 and will continue through to the end of October.
Preventative baiting of the purple shaded areas in eastern Ontario will take place in early August and will take one day to complete.
In addition to the activities mentioned above, NDMNRF may conduct localized rapid response baiting and trap-vaccinate-release measures, which would take place in the event of a raccoon or fox strain rabies case outside of the planned baiting area.
The ministry is committed to the research, surveillance, control and elimination of the outbreak of rabies in southwestern Ontario to prevent the disease from spreading. Since the start of the rabies outbreak in 2015, the first of its kind in over a decade, NDMNRF has taken quick action to protect communities, distributing 7.5 million vaccine baits by air and ground. Rabies cases have decreased by 95% since 2016.
In keeping with current World Health Organization guidelines, the 2022 rabies control zone has been reduced as some areas have had no reported cases in over two years. The control zone encompasses an area within approximately 50 km of positive cases that are less than two years old (positive cases since July 1, 2020).
Any warm-blooded mammal can contract rabies. If a human contracts rabies and does not receive treatment, the disease is fatal.
Ontario’s rabies vaccine baits have been tested to ensure they are safe for wildlife, people, and pets. However, eating a vaccine bait does not replace the regular rabies vaccination provided by a veterinarian for pets. If a pet has eaten a bait and the owner is concerned, they should contact their vet as a precaution.
Ontario’s rabies control program is a joint effort that receives important input and contributions from a variety of partners across the province. Partnerships with provincial ministries, federal agencies, regional health units, municipalities, wildlife rehabilitators, licensed trappers, wildlife control agents and Indigenous communities are all key to the continued success of Ontario’s rabies control program.
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