Talk:Animal in Distress - By Veterinarian Advice (Re:Taking Possession of)

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Commentary

Provincial Animal Welfare Services Act, 2019, S.O. 2019, c. 13[1]

1 (1) In this Act,

...
“critical distress” means distress that requires immediate intervention in order to prevent serious injury or to preserve life; (“détresse critique”)
“distress” means the state of being,
(a) in need of proper care, water, food or shelter,
(b) injured, sick, in pain or suffering, or
(c) abused or subject to undue physical or psychological hardship, privation or neglect; (“détresse”)

...

31 (1) An animal welfare inspector may remove an animal from the place where it is and take possession of the animal for the purpose of providing it with necessaries to relieve its distress if,

(a) a veterinarian has advised the inspector in writing that alleviating the animal’s distress necessitates its removal;
(b) the inspector has inspected the animal and has reasonable grounds for believing that the animal is in distress and the owner or custodian of the animal is not present and cannot be found promptly; or
(c) an order respecting the animal has been made under section 30 and the order has not been complied with.


Comments

  • When reading 31 (1), (a) and, (b) together it appears that (a) should only be applied if the owner is in someway unable to remediate the situation on their own, or in a reasonable time.

Disenting

Procedual Fairness (Sufficient Particulars)

  • Kamstra v Chief Animal Welfare Inspector 2021 ONACRB 8, 2021 ONACRB 8 (CanLII), <https://canlii.ca/t/jfqm1>, retrieved on 2024-02-15

References

  1. Provincial Animal Welfare Services Act, 2019, S.O. 2019, c. 13, <https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/19p13>, reterived 2021-04-22