WSU veterinary hospital gets a warning
from USDA for animal care violations
By
The Lewiston Tribune, July 31, 2018
Washington State University has received an official warning from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture for allegedly violating the Animal Welfare
Act.
The violation stems from the death of a dog that was left in a kennel
overnight and died at the Veterinary Teaching Hospital in 2016. According to
a release from the university, WSU has put policies in place to avoid
related deaths or incidents in the future.
According to documents from WSU’s Institutional Animal Care and Use
Committee, provided by the animal rights group Stop Animal Exploitation Now,
the dog was given required tests by students in the junior surgery class and
left in the kennel. The documents stated the animal’s condition
deteriorated, and it developed a cough as the day progressed.
“Evening check noted that there was lot of blood in the cage. The technician
left a text message to the vets and went home when nobody responded or
turned up. However, the next morning the animal was highly moribund. When
the technician went to the (Veterinary Teaching Hospital) to get a doctor,
nobody could be located. The animal passed away,” as cited in the May 4,
2016, Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee meeting minutes.
It was later found the dog died from Parvovirus, a disease that attacks
white blood cells in dogs and can damage heart muscles.
“WSU negligence killed multiple animals, and they can’t be brought back to
life. This ‘penalty’ is not sufficient to compel WSU to change. More animals
are likely to die,” Stop Animal Exploitation Now co-founder Michael Budkie
wrote in a news release.
“It was shocking to us, it really was,” Budkie said. “Only an official
warning was a major disappointment.”
More than two years ago, the animal rights group requested the USDA fine WSU
$10,000 for every animal subject to a violation, which Budkie told the
Moscow-Pullman Daily News in June 2016 was expected to be worth six figures.
Under the official warning, WSU is not required to pay anything to the USDA.
Charlie Powell, public information officer for WSU’s College of Veterinary
Medicine, said the university has “never paid a fine to the USDA.”
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