Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 7, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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A3 FRIDAY FEBRUARY 7, 2025 ● ASSOCIATE EDITOR, NEWS: STACEY THIDRICKSON 204-697-7292 ● CITY.DESK@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
Injured, malnourished, dead dogs litter First Nation’s roads; rescuers plead for funding, oversight
Maulings, cullings and a ‘war zone’
O
NE dog riddled with bullets
lies in a puddle of water
on the side of a road, dirty
enough to blend into its surround-
ings.
Another canine is seen half buried
in garbage, next to an empty bottle of
booze and pop cans.
Dead dogs are a common sight
on Sandy Bay Ojibwa First Nation,
which animal advocates describe
as hell on Earth — a community
plagued by overpopulation and
neglect.
Nicole Sellers, an emergency
dispatcher in western Manitoba who
volunteers to rescue dogs and cats in
her spare time, said many Manitoba
First Nations have issues with wild
dogs, but the situation is particularly
dire in Sandy Bay.
Sellers said the First Nation, located
about an hour north of Portage la Prai-
rie, is littered with dead dogs discard-
ed on roads or at the landfill.
“Some of the communities will take
the dogs out of the community and
shoot them,” Sellers said. “But Sandy
Bay basically shoots them on the spot.
I’ve had text messages from some
of the community members saying
they’re at work and they hear all these
gunshots going off. They can’t work,
and they say it’s traumatizing.”
Sellers said she’s had dogs shot right
in front of her while she’d been trying
to rescue them, while others who were
spayed or neutered in previous visits
have suffered a similar fate.
“It’s just really sad,” she said. “I felt
like what I thought a war zone would
be like.”
The horrors she and other advocates
have witnessed have left them pleading
for more funding and better oversight
from the province.
The Free Press reviewed dozens of
photos and videos from Sandy Bay,
including some in the last couple of
weeks, showing animals that appear
severely injured, malnourished or
deceased, including dogs that have
frozen to death and others littered with
bullets — victims of cullings intended
to control the out-of-control population.
Sandy Bay Chief Trevor Prince
posted a message on Facebook on Jan.
21, refuting a now-deleted post that 300
dogs had been killed in the community.
Prince wrote he did not hire anyone
to purge the dog population. Advocates
claim stray dogs in the community
have a $50 bounty. But even collared
animals are being shot.
“We’ve had a dog population problem
in our community for many years as
there is in most First Nation communi
-
ties,” he wrote.
Prince did not respond to calls,
emails and social media messages
from the Free Press.
The chief wrote that packs of dogs
roam around school grounds, raising
concerns over the safety of school
children. He also said random attacks
have taken place in the community,
including on his stepdaughter.
“I understand that spay and neuter
clinics is a solution to control the dog
population, that’s a long-term solution,”
he wrote. “An immediate solution was
needed for the aggressive ones that
were attacking people in public.
“I’m not proud of that solution but
something needed to be done.”
Prince said he’s received hate mes-
sages in response to the culling and
offered to allow people to come into the
community and rescue the dogs.
A pack of 10 dogs mauled Lorraine
Trout’s nine-year-old granddaughter
while she was walking home one eve-
ning in Norway House Cree Nation last
summer.
The attack left a deep gash on the
child’s face, and multiple puncture
wounds in her chest and arm, injuries
that required her to be flown to Winni-
peg’s Health Sciences Centre.
In the immediate aftermath, Norway
House captured some dogs and put
them in cages before they were taken
away.
The band office implemented a by-
law mandating residents register and
leash their dogs.
Trout said Thursday the problem
persists, saying many people hid their
dogs while the community was on
high alert and efforts to alleviate the
problem in the northern First Nation
only lasted a couple of days.
“Nobody comes here,” Trout said.
“I kept taking pictures, and nobody
was doing anything about it. And it’s
starting again.”
Chief Larson Anderson, who could
not be reached for comment Thursday,
told the Free Press in December they
cull on a case-by-case basis, and only
when absolutely necessary. He said
he wishes to work with community
members to take responsibility for
their animals.
Not everyone co-operates, Sellers
said.
She spoke of watching dogs eat other
dogs, and seeing others with mange
and significant physical injuries.
Nearby veterinary care is lacking.
The closest vet — a 30-minute drive
northwest of the community — closed
suddenly last year after the vet died.
The next closest is 45 minutes south-
west in Gladstone.
Last March, 45 animal welfare
organizations declared a state of emer-
gency in the province due to animal
overpopulation.
In an open letter, they asked the
government to step in and provide sup-
port and resources to assist animals in
need.
They called for $2.5 million annu-
ally from the province for spay and
neuter programs, along with money for
food and supplies and an action plan
to address puppy mills and backyard
breeding practices.
In response, the province launched
the Northern and Remote Veterinary
Care Initiative and gave $200,000
to the Winnipeg Humane Society to
expand its One Health Program, which
runs mobile spay and neuter clinics in
northern and remote communities.
Agriculture Minister Ron Kostyshyn
said Wednesday the province conduct-
ed 25 mobile clinics in communities
in 2024, providing care to more than
1,700 animals, including 1,200 spay
and neuters.
Sandy Bay and Norway House were
not among the communities visited.
“It’s a good start for our province,
and I look forward to working to im-
prove the program,” Kostyshyn said.
“We know we have more to do.”
Kostyshyn said he strongly encour-
ages people to report animal welfare
issues and that it’s important the
province’s chief veterinary officer is
involved.
The money barely scratches the
surface of the problem, said Chelsea
Kork, director of K9 Advocacy Manito-
ba, which rescues dogs and cats from
rural First Nations.
“It was kind of a slap in the face,”
Kork said. “Our rescue alone, one sin-
gle rescue, we spend $350,000 yearly
on vetting. One hundred thousand
doesn’t go very far.”
She said the province needs more
bylaws and an animal control officer to
enforce them.
Kork no longer goes to Sandy Bay.
“It’s like PTSD at this point,” she
said. “I get anxiety just thinking about
going there.”
If it’s not there, it’s somewhere else.
Kork said a dog was taken in Tues-
day night from Bloodvein River First
Nation that had been stabbed in the
head.
“This is what we’re dealing with
here,” Kork said.
Kork said it’s not uncommon for her
organization to bring in dogs and find
bullets lodged inside them when they
are X-rayed.
“For us, it’s normal. When they do
the cull days, how many of those dogs
are shot, but not shot to kill, and they
die a slow, painful death where they
bleed out? Tons, I’m sure.”
scott.billeck@freepress.mb.ca
SCOTT BILLECK
NICOLE SELLERS PHOTO
Photos and videos from Sandy Bay show animals from the out-of-control dog population appearing injured or dead, some bullet-ridden.
SUPPLIED
Lorraine Trout with granddaughter Heavenly
Monias, 9. The child was mauled by a pack of
10 dogs in Norway House in August.
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