Ross
Collins, Susan Morgan, Arkansas, Chained

Ross
Collins and Susan Morgan
Fayetteville
Walton Arts Center 495 W Dickson
10:00 a.m. June 30-10 a.m. July 1
(479) 466-0073 rcollinsre4u@yahoo.com

Protestors
spend time chained to the dog house
BY
KATE WARD Northwest Arkansas Times
Posted on Sunday, July 1, 2007
Ross Collins spent Saturday night in the dog house, but it wasn’t
because he was in trouble.
"
I’m chaining myself to this dog house for the next 24 hours
to raise awareness that dogs should not be chained up, ”
Collins said as he chained himself outside the Walton Art Center
on Saturday morning. “ Dogs are social animals and they
need human contact. ”
Collins,
along with coworker Susan Morgan, was one of 164 people in 34
states to participate in the fifth annual “ Chain Off ”
sponsored by Dogs Deserve Better. The event is hosted annually
across the country to raise awareness. The slogan for the 2007
event — “ Unchain the 50 ” — aimed at
getting at least one person from all 50 states to spend between
eight and 24 hours chained to a dog house.
"
Everyone seems pretty interested in what we’re doing, ”
Collins said. “ They’re surprised at a lot of the
things they learn ”
Dogs
Deserve Better is a nonprofit organization dedicated to freeing
chained dogs and bringing them inside. Through its education and
legislative efforts, the group helps rescue and shelter needy
chained and penned dogs. “ They have resources to help with
house training and to provide low cost fencing, ” Collins
said. Through their work at the Fayetteville Animal Shelter, Collins
and Morgan have seen the effects of chaining first-hand. “
A lot of people think they’re doing the right thing by leaving
their dog outside on a chain, ” Collins said. “ But
here in Fayetteville, we’ve found dogs tied up dead on chains.
We’ve also seen dogs that are emaciated and vicious. ”
Because chained dogs are territorial, Collins said they are two-and-ahalf
times more likely to become vicious. “
When
they’re out there alone, all day, they become unsocialized,
” Collins said. “ Not only are they more likely to
attack someone, they’re also prone to being attacked by
other animals. ” According to the Dogs Deserve Better Web
site, at least 143 children across the country have been killed
or seriously injured by chained dogs since 2003.
In
addition to psychological damage, Collins said, dogs kept chained
in one spot for hours, days, months or even years at a time, also
suffer physical damage. In many cases, the necks of chained dogs
become raw and covered with sores due to improperly fitted collars
and the dogs’ constant yanking and straining to escape confinement.
“
If you don’t have a yard and you have to leave your dog
at home all day, I think crate training is a good alternative,
” Collins said. “ It forces people to interact with
their dogs by letting them out every few hours. Plus, it prevents
them from tearing anything up. ”
Collins
said dogs kept on chains rarely receive proper attention. Tethered
dogs, he said, often suffer from sporadic feedings, overturned
water bowls, inadequate veterinary care and extreme temperatures.
The
Human Society of the United States recommends that dogs be kept
indoors at night, taken on regular walks and otherwise provided
with adequate attention, food, water, and veterinary care. If
an animal must be housed outside at certain times, the dog should
be placed in a suitable pen with adequate square footage and shelter
from the elements.
For
more information, visit www. dogsdeservebetter. com.

