Urgent From PETA: Leaving Animals Outside Is a Crime in North Carolina
For Immediate Release:
December 7, 2020
Contact:
Brooke Rossi 202-483-7382
As temperatures near freezing at night in your area, PETA is reminding everyone that it’s illegal to leave animals outside, where they shiver and ache in the cold and can even freeze to death. Animals are especially vulnerable in the winter, and there were at least 37 reported cold weather–related companion animal deaths in 2019. (Most are not reported.) That’s why PETA works with law-enforcement officials in North Carolina to get charges filed against people who illegally leave their animals outside in extreme weather.
The following steps can go a long way toward helping animals survive the freezing temperatures coming to your area:
- Bring Them Indoors
Companion animals should live indoors with their human families. “Backyard dogs” and “outdoor cats”—like those featured in Breaking the Chain, the new documentary produced by Oscar winner Anjelica Huston—often go without adequate food, water, shelter, and veterinary care. Their water turns to ice, their food turns to mush if left out in the rain, and these animals are no better equipped to survive freezing temperatures or extreme weather conditions than humans are. They can suffer terribly from frostbite and die of exposure.
- Gear Up
Coats will keep dogs comfortable in cold weather, secure harnesses can help prevent them from getting loose on walks, and booties will protect their sensitive paw pads from the frozen ground. Keep walks short in cold weather, especially for shorthaired dogs.
- Change the Law
If your town or county allows the continuous chaining of dogs, work with local officials to get a ban passed—and contact PETA for help.
Animals left outside in the cold need people to help them—otherwise, they could die. Many chained dogs are pit bulls, whose short hair leaves them particularly vulnerable. Please be on the lookout for any dog kept chained or penned outside 24/7 or without adequate shelter from the elements and alert local law-enforcement authorities immediately.
PETA has released a cold-weather public service announcement. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow us on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.