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Page 10 - மனிதாபிமானம் சட்டம் அமலாக்கம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Nearly 50 neglected rabbits rescued from Lancaster County property

Nearly 50 neglected rabbits rescued from Lancaster County property Updated Mar 03, 2021; Posted Mar 03, 2021 Forty-seven rabbits living in filth on a Lancaster County property were rescued this week. (Photo courtesy of the PSPCA) Facebook Share Forty-seven rabbits with untreated medical conditions were rescued Monday from filthy cages on a Lancaster County property, officials said. The rabbits many of them babies, and some only several days old were found in cages overflowing with their own waste, according to the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. On Facebook, the PSPCA said the rabbits were suffering from untreated ear infections and painful scabbing or crusting.

PSPCA enforcement agents remove 47 rabbits from property in Lancaster County

Secretary of Agriculture: Pennsylvania Dogs to Face Horrific Consequences for Legislature s Inaction on Dog License Fee Increase

​ Secretary of Agriculture: Pennsylvania Dogs to Face Horrific Consequences for Legislature’s Inaction on Dog License Fee Increase 02/25/2021 ​ Harrisburg, PA – Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding was joined by partners in animal welfare to bring to light the horrific conditions that Pennsylvania dog wardens prevent and report on a regular basis. Now, due to the legislature s lack of effort to increase the dog license fee that funds the Bureau of Dog Law Enforcement, wardens are being stretched thin and their services to protect the dogs of Pennsylvania are slipping.  Pennsylvania s dog wardens are the eyes and ears inside Pennsylvania s kennels, where dogs are bred. Without a search warrant, no other agency is legally allowed inside, said Redding. Kennel inspections allow wardens to be the first line of defense for the dogs who live there. 

SPCA: Ex-Bristol Twp animal control officer cut wings of injured seagulls

A former Bristol Township animal control officer is expected to be accepted next week into a first-time offender program for using poultry shears to remove the wings of injured seagulls more than two years ago.  Attorney Ron Elgart said that William Kurko, 76, of Bristol Township, was trying to save the birds, which were among 13 intentionally run over by a car in a Tullytown shopping center parking lot in 2018. The Pennsylvania SPCA contends that Kurko, a state-licensed wildlife trapper, was not trained, licensed or equipped to treat the birds and should have sought professional medical care for them. The state agency filed eight misdemeanor charges against Kurko in October 2019. He faces four counts of animal cruelty and four counts of neglect of animal vet care. 

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