Pa. dog-protection fund may be broke by 2013

January 24, 2012|By Amy Worden, Inquirer Harrisburg Bureau
  • Owners of dogs such as this boxer are supposed to pay for licenses, but many do not, and the welfare fund is short partly because of this.

HARRISBURG - Without fresh revenue, a fund that plays a vital role in protecting dogs in Pennsylvania will run out of money by next year, state officials say.

Battered by a multimillion-dollar fund transfer in 2010, plummeting interest rates, and stagnant sales of dog licenses, the state's "restricted" account, created to pay for a range of services related to animal welfare, is shrinking fast.

State officials say the Dog Law Restricted Account, which in 2007 had a $14 million balance, may run out of money in 2013.

"What we are scared about is the dog-law restricted fund," said Michael Pechart, executive deputy secretary to the Corbett administration's agriculture secretary, George Greig.

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Pechart said in a recent interview that the balance of the account, which is supported mainly by license fees for nearly a million dogs statewide plus fines from enforcement actions, now stands at about $2 million.

The fund pays salaries for 92 positions (19 of which are now vacant) within the Department of Agriculture - most of them dog wardens who inspect almost 3,000 kennels in Pennsylvania and enforce the dog law.

Besides kennel inspections, dog wardens are responsible for picking up strays and responding to dangerous-dog calls.

The fund also is used to compensate farmers for livestock killed by dogs and coyotes and provides grants to local humane societies around the state.

The Bureau of Dog Law Enforcement - which has since been downgraded to the Office of Dog Law Enforcement by the Corbett administration - grew out of a years-long debate as advocates fought for and won passage of legislation to crack down on large commercial kennels, also known as puppy mills.

The state has responded to the funding crisis by curbing wardens' overtime, leaving jobs unfilled, and eliminating one high-level position - deputy secretary of dog law, a post created by then-Gov. Ed Rendell to lead efforts to crack down on substandard kennels.

Officials also considered eliminating a grant program that helps dozens of local humane societies pay utility bills. Last year, that program gave out $550,000, mostly in $10,000 to $15,000 grants to small shelters that depend on the funding, advocates say.

Instead, funding will likely be scaled back in this year's budget, but state officials would not say by how much.

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