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Planned dog shelters under scrutiny over space, timelines

THE GOAN NETWORK
Published May 18
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MAPUSA

Months after the Supreme Court pushed States to address rising concerns over stray dog attacks in public spaces, the State government’s proposed plan to establish dedicated dog shelters in three districts is emerging as one of the State’s most closely watched public safety initiatives “ but critical questions remain over execution, funding and whether the facilities can meaningfully reduce conflict between humans and stray animals.

The shelters, proposed by the Directorate of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Services, are intended to house and rehabilitate dogs involved in bite incidents, particularly those found near “sensitive public areas” such as schools, hospitals, markets and bus stands.

Officials say the move is aimed at balancing public safety with animal welfare obligations under existing law.

The decision follows mounting pressure from residents and local bodies amid growing anxiety over stray dog attacks across urban pockets of Goa.

But even before the shelters become operational, questions are surfacing over whether the State possesses the infrastructure, manpower and long-term rehabilitation framework required to make the project viable.

Senior officials in the animal husbandry department have indicated that land identification and operational planning are underway, though timelines for completion remain unclear.

Details regarding shelter capacity, district-wise allocation, veterinary staffing and rehabilitation protocols have also not yet been made public.

The proposed facilities represent a significant shift in Goa’s handling of stray dog management. For years, the State’s primary strategy revolved around sterilisation and anti-rabies vaccination drives under the Animal Birth Control (ABC) programme.

Critics, however, argue that sterilisation efforts have remained inconsistent, particularly in rapidly urbanising areas where open garbage points and food waste continue to attract stray populations.

Animal welfare activists, however, warn that shelters alone cannot become a substitute for scientific stray dog management.

Several activists and veterinarians have cautioned that poorly planned facilities risk becoming overcrowded holding centres unless backed by sustained sterilisation, vaccination and adoption programmes.

“There is a danger of treating shelters as a quick-fix political solution. If the intake exceeds capacity, the shelters themselves can become sites of neglect and conflict,” said one veterinary expert in the State.

The Supreme Court’s observations on stray dog management have increasingly pushed States toward creating structured mechanisms for handling dogs involved in repeated bite incidents, particularly in densely populated public zones.

Questions also remain over monitoring and accountability.

It is still unclear which agencies will oversee the shelters, how dogs will be classified as dangerous, whether behavioural assessments will be mandatory and what mechanisms will exist for public complaints and transparency.


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