LEGAL FILING:
KATE M. NEISWENDER (State Bar No. 133234)
LAW OFFICE OF K.M. NEISWENDER
Post Office Box 24617
Ventura, California 93002
voice: 805/649-5575
fax: 805/649-8188
Attorneys for Petitioner
PATRICIA A. LOCK
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOR THE COUNTY OF KERN
PATRICIA A. LOCK, an individual,
Petitioner, v.
COUNTY OF KERN, a political subdivision of
the state of California; and DOES 1 through 20, inclusive,
Respondents.
CASE NO.
PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDATE; COMPLAINT FOR
DECLARATORY AND INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
PETITIONER presents herself before this
Court requesting relief afforded her pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure
§1085 and alleges as follows:
Introduction
- This case involves an on-going pattern
and practice of abuse and failure to follow state and federal law at the
Animal Shelters in Kern County. Petitioner is asking that the County of
Kern be ordered to follow state and federal laws as specified herein, to
cease practices which prevent public access to impounded animals, and to
stop certain abusive practices which are harmful to impounded animals
without any reciprocal benefit to the animals or the public.
Parties
- Petitioner PATRICIA A. LOCK is a
resident of Frazier Park in Kern County, California.
- Respondent COUNTY OF KERN (hereinafter
referred to as the "County") is a political subdivision of the state of
California. The County operates essential services within its
jurisdiction, including the Animal Services Control Division.
- The Animal Services Control Division
(hereinafter “Animal Control”) is part of the Kern County Environmental
Health Services Department, and has primary responsibility for the
operation of two County-owned animal shelters, as well as shelters in
Lake Isabella and Ridgecrest. Between January of 2002 and August 31,
2004, Animal Control impounded more than 70,000 animals, and euthanized
more than 75% of those animals.
- The parties designated herein as Does 1
through 20, inclusive, are presently unknown to Petitioner, but which
are subdivisions or officers of the County who are responsible for the
actions described herein or for carrying out the functions of the County
and who may be affected by this litigation. Petitioner will amend this
Petition to specifically identify each such Respondent as required and
as the capacity and identity of each such Respondent becomes known.
Jurisdiction and Venue
- This court has jurisdiction under §§
1085 of the California Code of Civil Procedure.
- Kern County is a proper venue for this
Petition because the acts performed by the Respondents, including the
violations of law and statute, took place in Kern County, and the
impacts of the County’s decisions, policies and practices have had and
will continue to have severe adverse impacts upon Kern County, its
citizens, and its animals, as further detailed herein.
The Role of Animal Control In Kern County
Jurisdiction and Venue
- According to literature disseminated by
the County in 2004, Kern County is the third largest county in the state
of California and covers 8,172 square miles. The incorporated areas of
the county cover 400 square miles; while the remaining 7,772 square
miles is unincorporated. Animal Control is responsible for the
unincorporated areas of the county, which includes the unincorporated
municipalities of Frazier Park, Lamont, Mojave, Oildale, and Rosamond.
Animal Control provides all or partial animal control services through
contractual agreements to the cities of Arvin, Delano, and Maricopa.
- Animal Control operates two animal
shelters. The larger shelter is located at 201 South Mt. Vernon Avenue
in Bakersfield and the other one is located at 923 Poole Street, at the
Mojave Airport, in Mojave. Both shelters have facilities for both dogs
and cats. Additionally the shelters can accommodate other animals.
Occasionally larger domestic animals enter the shelter such as horses,
goats, or pigs as well as more exotic pets such as snakes, lizards, or
rabbits. In order to meet the sheltering needs of the unincorporated
area around the City of Ridgecrest and in the Kern River Valley the
Division has contractual service agreements with the City of Ridgecrest
and a private shelter in Lake Isabella.
- According to literature disseminated by
the County in 2004, while the population and the number of animals in
the service area has continued to grow the staffing levels for Animal
Control has remained constant since 1997. This is true despite an
estimated ten (10%) percent increase in the County’s population between
1997 and 2004, an increase of almost 100,000 residents.
FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION
(For Violation of Provisions of the California Food and Agricultural Code)
- Petitioner realleges and incorporates
herein by reference all the allegations set forth in this Petition as if
set forth herein in full.
- The provision of services concerning
domestic animals, including dogs, domesticated cats and feral cats, is
governed by primarily by the Food and Agricultural Code. That code was
amended in 1998 to include a number of provisions to promote the
adoption of companion animals, to extend shelter operating hours, to
extend holding times for animals, and to enable non-profit rescue
organizations to have more access to impounded animals. These amendments
are commonly known as the “Hayden Law,” as they were authored by State
Senator Tom Hayden (SB 1785). The Hayden Law is codified in various
places throughout the Food and Agricultural Code. Similarly, in 1998,
the code was amended to make it mandatory for all companion animals
being adopted by a member of the public to be spayed or neutered prior
to adoption; this amendment is commonly known as the “Vincent Bill,” as
it was authored by State Assemblyman Vincent. The Vincent Bill, AB 1856,
is codified at Food and Agricultural Code §30503 and §31751.3.
- The 1998 changes were responsible for a
number of significant changes to animal control operations statewide.
The Vincent Bill was designed to decrease the number of unwanted
animals, on a long-term basis. The Hayden Law made shelters more
accessible to the public and rescue organizations.
- From the time of the enactment of the
Hayden Law and Vincent Bill, the County has failed and refused to follow
the laws. It has been the County’s practice and policy to ignore the
mandates of the legislature, as follows:
- In violation of the Vincent Bill
(§30503), the County routinely adopts out dogs that have not been
spayed or neutered;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108), the County has routinely euthanized dogs prior to the
expiration of the statutorily-mandated holding period;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108.5), the County has routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
dogs upon impoundment, and routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
dogs prior to the holding period specified in §31108;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108.5), the County has routinely allowed purported owners to
relinquish dogs without proof of ownership, as required by law; the
County does not even require the public to come in during business
hours, instead allowing dogs to be placed in an after-hours “drop
bin;”
- In violation of the Vincent Bill
(§31751.3), the County routinely adopts out cats that have not been
spayed or neutered;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752), the County has routinely euthanized cats prior to the
expiration of the statutorily-mandated holding period;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752), the County has routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
animals upon impoundment, and routinely euthanized owner-relinquished
animals prior to the holding period specified in §31752;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752.2), the County has routinely allowed purported owners to
relinquish cats without proof of ownership, as required by law; the
County does not even require the public to come in during business
hours, instead allowing cats to be placed in an after-hours “drop
bin;”
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31752.5), the County has routinely euthanized cats that might be
feral prior to the expiration of the statutorily-mandated holding
period, and have failed to determine whether a cat is feral after the
close of the holding period through the use of a standardized protocol
(§31752.5(c)).
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§31108(b) and §31752(b)), the County has established a pattern and
practice of failing to cooperate with non-profit animal rescue
organizations, by routinely denying such groups access to areas where
animals are located through the use of locked gates; by informing
shelter personnel that they are not allowed to call rescue groups even
if an animal is impounded that is targeted by rescue (i.e., personnel
are not allowed to call Golden Retriever Rescue when a Golden
Retriever puppy is impounded); and refusing to adopt to rescue
organizations;
- In violation of the Hayden Law (§17005
and §17006) , and numerous other policies and procedures set forth in
the law, the County has routinely refused to allow the public access
to impounded animals by, inter alia, keeping cats and kittens in a
locked area, and refusing to allow the public or rescue organizations
to view the animals; by keeping the majority of the dogs at the
shelters in locked areas away from the public and rescue
organizations; by refusing to allow members of the public to view the
animals in the locked areas unless they can describe the animal they
lost exactly, and then only if that description matches exactly the
description rendered by shelter personnel upon impoundment; by
refusing to allow animals to be photographed for rescue and adoption;
by mis-stating the physical descriptions of an animal; and by failing
to log in every impounded animal in the computer system, which thwarts
the public’s ability to locate and view a lost animal.
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§17005), and numerous other policies and procedures set forth in the
law, the County has made it a policy and practice to thwart the
public’s ability to adopt impounded animals by establishing a
“temperament test” that is administered upon impounded animals before
those animals can be viewed or adopted by the public. Such a test has
been found to deem a dog “unadoptable” if the dog is not capable of
walking on a leash; if it growls when a human takes its food away
(even though the County only feeds impounded animals once a day, in
violation of Penal Code §597(e)); if it growls; and numerous other
arbitrary and capricious “tests” that the vast majority of animals
fail. Once an animal fails the “test,” it is deemed “unadoptable” in
direct violation of §17005, and euthanized without the opportunity for
the public to view, interact or adopt the animal;
- In violation of the Hayden Law
(§17005(b)), Civil Code §1834, and Penal Code §597.1, the County has
established a practice and policy of euthanizing treatable animals,
without providing medical care to the animal or allowing the public or
rescue organizations to provide medical care; in addition, rescue
organizations and others have been refused adoption of an animal
because a shelter worker has said an animal is “ill,” without a
veterinarian present, without medical testing or other confirmation,
and without acknowledging the ability of the adopting person or entity
to provide medical care to the animal, if needed. Further, Civil Code
§1834 specifically requires "necessary and prompt veterinary medical
care" which has not been provided to many of the animals brought to
the County shelters.
- The County has failed in other and
further respects to be proven at time of the hearing in this matter.
- The County is required to comply with
the provisions of the Food & Agricultural Code, in every respect. The
County does not have any statutory exemption from complying with state
law on animal control and regulation.
- Petitioner has exhausted all
administrative remedies available to her and will suffer irreparable
harm if the relief requested herein is not granted.
- This Court is asked to immediately
enjoin any further violations of the law, as outlined herein, and to
order the County to take the following actions:
- Enjoin the County from adopting out
cats or dogs that have not been spayed or neutered;
- Enjoin the County from euthanizing
dogs or cats prior to the expiration of the statutorily-mandated
holding period;
- Enjoin the County from euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats upon impoundment, or euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats prior to the holding period specified
by law;
- Enjoining the County from allowing
purported owners of dogs or cats from relinquishing animals without
proof of ownership, as required by law and abolishing the after-hours
“drop bin;”
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
cats that might be feral prior to the expiration of the
statutorily-mandated holding period, and mandating the use of the
statutorily-required feral testing protocols before euthanizing a cat
suspected of being feral;
- Mandating the County immediately
establish policies and procedures that will ensure cooperation between
shelter personnel and rescue organizations, as required by law;
- Mandating that the County immediately
unlock all kennel areas so that the public can have viewing access to
impounded animals, without having to describe an animal; mandating
that the public and rescue organizations be allowed to photograph
animals for rescue and adoption purposes; and, mandating that the
County log in every impounded animal in the computer system;
- Enjoining the use of the County’s
“temperament test” that prevents the public from adopting the majority
of the impounded animals at the shelters;
- Mandating that the County provide
medical care to animals with medical problems, and requiring that,
alternatively, that the County allow the public or rescue
organizations to provide medical care.
SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION
(For Violation of the Federal and State Laws Regarding The Use, Storage
and Reporting of Euthanasia Drugs)
- Petitioner realleges and incorporates by
reference all the allegations set forth in this Petition as if set forth
herein in full.
- Under Title 16, §2039 of the California
Code of Regulations, any employee of an animal control shelter who is
not a veterinarian or registered veterinary technician must receive a
minimum of eight hours of training in order to administer euthanasia
drugs to any animal.
- The County has consistently failed to
provide the required training to its employees, and as a result, Animal
Control personnel who euthanize animals at the County’s shelters do not
have the required training, in violation of law. The rationale for this
regulation is that certain animals are very difficult to euthanize
humanely. Very young animals and old or sick animals have small or
hard-to-find veins. Therefore, without proper training, someone would
have to insert a needle repeatedly to find a vein. If a vein is not
located, an animal can take a long time to die, often in great pain.
- Petitioners have exhausted all
administrative remedies available to them and will suffer irreparable
harm if the relief requested herein is not granted.
- This Court is asked to issue an
injunction, enjoining the County from allowing any untrained Animal
Control personnel to administer euthanasia drugs without with the
state-mandated training. THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION (Complaint For
Declaratory and Injunctive Relief)
- Petitioner realleges and incorporates
herein by reference all the allegations of Paragraphs 1 through 22,
inclusive, of this Petition.
- An actual controversy exists in that
Petitioner contend the County has failed, and continues to fail, to
follow the laws, as set forth herein. Petitioner further contends that
the County has established a pattern and practice of violations of law,
and that the incidents complained of herein are not isolated or random.
On the other hand, the County contends it has acted in accordance with
the law, and that its policies and procedures are consistent with the
law.
- This Court is asked to intervene and to
resolve this conflict, and to order the County to comply with law and
statute in regards to all operations of the Animal Control division and
all County-operated animal shelters.
WHEREFORE, Petitioner prays:
- FOR THE FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION: For an
order of this Court, enjoining the County from violating the law as
outlined herein, and ordering the County to take the following actions:
- Enjoining the County from adopting out
cats or dogs that have not been spayed or neutered;
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
dogs or cats prior to the expiration of the statutorily-mandated
holding period;
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats upon impoundment, or euthanizing
owner-relinquished dogs or cats prior to the holding period specified
by law;
- Enjoining the County from allowing
purported owners of dogs or cats from relinquishing animals without
proof of ownership, as required by law and abolishing the after-hours
“drop bin;”
- Enjoining the County from euthanizing
cats that might be feral prior to the expiration of the
statutorily-mandated holding period, and mandating the use of the
statutorily-required feral testing protocols before euthanizing a cat
suspected of being feral;
- Mandating the County immediately
establish policies and procedures that will ensure cooperation between
shelter personnel and rescue organizations, as required by law;
- Mandating that the County immediately
unlock all kennel areas so that the public can have viewing access to
impounded animals, without having to describe an animal; mandating
that the public and rescue organizations be allowed to photograph
animals for rescue and adoption purposes; and, mandating that the
County log in every impounded animal in the computer system;
- Enjoining the use of the County’s
“temperament test” that prevents the public from adopting the majority
of the impounded animals at the shelters;
- Mandating that the County provide
medical care to animals with medical problems, and requiring that,
alternatively, that the County allow the public or rescue
organizations to provide medical care.
- ON THE SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION: For an
Order of this Court, prohibiting the County from using the drug Euthanol
on cats, and requiring all Animal Control personnel who administer or
who might administer euthanasia drugs immediately be provided with the
state-mandated training;
- ON THE THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION: For an
Order of this Court, ordering the County to comply with law and statute
in regards to all operations of the Animal Control division and all
County-operated animal shelters;
- For an order awarding Petitioner costs,
and for an order of attorneys' fees pursuant to C.C.P. Section 1021.5,
in this proceeding; and
- For such other and further relief as the
Court deems just and proper.
DATED: October ____, 2004
______________________________
KATE M. NEISWENDER
Attorney for Petitioner PATRICIA A. LOCK
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Update of Plaintiff, Pattie Lock vs. County
of Kern
Since Judge's Order, November 10, 2004
Following the Judge's Order at the Temporary Restraining Order that Kern
County follow the laws they have continued to ignore for the past five
years, KCAC tried yet another (illegal) tactic and began turning away
stray animals brought to the shelter.
In one horrifying instance, a man trying to
turn in a feral cat he had trapped who was turned away from the shelter.
The man let the cat go in a nearby field, where it was attacked and badly
injured by hawks.
Both Matt Constantine and his supervisor
Steve McCalley told reporters that KCAC had no mandate to take in strays,
showing a bizarre lack of knowledge of the laws that these two people in
charge of Animal Control in Kern County have.
Kern County Counsel Nations was adamant
that the County would follow the laws and would not turn away dogs and
cats; that they were scrambling to gather cages and pens together to deal
with this crisis, while Matt Constantine ordered the shelters to turn them
away, which was witnessed by the news media.
While the shelters were turning animals
away, there were dozens of empty cages in the one dog building at
Bakersfield that is accessible to the public. A visitor asked why only
five dogs were available for adoption, and was told that only these five
had passed temperament testing. The person who does the temperament
testing is not expected to be available until late next week, which means
all animals whose time is up before then can expect to die also, rather
than only the approximately 90% or so who routinely apparently don't pass
the temperament test.
In his own declaration, Matthew Constantine
stated that they began spending money to comply with the Hayden Law five
years ago, which extended the holding period for stray animals from three
to four days. He claims they spent $500,000 to $600,000 to expand the
Bakersfield Shelter, which has been finished since 2001.
He further states that KCAC has expended
$600,000 to $800,000 to comply with the Hayden and Vincent mandates,
contracting for spay and neuter (which is not done at the Mojave shelter),
trained employees (although a rush to train all employees within 30 days
to be certified in euthanasia was begun upon Court Order), paid shift
differentials and hired more staff, (although he states that the new
building remained vacant due to lack of funds to staff it) "and incurred
many other expenses attempting to comply with the Hayden Law and the
Vincent Bill"- which KCAC records show in no way have been complied with.
He further states that he estimates another $40,000-$60,000 will be spent
in 2004-2005 for compliance. In what way we can't imagine.
He states, as did the County Counsel in
court, that no money has been received from the state as reimbursement for
the money the County spent to comply with the new laws; however when
questioned in court, Counsel admitted that the County had never asked the
State for reimbursement.
So, since 2001, all of the additional space
at the county shelter has been empty? Not at all. When the City of
Bakersfield and the SPCA came to an inability to resolve their contract in
2003, KCAC stepped in and gave the extra space to the City of Bakersfield-
for a price of course. This was not an obligation by the County; this was
a choice.
Since they were already unable to meet
their current duties, it seems absurd that they would take on anything
else. Probably this extra money went to provide veterinary care for
impounded animals, spay and neuter programs at Mojave, coordinating with
rescue groups and volunteers to improve adoptions of animals? Not at all.
Where did it go?
According to Matt Constantine, it appears
very little money has actually been spent for compliance with these state
mandates in over five years, and I am sure the State of California will
see it the same way, leaving Kern County short of money they badly need.
Kern County Animal Control has effectively thumbed their noses at the law,
as they now are doing with the Superior Court Judges' Orders.
What happens to citizens when they
flagrantly defy the law? Try it and see.
Pattie Lock (
pattie@ShelterWatch.com )
Plaintiff
Lock vs. County of Kern
http://www.ShelterWatch.com
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