PDA

View Full Version : Selfish woman has cats euthanized



NKBurlington
07-15-2004, 12:51 PM
:mad:

Elderly condo owner in violation of pet policy has cats euthanized

Tim Whitnell
Jul 14, 2004

A Burlington senior has followed through on a promise to euthanize her cats after being told she could not keep pets in her condominium unit.

Donalda Nicholson, a resident of The Sands condo on Northshore Boulevard, said she had agonized for months over what to do, whether to fight an eviction notice and keep her pets, leave her unit six months into a two-year lease and take her pets or stay and get rid of her healthy 12-year-old Himalayan cats.

She determined several weeks ago to get rid of the cats rather than giving them to someone else.

Nicholson, who lives alone in her subleased unit, had been ordered by Wilson, Blanchard Management Inc., the building's property management company, to comply with a no-pets policy by July 31 or else vacate her unit.

A May 31 condo board meeting where the pets issue was at the forefront changed nothing.

She said she had moved in aware of the condo's no-pets policy.

Nicholson explained that she had some trouble finding a veterinarian who would euthanize the cats but finally located one at an animal hospital in Oakville.

She said she tried two or three vets in Burlington but was refused.

"I had the cats put down last Thursday. It was hard on me and the vet," she said, her voice trembling.

"I still think it was the most humane thing to do," she added, having said repeatedly over the last few months her belief only she could care for the cats properly.

"What's really hurting me is that the old rules, the bylaws, are more important to them than the health of their neighbours," she said of some of the condo unit owners and the property management company.

A local veterinarian the Post spoke to predicted it would not be easy for Nicholson to have her healthy pets euthanized.

"A vet can choose, if there's not a medical reason to put it down, not to perform it. It would be an ethical decision on the vet's part," said Dr. Barry Burtis of Burlington's Bay Cities Animal Hospital, who writes the Pet Tales column for the Post.

Nicholson's first-floor neighbour and pro-pet compatriot, Carol Davidson, was also ordered to get rid of her pet, a 30-year-old African parrot.

However, she says she won't part with her bird and is looking elsewhere to live.

"I don't want to live anywhere where people don't have compassion," she observed.

"I knew no pets were allowed but I always thought that meant cats or dogs and not birds. I'm not leaving her behind," Davidson said of the parrot. "She says good morning and goodbye to me and sings; she makes me happy," said the widowed woman, a survivor of kidney and breast cancer.

While Davidson is willing to make a clean break, leaving behind a unit she invested $20,000 in, Nicholson realizes she has angered some, not necessarily by staying and having her pets put down.

"It's a very big decision and I'll have to live with it. It'll be very lonely," said the retired registered nurse.

She has said previously that she has a letter from her doctor recommending she be allowed to keep the felines for her emotional well-being.

Nicholson said she had two 16-year-old cats, a Himalayan and a Persian, before her current cats and that they deteriorated in front of her eyes over several years.

"I guess it's a little selfish of me to save myself from suffering. I'm sparing myself and them the suffering. I know how hard it is to watch them suffer."

The property manager of The Sands said his company's no-pets policy has not changed.

"The Condo act supersedes any provisions in the Tenant Protection Act," said Mike Mullen. "The only way pets would be allowed is under human rights, like a seeing eye dog."

Mullen said the company is simply following the wishes of The Sands' unit owners.

"The board has an obligation and duty to enforce the rules. We don't view it as a pleasant situation."

He said the property management firm has received three letters of support for the condo board's position and none in favour of Nicholson.

Mullen noted that if an owner objects to a condo board bylaw they need at least 15 per cent of the owners to sign a petition. Then a meeting can be held with a simple majority required to make any changes.

Nicholson's had offers from individuals and groups to take care of her cats but she's refused them all.

A local no-kill shelter had offered its services.

Animal Aid of Burlington, which finds homes for hundreds of unwanted and lost pets every year, recently wrote a letter to the Post stating the organization is "very concerned" Nicholson is considering euthanasia.

"We have encountered similar situations on a number of occasions in the past and have been able to find loving homes for pets that can no longer be looked after by their owners, for whatever reason. Last year we found homes for more than 750 animals. There is no necessity whatsoever for these cats to be euthanized," Patricia Howard, Animal Aid's secretary, said in the letter.

The Toronto-based Animal Alliance of Canada was also disturbed by Nicholson's intentions.

"I understand what she's saying but it doesn't have to be that way. I don't blame her at all. It's a highly-emotional, highly-disturbing situation," said Liz White, a director of the alliance.

"I think the situations with condos is utterly dreadful. I find it mindboggling that people have so much control over someone's life when it's not a problem," White said of the power of landlords and condo boards.

The animal advocacy group had also offered to help Nicholson.

"I think we would be able to find a home for them, maybe not the same home but a good one in another way."

DJFyrewolf36
07-15-2004, 01:09 PM
:mad:

Landlords P**S me off! Grrrr, I would have left.

Shame on the owner for not standing up for her kitties!

aly
07-15-2004, 01:10 PM
Thats disgusting. The only good news is that at least several vets would not do that for her.

Several vets in my town have taken in healthy animals for euthenasia, but secretly slip them out the back door to the shelter. My props to them.

catlover4ever
07-15-2004, 01:18 PM
Shame on her and shame on the vet that did the procedure. :mad: :mad: At least the vet could have taken them and told the woman she could not be there for the procedure and then the vet could have taken them to a shelter or something other than putting them down.

CatMama78
07-15-2004, 02:06 PM
:mad: :mad:

What is this woman's bleepin problem?! She had many good offers to rehome this cat, which probably had many more happy years left to live. And she'd rather have the cat KILLED. I'm so angry - RAR!!

Laura's Babies
07-15-2004, 02:11 PM
I have taken in cats from my old vet that were brough in for him to PTS and I hope that is what the vet in this case did. It hurts no one for them to quietly slip them out the back door into loving arms of someone else who will love them......

heinz57_79
07-15-2004, 03:31 PM
:mad: :mad: :mad:

No pets?? MOVE!! No children?? MOVE!! Getting rid of ANYONE is not an option.

In a sense, I'm glad she found a vet to do it, because who knows what she would have done otherwise. Taken the cats somewhere and dropped them off, put them in a bag and dump them somewhere... who knows? I would rather she put them down than do something inhumane.

Gods, people are so STUPID!

jazzzytina
07-16-2004, 07:07 AM
However, she says she won't part with her bird and is looking elsewhere to live.
"I don't want to live anywhere where people don't have compassion," she observed.

Excuse me, but SHE doesn't have any compassion for killing innocent, healthy (I'm assuming) animals rather than giving them to a loving home. :mad: :mad: :mad:

catmandu
07-16-2004, 09:07 AM
i think that I would have moved,or at least given My Cats,a chance at Life,as someone would ahve atken those Cats!Those Cats would have fought,fo thier Lives,if given a Chance!

moosmom
07-17-2004, 10:12 AM
:mad: :mad: :mad:

NOTHING I say can be printed here because this is a family site. SHAME on the lady and SHAME on the vet that killed those cats!!! If I were there, I'd have gotten the media (tv, radio, newspapers) involved. See how fast those 6astards changed their so-called by-laws.

:mad: :mad: :mad:

leslie flenner
07-18-2004, 07:52 PM
It's a proven fact that they do better, longer with a pet. I suspect these condo owners would like a high turnover for monetary reasons and they don't want to pay for any cat or dog or bird "damage" in the turnover process!! they could care less about the tenants!! there should be a tenant organization to overturn the pet rule--! if it's even possible- what state is this in?

Uabassoon
07-18-2004, 08:52 PM
Originally posted by jazzzytina
However, she says she won't part with her bird and is looking elsewhere to live.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"I don't want to live anywhere where people don't have compassion," she observed.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Excuse me, but SHE doesn't have any compassion for killing innocent, healthy (I'm assuming) animals rather than giving them to a loving home.


The story was about two different people. One lady that had her two cats euthanized and then another lady with a bird that decided to move instead of getting rid of her bird. That quote came from the lady who kept her pet and moved.