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Romance
08-24-2007, 09:27 AM
Service dog killed in traffic ends up at San Jose rendering plant
By Linda Goldston
Mercury News
San Jose Mercury News
Article Launched:
http://www.mercurynews.com/search/ci_6674043?IADID=Search-www.mercurynews.com-www.mercurynews.com




It was bad enough for Richard Gambord to learn that his missing service dog was killed a short time after he crashed his van and the dog ran off.

Then, he learned that the Golden Retriever's battered body had already been diposed of - mixed in with roadkill and grease at a San Jose rendering plant.

"It's just so sickening," Gambord said. "They took this esteemed and loved dog and hauled him away like he was roadkill. It makes me sick."

A Caltrans worker took Quinn's remains to the San Jose Tallow Company the same night he was killed - a violation of Caltrans policy, a Caltrans spokeswoman said.

To Gambord of Los Gatos, and the college student who spent more than a year training him, Quinn was treated with no more respect than motorists show squashed squirrels.

Brigetta Smith, public information officer for Caltrans confirmed that the dog was taken there even though it violated the department's procedure. Road crews are supposed to take the body of a dog or cat to an animal shelter so it can be scanned for an ID chip - and the owner can be notified, she said.

In this case, Gambord and others searched for a week for the dog that was wearing a collar and a purple cape with the logo for Assistance Dog Institute.

Based in Santa Rosa, the institute places nine to 15 assistance dogs each year and there is always a waiting list. Quinn was placed with Gambord, who has multiple scelorsis, three weeks ago, and already had helped him to take a few steps without fear of falling.

"We certainly didn't want it to end this way," said Jorjan Powers, community and public relations director for the Institute. "It's just an unhappy ending no matter how you look at it."

Smith said Caltrans is reviewing its procedures "to make sure this doesn't happen again."

A California Highway Patrol officer who removed the dog's body from the roadway told Caltrans the dog was wearing a collar and its purple uniform. The Caltrans worker who picked up Quinn, however, said he did not see the cape or the collar.

"I've asked our guys to review the agreement we have with the rendering plant to make sure they won't accept domestic animals from us," Smith said. "There should be safeguards on both ends."

Gambord and Quinn were returning home from an outing on Aug. 12 when Gambord said he heard his dog choking in the back of the van. The next thing he knew he had crashed into some bushes on the Interstate 280/880 freeway interchage in San Jose. The van's door flew open and Quinn bolted out about 1 a.m. Authorities think the dog was hit by a car about an hour later.

"He kept getting hit so the CHP ran a traffic break so Caltrans could pick him up," Smith said. "We picked him up about 2 a.m. right at northbound 280 to northbound 880."

Smith said Caltrans used to take all dead animals it removed from roadways in the South Bay to the rendering plant, but it changed its procedure two years ago to take only wild animals.

Caltrans used to have a contract with the humane society that allowed them to drop off the dead bodies of cats or dogs that had been killed on a freeway or expressway but "Caltrans chose not to renew it," said Chris Benninger, executive director of Humane Society Silicon Valley."

Peggy Leyba of San Jose Tallow Company said the manager could not be reached Monday. Commonly, the dead animals taken to tallow plants are boiled down to oil that goes into a range of products, including fertilizer, soap and stock feed.

"They do accept dead dogs," Leyba said but she had no information about the products produced.

Powers said the staff of the institute plans to hold a memorial for Quinn, and meet to discuss what happened. "We plan to meet and see if there isn't some good that can come out of this tragedy."

moosmom
08-24-2007, 09:38 AM
That's awful!! Did they KNOW it was a beloved service dog or just another dog running loose who happened to be hit by a car???

RIP sweet Quinn.

sabies
08-24-2007, 10:29 AM
That is awful. How did they not notice a collar and cape?

Why is roadkill going into stock feed? I feel sick.

mike001
08-24-2007, 07:58 PM
This is a first for me. Where we are it's illegal to leave an animal that you hit, on the road. We have to call the humane society so they can send someone to pick up the animal. Maybe the dog wasn't dead and could have been saved if someone had picked it up. Very unlikely you would miss seeing a cape on a dog. How sad is that.

Freedom
08-24-2007, 09:32 PM
There was a LOT about companion animal remains ending up in various foods for livestock and even for our PETS during the pet food recall earlier in the year. Anything which contains "animal renderings" includes roadkill and sometimes even companion animals.

Lady's Human
08-24-2007, 10:13 PM
It's illegal for carcasses from roadkill to be rendered in plants which produce food products, and has been for a long time. Rumors to the contrary aside, (and after a web search all I found were rumors, nothing concrete) rendering plants in the US are fairly tightly controlled.

Lady's Human
08-24-2007, 10:17 PM
Back to the original topic, if the animal was hit repeatedly, as stated in the article, there's no way to know what condition it was in when the caltrans workers picked it up.

jackie
08-27-2007, 06:41 AM
Heartbreaking.

:(

king2005
08-27-2007, 03:50 PM
Commonly, the dead animals taken to tallow plants are boiled down to oil that goes into a range of products, including fertilizer, soap and stock feed.

Wait what??

& the government wonders why MAD COW keeps popping up!! WTH!! :mad: :mad: :mad:

I feel horrible for the dog & the owner, but that comment about stock feed is FAR FAR FAR more frightning & THAT needs to be investigated more (as well)!!

I thought that stuff was banned in the USA??

I know its banned in Canada & the hormone shots, but assumed the feed thing was banned in the USA aswell... if not, thats so gross!!!!

loveallfurryfriends
08-29-2007, 06:10 PM
I am so sorry for this beloved service dog's owner. To think that your beloved friend could be hauled away & dumped like trash is very upsetting.

Blackrose
08-29-2007, 07:15 PM
How awful. :( I can't imagine what that poor dog's owner, and its raiser, are going through right now. Even thinking about my animal being disposed in that kind of way makes me angry.


Commonly, the dead animals taken to tallow plants are boiled down to oil that goes into a range of products, including fertilizer, soap and stock feed.
This is the last time I'll use soap....maybe my stinkiness can be used in an animal rights campaign...

Lady's Human
08-29-2007, 07:24 PM
If you're going to protest the use of tallow and rendered animal products, make sure you don't use any steel (tallow is used in the rolling process), and a number of other industrial processes.