Marion
Hewko, British Columbia, Chained

Susan
Hartland, Leslie Kenter, Tracy Huddleson
Redmond in King County
Entrance of the Dog Park, King Counties Marymoor Park in Redmond
June 30-July 1
10am June 30 -6pm July 1 30 hours
email: hartlas@hotmail.com
Leah
Martinez from Bellevue, Washington
Chilliwack,
British Columbia
Marion Hewko

Woman
wears dog collar, chain in protest
By
Gerry Bellett, Vancouver Sun
Published: Friday, June 29, 2007
Photo by Darren McDonald/Chilliwack Times
It's
been a busy week in the zany world of doggy politics. It opened
with news of vigilante dog snatchers targeting allegedly irresponsible
dog owners across the Lower Mainland and ended with Marion Hewko
standing with a chain around her neck at a busy Chilliwack intersection.
Hewko
described her vigil - chained for 13 hours today to a post at
the intersection of Lickman Road and Luckakuck Way under the Maple
Leaf and the banner Dogs Deserve Better - as an act of solidarity
with abused and chained dogs everywhere.
It
bemused many passing motorists, as the intersection is a busy
local route and lies close to a turnoff from Highway 1.
"Some
people give me the thumbs up. Some others looked disgusted, but
they're probably the guilty ones who keep their dogs tied up.
I just hope they go away and think about it," Hewko said
seven hours into her protest, which began at 5 a.m.
"If
just one dog is untied and treated properly because of this, it's
worth it," she said.
B.C.
is chock-a-block with advocacy groups, societies and organizations
concerned with the welfare of dogs. Now, there's apparently a
direct action gang whose members brazenly pose as animal welfare
officials as they steal supposedly abused animals.
On
Monday, a man and a woman drove up to a Burnaby home and presented
phony papers to the owners of Tommy, an American Labrador puppy,
before snatching the dog.
While
guerrilla tactics appeal to some in the dog welfare movement,
Hewko has no time for them.
"I
really want to stress that we don't believe in stealing dogs.
Hell, no, that's wrong," she said at the end of a nine-metre
tether.
Hewko
organized the B.C. and national branches of Dogs Deserve Better
in January, after searching for a way to better the lot of man's
oldest companion. The organization was founded in the U.S. to
end the suffering endured by dogs kept on chains or penned for
life. This weekend marks the beginning of the society's annual
"chain-off" week, when members will chain themselves
to doghouses across the U.S. to make their point.
"I
just love dogs, but it used to irk me seeing people with dogs
loose in the back of pickup trucks in real danger of getting hurt
and seeing dogs tied up," said Hewko, who works for the Chilliwack
Society for Community Living.
By
noon Friday, she was hungry and cold - and bored.
"Now,
I know just how a dog feels being tied up like this. They get
bored and they will get angry. I got myself tangled up with the
post just moving around but I could undo it. A dog who gets caught
around a tree can't.
"Dogs
are social animals who want to belong to a pack. Keeping them
alone, ostracizing them from family and friends, that's just cruel,"
she said.
Most
municipalities have bylaws forbidding the chaining of dogs, but
Hewko says many people living in the rural areas of the Fraser
Valley don't care.
"You
can drive by farms and see dogs chained up all the time or kept
in pens. You'll find German shepherds kept chained in the yard
outside and a little Chihuahua kept inside as a pet. Why is that?
I just hope people will think about what they are doing and stop
abusing their animals."
The
group raises money - not huge amounts, she admits, but enough
to help with rescue work. A donations jar by her side only had
$5 in it by noon.
"That
was from a co-worker," Hewko admitted. "But I did take
pledges and so far I've raised $140."
While
Hewko tried to stay comfortable for 13 hours with a chain round
her neck, her own pet, Maggie, a two-year-old golden Labrador,
was at home in comfort.
"She's
probably asleep on my bed," she said.
gbellett@png.canwest.com

Marion
at Redmond Park, Seattle
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