Chilliwack Progress, July 02, 2014

Page 1

The Chilliwack

Progress Wednesday

3

Feature

5

9

News

Scene

Journey

Crash

Harrison

Tales from a modern family.

Head-on crash on Promontory Road.

Harrison Festival has a bit of everything.

Y O U R C O M M U N I T Y N E W S PA P E R • F O U N D E D I N 1 8 9 1 • W W W. T H E P R O G R E S S . C O M • W E D N E S D AY, J U LY 2 , 2 0 1 4

Apparent poisoning leaves family shaken Eric J. Welsh The Progress

Katie Bartel The Progress

PLUS PST

Continued: DOG/ p8

Continued: TEACHERS/ p8

Heartbroken Jo-Ann Mitischev spends time with her five year old German shepherd Belle, trying to cope with the loss of her other dog. Two year old Ben may have been poisoned Wednesday afternoon. ERIC J. WELSH/ PROGRESS

calling the RCMP, Chilliwack Animal Control and the SPCA. “The dogs are great with kids. We have grandkids who play with the dogs,” Pete said when asked if anyone could have had motivation to hurt the animals. “They go inside at night and according to Chilliwack Animal Control they’ve never had a complaint filed about our dogs. We’ve never had a complaint from any of our neighbors. I’m just devastated to think there are people out there who can do this kind of thing to animals.” “There’s some kind of sicko

DOES YOUR BOX LOOK LIKE THIS? Retail 85¢ Box $1.00

have the resources to test the bones, and without any leads, where do they go? It would be nice if someone would take a look at those objects, test them for morphine or rat poison or whatever. Then you could alert more people.” The Mitischevs did the only other thing they thought they could, posting their story on Facebook in the hopes that what happened to them doesn’t happen to anyone else. In the meantime, Pete is taking extra precautions to keep Belle from suffering the same fate.

Chilliwack school district pulled the plug on summer learning Monday morning. The school district had hoped an 11th hour deal would be made between teachers and the government so as to continue with its summer learning programs. For weeks, it would not commit to canceling summer school, holding hope an agreement would be reached in time. A special board meeting on Thursday determined a deal had to be made by Monday in order for summer learning to go as planned. By Monday morning, with no deal in place, hope was gone. “Due to continued strike action and knowing that our sites would be picketed, we’ve cancelled our summer school programs,” said Chilliwack school district superintendent Evelyn Novak. Last week the BC Teachers’ Federation announced it would continue to picket through the summer, including summer school sites, if a deal wasn’t reached. In order for the school district to go ahead with summer learning, it would require principals and vice principals to operate the programs. “It would be very challenging to do that,” said Novak. “If we didn’t cancel, and if we tried to go ahead, the teachers would be out there picketing at our five sites. “It couldn’t go ahead.” Chilliwack’s summer learning courses don’t fall under the essential services ruling by the Labour Relations Board. Last week the LRB ruled summer school courses for grades 10-12 students were essential. But only remedial courses.

psycho-lunatic out there,” Jo-Ann added. “We had this lively dog who was left laying on a bed, lifeless.” According to Pete, a file was opened and he heard back from RCMP Wednesday night. He was told the case would be handed over or presented to Chilliwack Animal Control. But they say that because no bylaws were broken, there’s nothing they can do about it. “The SPCA said that if there was poisoning and there was cruelty to animals, that is something they can follow up,” Pete said. “But they don’t

SERIOUS PROTECTION

DON’T BE FOOLED BY BRAND-”X”

• TRUCK & RV TOWING EXPERTS •

44467 Yale Road West • 604-792-3132 www.vehiclesolutions.ca

Open: 8am-5pm Monday-Friday - 9am-5pm Saturday

6-14W_TM18

A little statue sits on the front step of Pete and Jo-Ann Mitischev’s house on Mayfair Avenue. A little German shepherd dog holds a welcome sign in its mouth, a signal to visitors that the Mitischevs are a pet-loving couple. But it was an unwelcome visitor who paid the Mitischevs a visit Wednesday afternoon, shaking their faith in humanity. They believe one of their two beloved dogs, their ‘furbabies,’ as Jo-Ann calls them, was poisoned by someone who threw two rawhide bones into their backyard. While five year old Belle shied away from the bones, the younger of their dogs, two year old Ben, was more impetuous. He gnawed away at the possibly tainted bone, and was in very bad shape when Pete found him. “He was in distress and not responsive at all,” Pete said. “It took me maybe 10-15 minutes just to get Ben’s attention and get him up for a few minutes. Then he collapsed again. I did a tour of the backyard and found those two rawhide sticks.” They phoned several veterinarians and rushed Ben to the Family Pet Hospital in Sardis. Veterinarian Kulvinder Grewal ran tests for canine parvovirus, a contagious virus that can cause the symptoms that Ben had — bleeding from the nose, mouth and anus. The tests came back negative, leaving poison as the strongest of possibilities. “The symptoms all pointed toward poisoning,” Jo-Ann said. But Grewal stopped short of confirming that when he spoke to The Progress. “It could be poison, but you never know and coming to that result isn’t fair,” he said. “Without an autopsy there’s no way to check inside the dog and confirm the cause. It was offered to the owners, but it’s a very costly procedure.” Ben was suffering and the likelihood of recovery was slim, so the Mitischevs chose to alleviate his pain. Pete got on the phone soon after,

Summer school cancelled in Chilliwack


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.