SPCA New Zealand
Animal Advocacy

Chained Dogs

Animal Advocacy

Chained Dogs

The Problem

The prolonged tethering or confinement of dogs is an issue that our inspectors deal with daily. While it is difficult to gather accurate numbers, it is safe to say this issue impacts the lives of thousands of dogs in New Zealand.

Tethering or chaining a dog describes the tying of a dog with a rope, line, or chain to a fixed stationary point (also referred to as ‘life chaining’ when prolonged). Close confinement of a dog describes a situation where a dog is contained in an enclosure or cage that provides insufficient space to meet their physical, health and behavioural needs.

The current legislative and regulatory framework restricts animal welfare Inspectors’ ability to intervene in many of these cases. SPCA has raised the issue of prolonged tethering and confinement of dogs with MPI and the National Animal Welfare Advisory Committee consistently over a number of years calling for better protections for these dogs.

The Solution

SPCA advocates for new, directly enforceable regulations via an amendment to the Animal Welfare (Care and Procedures) Regulations 2018.

In 2022, over 20,000 New Zealanders called for action through our Break the Chain campaign. This resulted in the drafting and public consultation of a number of proposed tethering regulations, bringing these dogs one step closer to a better life.

In early 2023, the Government closed the public consultation period on these regulations. Although SPCA, other animal welfare organisations and many members of the public submitted on the proposed regulations, little has been communicated publicly since then and we are concerned this issue may have dropped down the priority list.

We are so close but progress appears to have stalled. We now are calling for all New Zealanders to take action once more and demand the change.

The timeline

2015-2017 SPCA calls for dog tethering regulations through written submissions and MPI stakeholder workshop

2018 Animal Welfare (Care and Procedures) Regulations were released but the final regulations did not address prolonged tethering or confinement of dogs

2021 December SPCA submits Policy Brief to Associate Minister of Animal Welfare calling for Amendment to the Animal Welfare (Care and Procedures) Regulations 2018 to address the issue of prolonged tethering and confinement through regulations

2022 April SPCA submits in support of the Chained Dog Awareness New Zealand petition which called for an end to life chaining of dogs and was signed by more than 29,000 people

2022 July SPCA “Break the Chain” campaign sees more than 20,000 New Zealanders take action to call for better protections for chained and caged dogs

2022 August Petition Select Committee Report supports introducing regulations to address prolonged tethering and confinement of dogs

2023 February MPI opens public consultation on draft dog tethering regulations, with the consultation period closing in March

2023 August 15,000 people co-signed our letter to the Minister demanding decisive action to progress the regulations

DOGS IN NEW ZEALAND HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR YEARS FOR THE CHAIN TO BE BROKEN. WE NEED YOUR HELP TO BREAK THE CHAIN AND DEMAND THE CHANGE

Stay in touch

Following our 2022 campaign, MPI drafted regulations but progress stalled after public consultation in 2023, despite 15,000 people joining SPCA to demand action. SPCA calls on the current Minister, Andrew Hoggard, to urgently progress these regulations to protect chained dogs.

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