The Wisdom Panel - deciding a dog's breed from his DNA?
From WBUR.ORG (http://www.wbur.org/news)
BOSTON, Mass - May 29, 2008 - In
Boston, it seems not all dogs are considered equal. After a number of Pit Bull
attacks five years ago, the city passed an ordinance that slaps a muzzle on dogs
of the breed in public.
In the next few weeks, city officials are
re-examining the law to assess its effectiveness. They'll also look at how a new
test of dogs' DNA could change things. WBUR's Monica Brady-Myerov picks up the
story from here.
TEXT OF STORY:
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: First, meet
Charlie. Joyce Linehan got Charlie from the animal shelter, who told her he's a
Pit Bull. According to the Boston law, Charlie should be a dominant dog who
lives to fight, is stubborn and has powerful jaws capable of crushing bones.
That's why the city feels the public and other dogs need to be protected from
dogs like Charlie. But Linehan says that's all overblown. Her Charlie is a 70
pound softie.
JOYCE LINEHAN: He's a great dog, he's a little big needy,
he's very affectionate but he's a really really great dog and we've no trouble
at all.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: Outside his home in Dorchester, Charlie
lives life in a muzzle. A mug shot of his black and white face, and that of his
owner is filed with his registration somewhere in city hall. A beware of dog
sign hangs on the front door. All of that is required by the ordinance, which
lists three breeds of dogs that are commonly known as Pit Bulls. Linehan led
opposition to the ordinance and at first didn't take it seriously.
JOYCE
LINEHAN: I was actually on a Sunday morning at 10am walking down Dorchester Ave.
ridden up on with lights and siren and yelled at by a police officer about why
do wasn't wearing a muzzle.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: Now meet Storm, who
often comes by the Hyde Park Pharmacy where his owner Patty Ferzoco Hickey
works. Storm is a German Sheppard Chow mix. Ferzoco Hickey remembers a day 6
years ago when Storm was attacked by another dog.
PATTY FERZOCO HICKEY:
We were walking Sunday morning, quarter to 8 in the morning a dog jumped out of
a park car. The man was at church, brought his dog, Pit Bull and attacked my
dog. The only way my dog got released was he heard me screaming, my dog howling
and he ran out of church and separated them.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: Storm
is no toy poodle. He's a 100 pounds of black and tan fur. Ferzoco Hickey says a
Pit bull is the only dog that scares her and Storm.
PATTY FERZOCO HICKEY:
They are very strong, I've had one run into me full force, bruised my
leg.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: But what if all dogs who look like Pit Bulls,
aren't? And what if dogs who look nothing like Pit Bulls, have traces of them? A
new DNA blood test for dogs introduced late last year may change the lives of
thousands of dogs. The test is called a Wisdom Panel and it gives a clear
genetic identity of a mixed breed dog. For Charlie, it could change his life.
Owner Linehan says she and everyone she knows thinks Charlie looks like a Pit
Bull. But she was shocked when the $200 test classified him as something else.
JOYCE LINEHAN: Look at him! Dalmatian corgi? I sent an email to all my
friends saying from now on he won't be wearing a muzzle he'll be wearing a
fireman's hat you know like the little Dalmatians.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV:
Even though Charlie has significant amounts of Dalmatian and Welsh Corgi, he
also has distant traces of American Staffordshire Terrier, one of the breeds
considered a Pit Bull in Boston. And the way the ordinance is written, any dog
that looks like a Pit Bull is considered dangerous. City Counselor Rob Consalvo,
who proposed the ordinance, says when the law is reviewed in June, the new DNA
testing will be looked at.
ROB CONSALVO: Definitely it's on the table for
discussion as part of our review and we need to have it on the table and see how
it impacts this ordinance.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: Pit Bull bites to humans
have dropped slightly over the past five years, but it's unclear whether that's
because fewer people own Pit Bulls or fewer people have chosen to report bites.
Boston has 230 registered Pit Bulls, but many believe there are hundreds more
that are unregistered. Where the DNA testing could really change things is the
animal shelter.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: The majority of dogs waiting to be
adopted at the MSPCA shelter in Jamaica Plain on this day are Pit Bulls. They
are classified by sight.
KARA HOLMQUIST: This is bruno he's very sweet
he's been here for a while.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: But Kara Holmquist
Director of Advocacy for the MSCPA says the agency doesn't plan to use the DNA
test to classify dogs. She says dog owners who order the tests for medical
reasons risk discovering their dogs fall under the Pit Bull
ordinance.
KARA HOLMQUIST: We're seeing both sides of it. And I think it
will be interesting to watch how this Wisdom Panel is used in the public policy
debate.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: But the DNA test doesn't change Counselor
Consalvo's mind.
ROB CONSALVO: I believe if there's any trait of the dog
in a particular animal than it should still be included in the ordinance because
part of the issue is the tendency of the dog.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: As for
Charlie, the Dalmatian, Corgi Mix who looks like a Pit Bull..... Joyce Linehan
has already changed his classification at the veterinarian.
JOYCE
LINEHAN: Next time I go to license him for next year, I will send in paperwork
which has his rabies vaccination and that other things they required that way he
is a Corgi cross and I am therefore going to try to register him as something
other than a Pit Bull.
MONICA BRADY-MYEROV: The new DNA test could have
consequences in many cities and towns in Massachusetts. Canton, Everett,
Haverhill, Holyoke and Medway all have laws restricting Pit Bulls...or at least
dogs thought to be Pit Bulls.
See also MMI Genomics - Offering DNA diagnosis of Canine Genetic Identification
DNA & Dogs - according to a DNA Expert
