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Kijiji pressed to end sale of household pets

September 9, 2013 Benjamin Shingler, The Canadian Press

MONTREAL - Canada's largest classified website is under pressure to ban the sale of household pets as part of a Montreal woman's quest to put an end to puppy mills.

Barbara Lapointe, a mother of two who operates a dog walking business, wants Kijiji to instead promote adoption from registered animal rescue groups and individual families. Lapointe's online petition, posted on the website Change.org, had collected nearly 48,000 signatures by midday Sunday. "We want them to set the example and be the ethical leader on this," Lapointe said in an interview.

Lapointe is also trying to get her local municipality, the Town of Mount Royal, to ban the sale of animals in pet stores. She's hoping it will follow the lead of other Canadian cities such as Richmond, B.C., which banned the sale of puppies in pet stores in 2011.

Lapointe said cracking down on pet stores would eliminate a major marketplace for puppy mills but even then illegal breeders would "still be able to resort to online sales." Kijiji Canada has no plans to change its policy.

Shawn McIntyre, the site's community manager, said it has set up a system to catch suspicious posts and prevent mills from using the site.

"We're choosing to work with the industry and do our best to keep it clean and safe," McIntyre said, explaining that staff moderates posts and has partnered with animal protection groups. "We want to make sure that we're filtering out any bad users and not driving them underground." The site, however, has had trouble blocking some sellers in recent years.

A Nova Scotia woman, Gail Benoit, was banned by the site after Kijiji said it received hundreds of complaints about her. But she continued to try to find ways around the ban by using fake names, different computers, and getting others to post ads on her behalf.

Some of Kijiji's competitors have taken steps to cut out pet sales altogether. In August, the British Columbia-based site BuySellTrade.ca removed private pet ads altogether. It now only posts pets for adoption via the local SPCA. Craigslist also no longer allows the sale of household pets. The site allows individuals to find new homes for their pets, sometimes at a small adoption fee.

Puppy mills continue to be a major problem in Canada, despite stronger legislation in several provinces. Lapointe's home province of Quebec has a particularly poor reputation. This year Quebec again placed at the bottom of annual rankings conducted by the US-based Animal Legal Defense Fund.

Last week, 90 dogs were seized from a large-scale breeding operation on Montreal's South Shore. SPCA officials said the animals had been kept in unacceptable conditions.

Canada's Humane Society International says it has been working to get provincial governments to introduce and enforce stronger laws against puppy mills. "They exist for the sole purpose of breeding, again and again, to produce puppies to be sold in pet stores or online, profiting the breeder," says a statement on the organization's website.

March 13, 2014 Kijiji has launched a new initiative in an effort to curb the unethical sale of dogs. Thousands of dogs are bought and sold every year on Kijiji, and now the company is taking steps to ensure the site remains a trustworthy place for pet owners. Kijiji announced this week that it is now charging users $4.99 to post a dog advertisement. In most categories, users can post classified ads for free. The fee will only be charged for dog ads, the company said on its website, because illegal pet vendors appear to be most active in this category.

May 5, 2014 Fitting sentence unlikely if scumbag accused of starving and torturing two animals he got off Kijiji is found guilty

Read more: Free pet rabbits offered on Craigslist; cracking down on breeder ads online; Kijiji's position, free pets often end up in wrong hands, CHS seizes dead animals 

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