Acts of extreme cruelty towards animals are rare in Tasmania. The overwhelming majority of animal welfare complaints in Tasmania are the result of neglect and/or ignorance.
If you see any of the welfare problems listed below, or anything else you think might be a welfare problem, report it to the RSPCA:
Confidentiality
If you make a report, it is entirely your choice whether you give your name. If you make a report anonymously, it will not be possible to report back to you on any investigation.
Types of issues to report
While there can be many different kinds of animal welfare issues, the most common in Tasmania are:
Failure to provide appropriate nutrition
Affected animals may look unhealthily skinny. Please bear in mind that elderly livestock and horses can look quite skinny yet be healthy.
Failure to provide basic health care
This means an animal that is flyblown, is severely lame, is scouring badly or has any other obvious health problem that is not being treated.
Failure to treat disease or injury
This includes an animal that has an untreated broken leg, has advanced cancer, is a “downer” (i.e. cannot stand) and any case of high mortalities.
Failure to provide clean water
Failure to provide adequate shelter
This includes prolonged tethering in the open in adverse weather conditions;
Obesity and a lack of exercise
Overstocking/hoarding
Overgrown fleeces on sheep or angora goats
Please note: a few breeds shed their fleeces naturally and they can look a mess over the weeks it takes for all the fleece to shed
Dog attacks on, in particular, sheep and goats
Please note: Dog attacks on animals, or other dogs, should be reported directly to your local council.
Helpful details to include
The precise location of the issue
Some rural properties are extensive, so the more detail you can give as to where the affected animals are would help greatly. In such cases, a GPS location is ideal but, if that is not possible, the name of the road and the distance from a landmark would be sufficient.
The extent of the welfare issue
Essentially, whether it needs immediate attention or whether it can be looked at the next time an inspector is in the area.
A photo
If you can safely and legally take a photo, and email or text it, it would help assess the situation and assign a priority to your report.
What NOT to do
Gathering evidence for a prosecution is a highly-specialised task and usually requires legal authority. It should only be done by people trained in evidence-gathering.
You should not go onto the property.
Next steps
Your report is assigned a priority based on the information you provide. If the animal is not in immediate danger, other more urgent reports may take priority.
Decisions about how to handle a report are based on the seriousness of the welfare issue as well as any past dealings with the people or property reported.
In ensuring the welfare problem is resolved, inspectors will visit properties and require changes to be made by the responsible owner, lessee or manager. Where necessary inspectors will organise for veterinary intervention, removal of animals, or even enthanising of animals in extreme distress. Depending on the particular circumstances, inspectors may issue an infringement notice (i.e. a fine) or initiate a prosecution.
Reporting Animal Cruelty or Neglect (PDF 260Kb)