Jennifer
Groza, Ohio, Chained

Jennifer
Groza
Sunday July 1st, 10 a.m.-?
Woman
fastens self to cage, calling attention to chained canines
By
JOHN W. GOODWIN JR.
VINDICATOR STAFF WRITER
YOUNGSTOWN
— Jennifer Groza believes no dog should be chained outdoors,
and she spent half a day tethered to a cage in her grandparents'
front yard to emphasize that point.
Groza,
a 24-year-old Youngstown native and student at the Western School
of Health and Business in Pittsburgh, covered the medium-sized
animal pen with tarp and attached herself to it with a 12-foot
chain Sunday morning. There, surrounded by family and neighbors,
she sat for 10 hours.
Groza's
actions were part of the Unchain The 50 national effort by the
Dogs Deserve Better organization to raise awareness of the plight
of dogs that are constantly chained outside. About 104 people
in 34 states participated in the event.
"We
want to raise public awareness that people still chain their dogs
outside forever and this is considered a form of animal abuse,"
she said. "People don't realize that chaining outside is
one of the causes of aggression because [the dogs] are shut out
from the world, and when they do get loose, that is when kids
can get bit."
Groza
said another problem with chaining dogs outside is that some dogs
hang themselves trying to jump over fences or porches with the
chain still tied around their necks. She said some pet owners,
in an effort to be responsible, put their dogs in danger.

Basic
training
According
to Groza, the Animals Deserve Better organization encourages dog
owners to engage in "basic training" with their pets.
She said every dog must be taught how to behave indoors and feel
as if it is part of the family "pack."
Animals
Deserve Better, via donations collected during the Unchain The
50 campaign, can assist pet owners in bringing their outside dogs
indoors. The organization, Groza said, leaves literature on the
doors of homes with outside dogs, then offers to pay for the medical
attention and provide a fence if the owner agrees to bring the
dog inside. The organization will place the dog elsewhere if the
owner no longer wants the animal.
Groza, at the halfway point of her endeavor, raised about $200.
"People
have to realize [the dog] will not be the perfect dog when it
first comes into your house. They do become the perfect dog, but
it takes time and patience," she said.
jgoodwin@vindy.com


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