Baker City officials scramble to find place to impound dogs
Published 5:00 am Wednesday, February 12, 2025
- This dog is one of five rescued after being abandoned near Tipton Summit in late April 2024.
BAKER CITY — Dr. Matt Kerns said he doesn’t want to curtail a community service his business, Animal Clinic of Baker, has provided since long before he started working there as a veterinarian.
But Kerns said the clinic no longer can impound dogs picked up by local police, primarily the Baker City Police Department.
“It’s become a real challenge,” Kerns said.
He said he notified the city, which pays the clinic $10 per night per impounded dog ($20 for dogs deemed dangerous or on a rabies hold) that he will be withdrawing from the agreement as of Feb. 15.
The contract dates to November 2020.
Kerns said he met recently with Baker City Police Chief Ty Duby and Sgt. Mike Regan, City Manager Barry Murphy, volunteers from Best Friends of Baker as well as Dick Haines, a co-founder of New Hope for Eastern Oregon Animals.
Kerns said Best Friends volunteers have been so dedicated during the past couple decades that the clinic has rarely had to euthanize a dog because it wasn’t either claimed by its owner, or temporarily housed by a Best Friends volunteer, within the city’s prescribed five-day period.
The city pays the clinic $72 for each dog that is euthanized.
(Impounded dogs can be kept for up to seven days, he said, if the five-day limit happens on a weekend.)
The problem, Kerns said, is Best Friends no longer has enough volunteers to rescue most impounded dogs. He said it also has become harder for volunteers to find people willing to adopt dogs permanently.
Sumir Brown, the dog lead for Best Friends, said its number of foster homes has decreased over the last few years.
“We’re running out of people who are willing or qualified,” she said. “We’ve had to slow way down to figure out what’s best for the dog, and the community.”
The foster volunteers, she said, either already have a dog or need a break. And, a number of past fosters ended up adopting the dog they were caring for, which made it more difficult to continue as a foster home.
Since late December, Brown said 21 dogs have come through the care of Best Friends, and this includes impounded dogs that were unclaimed, adoptions, owner surrenders and transporting to other shelters. Dogs and cats available for adoption are posted on petfinder.com.
Kerns said if the Animal Clinic continued to impound dogs, the staff would have to start euthanizing dogs much more frequently due to the lack of foster homes through Best Friends.
“That goes against everything we work for here,” he said. “It’s an emotionally tough thing.”
A longer term issue, Kerns said, is people who reclaim impounded dogs often are verbally abusive to his staff. Many people, he said, don’t know how the process works, and that the clinic houses dogs but doesn’t actually pick up and impound them.
Social media has inflamed the situation in many cases, he said.
“I can’t subject my staff to it any more,” Kerns said. “It’s just too much.”
Baker City Council, county commissioners discuss situation
The Baker City Council discussed the situation during a meeting Feb. 11. About 40 people attended the meeting.
Murphy, the city manager, told councilors he believes the city can reach an agreement to have another clinic impound dogs.
Councilors agreed to creating a working group, with councilors and residents as members, with a goal of having an animal shelter built in the city. The nearest such shelter, operated by the Humane Society, is in La Grande.
Baker County commissioners talked about impounding dogs during their meeting Feb. 5 at the courthouse.
Ashley McClay, public information officer for the sheriff’s office, read a letter from Sheriff Travis Ash. Ash expressed concern about the effects of no longer having a place to impound dogs.
Commissioner Christina Witham suggested the Baker City Council consider the possibility of buying a 9-acre property, on 17th Street in west Baker City, that was formerly used as a boarding kennel.
The property could potentially be subdivided and sold for housing sites to offset the cost, Witham said.
In a staff report to city councilors for the Feb. 11 meeting, Murphy wrote, in reference to the idea of buying the 17th Street property, that the city “has no stable revenue source to pay for this, and the requirements of running an impound facility in a legally sufficient manner are substantial.”
During the Feb. 11 city council meeting, Sherry Brennan of Baker City said she and her husband, while walking on Feb. 1 near Broadway and 10th streets, watched two dogs, a pit bull and a Husky, attack a deer. Brennan said a child was with the dogs but was not able to control the two.
“There is a problem within our community with dogs being allowed to running at large,” Brennan said. “Some of these dogs are dangerous. People who let their dogs run loose need to be cited and fined.”
She pointed out that the city has an ordinance requiring dog owners to keep their animals under control. Brennan said she is filing a complaint with the police department about the Feb. 1 attack.
Kerns said the situation is frustrating because Baker City lacks the property tax base that larger cities rely on to operate publicly owned animal shelters. Yet there is a need here for such a facility, he said.
People who live within the city who reclaim an impounded dog are required to show that the dog has been licensed with the city and has been inoculated against rabies.
The city collects about $3,000 annually in dog license fees and about $8,000 in fees to release impounded dogs. The city budgeted $11,000 in the fiscal year for animal control expenses.