logo
Record number of children referred to scheme to prevent animal cruelty

Record number of children referred to scheme to prevent animal cruelty

STV News19 hours ago
A record number of children have taken part in a Scottish SPCA scheme that aims to help young people who have shown tendencies to be cruel to animals.
Said to be the first of its kind in the UK, the Animal Guardians programme is an early-intervention initiative designed to prevent animal cruelty by fostering compassion and empathy in young people aged three to 16.
Those referred to the scheme include children who have physically harmed or killed an animal or behaved uncaringly, such as teasing an animal or cutting its fur or whiskers.
The programme supported 27 children and young people in June, making it the busiest month since the initiative began in 2018.
Since the scheme launched, more than 300 children from across Scotland have been directed to it, with referrals coming from educational establishments, health and social care professionals, parents and carers, Scottish SPCA inspectors, and third-sector children's organisations.
Susan Witton, Animal Guardians youth engagement officer, said: 'Animal Guardians is about prevention and protection – for both animals and children.
'We're seeing clear evidence that with the right support, young people can learn compassion and emotional control that stays with them for life.'
The Scottish SPCA said in one recent case, a four-year-old was observed tormenting the family dog – pulling its tail, disturbing its sleep, and mimicking aggressive behaviour.
After a health visitor raised concerns, a Scottish SPCA youth engagement officer worked with the child over eight sessions, encouraging empathy and gentle handling through the use of soft toy animals, praise, and structured play.
The parent, who joined the final session, later reported a marked improvement, saying the child no longer disturbs the dog while sleeping and had even reminded the parent to 'use gentle hands' when interacting with the pet.
Last year, 102 children completed Animal Guardians – a 44% increase on 2023.
In the first half of 2025, 52 young people have already participated, a 7% year-to-date increase.
The Scottish SPCA said it is not known why June saw a record number of participants, but that it may be due to growing awareness of the programme and stronger partnerships with external agencies.
The University of Edinburgh is carrying out an ongoing evaluation of the scheme, which now operates in 90% of Scottish local authorities.
A study published in February by Professor Jo Williams and her research team at the university found children who participated in Animal Guardians showed significantly greater improvements than those in the control group in areas such as animal welfare knowledge, behaviour towards animals, and both cognitive and behavioural empathy.
As the summer holidays begin, the Scottish SPCA is encouraging families to behave in a safe and respectful manner when around animals and wildlife.
The charity is urging adults to supervise children during interactions with animals, whether in the home, neighbourhood or wider community.
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scottish Government warned over single-sex toilet policy
Scottish Government warned over single-sex toilet policy

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Scottish Government warned over single-sex toilet policy

In a formal legal letter sent on Wednesday, the organisation said ministers must urgently rewrite internal guidance on single-sex facilities to bring it into line with a recent Supreme Court judgment on biological sex. READ MORE The warning centres on the Scottish Government estate — made up of 66 sites and 1,016 toilet facilities — where existing policy allows staff to use facilities based on self-identified gender rather than biological sex. Around 18% of the facilities are gender-neutral single-user 'superloos', while the rest are designated as either male or female. There are also numerous smaller sites — including fisheries and field-monitoring offices — where facilities may be shared or gender-neutral. In April, the UK's highest court ruled unanimously that a Gender Recognition Certificate (GRC) does not alter a person's sex for the purposes of the Equality Act. The judgment clarified that the terms 'man' and 'woman' in the legislation refer to biological sex, not acquired gender. That ruling meant every organisation in the country needed to review their equality policies. The Supreme Court ruled that sex in the Equality Act means biological sexWhile First Minister John Swinney initially welcomed the 'clarity' provided by the ruling, the Scottish Government has said it is waiting for further guidance from the Equality and Human Rights Commission before issuing new advice to Scotland's public sector — including prisons, schools and the NHS. However, earlier this week, Dr Lesley Sawers, Deputy Chair and Scotland Commissioner for the EHRC, told The Herald that Scottish ministers had 'a responsibility to ensure their adherence to the Public Sector Equality Duty' — the legal requirement for public authorities in Scotland to consider protected characteristics, including biological sex, when carrying out their functions. In response, a spokesperson said work was 'proceeding at pace to implement the ruling across Government'. The Scottish Government's trans inclusion policy, signed off in January, states that 'staff should choose to use the facilities they feel most comfortable with' and that a GRC is not required to access single-sex spaces. In a letter to John Somers, Director of Equality, Inclusion and Human Rights, Maya Forstater, Chief Executive of Sex Matters, said the policy was 'clearly unlawful'. She added: 'The problem is not lack of infrastructure, but that the Scottish Government continues to operate an unlawful policy. 'As far as we can see, there is nothing to stop the Scottish Government immediately bringing the policy on toilets into line with the law, by making a statement that all facilities designated as male or female within the Scottish Government estate are to be interpreted as meaning biological sex, and that gender-neutral options are widely available. This would be in line with the Supreme Court judgment and the action taken by the Scottish Parliament. 'It is clearly a reasonably practical step in order to address the risk of individuals using opposite-sex toilets and other facilities. 'Please confirm, therefore, that you will take this step within seven days of the date of this letter. 'To the extent that the Scottish Government does not immediately stop the unlawful practices set out in this letter we may decide to commence proceedings without further warning.' The Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 require separate changing and toilet facilities for men and women 'where necessary for reasons of propriety'. Failure to provide such facilities, or to protect staff from discomfort or distress in those spaces, may also amount to unlawful harassment under the Equality Act. The Scottish Government has been approached for comment.

Minister ‘worried' about rise in crime reports near consumption room
Minister ‘worried' about rise in crime reports near consumption room

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Minister ‘worried' about rise in crime reports near consumption room

Asked if she is concerned about some residents reporting a rise in crime and discarded needles since its opening, she told the PA news agency: 'Of course it worries us. 'The safe consumption drug facility was sited here because it was already an area where these challenges occurred. 'So there was lots of street usage and lots of littering challenges. 'In time, I would expect that the challenges faced by the community will reduce as the confidence in this facility increases.' Asked if she accepts locals who believe crime and needle sightings have gone up, she added: 'I'm not sure the statistics bear that out. 'I think it's really important that we're not cloth-eared to the concerns that the local community are raising. 'It is causing them concern. They think there has been an increase in crime, and they think there has been an increase in littering. 'We need to pay attention to that, and we need to reassure them on that front. Whether that is actually what has happened, or whether the increased focus is what is making people worried about that, I'm not sure.' Maree Todd (Image: PA) She added it is 'important' that 'appropriate treatment' is not 'stigmatised'. By the end of June, 348 people had registered with The Thistle, with staff overseeing 3,008 injections in six months. Ms Todd said it is 'very difficult' to say whether the facility has been a success – but she believes it will be. She said: 'We do hear first-hand, anecdotally, from the staff working here about some of the incidents that they are facing. 'For example, a few months ago there was a cluster of contaminated drugs being used in Scotland, which almost immediately resulted in very severe overdose and threat to life, and that was able to be reversed here. 'Not only that, they could identify that there was contamination in the drug supply in Scotland, feed that back into our radar systems in Scotland and make sure the message got out all over Scotland. 'In other parts of Scotland where those drugs were being used, death did occur. Here in this facility, death was avoided. 'That's a really powerful indicator that actually this can save lives, and that's really important for us in Scotland.' Glasgow's Safe Drug Consumption Facility (Image: Newsquest) Asked about her first month in the job since taking over from the late SNP minister Christina McKelvie, she said: 'It's quite a daunting task but it's one I feel really confident I can make a difference in.' While Scotland has the worst drug deaths rate in Europe, the minister said she is 'confident' she can make a difference, and she added the Scottish Government has been 'creative' in its response to the issue. Helen Clark, prime minister of New Zealand from 1999 to 2008 and one of the commissioners at the Global Commission on Drug Policy, toured the site with Ms Todd. Ms Clark said while the facility will have to be 'studied closely', it has already shown positive signs of success. She said: 'The fact that in the five months of operating, they've recorded 39 medical emergencies tells you they've avoided 39 deaths. If people had had those emergencies happen with the drugs they consumed out there, they'd be dead. 'That's 39 lives saved. It's hard to put a value on that. It's incalculable.' She added: 'You have to meet people where they are, and if where they are is on a street corner in central Glasgow, unsafely injecting or inhaling a substance which potentially could kill them, it's better they're here. 'So again, it's about humanity. It's about not marginalising people who make choices which the vast majority don't make, but we're human beings. 'People make choices. They may be very risky. The key thing is to keep them alive.' Scottish Conservative shadow minister for drugs Annie Wells MSP said: 'This is an astonishing display of arrogance from Maree Todd. 'In the same breath, she's claiming she isn't cloth eared to the concerns of local residents whilst simultaneously dismissing them out of hand. 'Her claim, too, that this facility has saved 39 lives is also debatable, given the latest drugs deaths statistics showed the number was up – a rise since The Thistle opened. 'While we must look at all ways to treat those who need support, arrogant SNP ministers can ill-afford to pin all their hopes on state-sponsored drug taking, especially when locals are bearing the brunt.'

'Further blow' over new Ayr National Treatment Centre
'Further blow' over new Ayr National Treatment Centre

Daily Record

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Record

'Further blow' over new Ayr National Treatment Centre

The plans were put on hold in February last year due to funding problems. The future of The National Treatment Centre at Carrick Glen Hospital, Ayr, won't be known until December. The plans were put on hold in February last year due to funding problems. However, the Scottish Government is now saying there won't be any update on its future until the end of the year. Ayrshire Live previously told how NHS Ayrshire & Arran were forced to 'pause' any new capital projects, including Carrick Glen, from the Scottish Government because of budget constraints. In April 2022, £1.8m of public money was used to purchase Carrick Glen Hospital in order to take it out of the private sector. At the time the overall plan was to build 10 National Treatment Centres across the country and thus reduce waiting times. It was supposedly part of £400m investment in 10 centres across the country from the Scottish Government. They were touted to play a 'pivotal role' in reducing waiting times. Carrick Glen was due to be operational in 2025 and help reduce waiting times in orthopaedics. However, with no fresh finance going towards its completion, the Carrick Glen Hospital plan, which passed all planning hurdles in the summer of 2023, remains in a state of paralysis. And news of this fresh delay has been greeted with dismay. South Scotland Labour List MSP, Colin Smyth, said: 'This is a further blow to plans for a treatment centre in Ayr. 'New National Treatment Centres were at the heart of the SNP's NHS Recovery Plan and these delays spell disaster for waiting lists in the south of Scotland.' Mr Smyth continued: 'This will be very worrying news for patients in south Scotland who are languishing on waiting lists, and show just what a serious situation our NHS is facing. 'Hospitals in Ayrshire, and across the whole of south Scotland, are under huge amounts of pressure and every month we see yet more record high waiting lists. 'Our amazing NHS staff are doing all they can, but they can't work miracles and need the improved facilities they were promised.' The Scottish Government did say they were spending more than £1bn on NHS capital investment this year. A spokesperson added: 'As part of our own Scottish Spending Review, we are undertaking a full review of our capital spending to prioritise the available funding towards projects that drive progress against our priorities. 'We will provide clarity over which projects and programmes will receive funding in the medium term when we publish our new infrastructure pipeline, alongside the 2026-27 Budget and Scottish Spending Review. 'The publication of the new pipeline will put our capital budget back on a sustainable trajectory.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store