Law disbanding the NJSPCA has some unintended consequences

The law which disbanded the troubled New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals may have had an unintended consequence: stripping municipal Animal Cruelty Investigators of power.

News 12 Staff

Jan 25, 2019, 12:38 AM

Updated 1,928 days ago

Share:

The law which disbanded the troubled New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals may have had an unintended consequence: stripping municipal Animal Cruelty Investigators of power. But some say that’s necessary to clean up a broken system and prevent former NJSPCA officials from reinserting themselves into it.
Carol Tyler has been a certified Animal Cruelty Investigator since 2001. Her company, Tyco Animal Control, is contracted with 25 North Jersey municipalities. But on Feb. 1, ACIs will no longer exist in New Jersey. ACIs can still be animal control officers, but they’ll no longer have law enforcement authority or the ability to conduct animal cruelty investigations.
“There’s no reason for them not to have faith in us,” Tyler says. “The law was created because of lack of faith in another group.”
That other group was the NJSPCA, disbanded by state lawmakers after a series of Kane In Your Corner investigations exposed financial irregularities and a backlog of uninvestigated cases.
Now-retired Sen. Raymond Lesniak credited Kane In Your Corner with inspiring his legislation, and the NJ State Commission of Investigation branded the group “a haven for wannabe cops.”
Under the new law, each town had to appoint a Humane Law Enforcement officer to investigate animal cruelty complaints. Since HLEOs are also responsible for enforcement actions like serving search warrants and making arrests, the Police Training Commission decided that they would be required to get six to eight weeks of police academy training.
Tyler says she believes that this requirement is unnecessary.
“I certainly don't need to learn to jump over walls or run around with 20-year-olds,” Tyler says. “If you make this training the only way into this, I think you're going to create a whole new generation of wannabes.”
Glen Rock Police Chief Dean Ackerman asked the PTC for a waiver, so he could use Tyler as his HLEO without the additional police training. The state turned him down. He says he still thinks the arrangement would have worked. “They are the experts in investigating animal issues; we can deal with the situation that requires an armed law enforcement officer,” he says.
But Collene Wronko, an animal welfare activist whose efforts were instrumental in toppling the NJSPCA, says she believes the state is making the right call.
She says “I think it's a much better system now than we had before” because “I can call, 24-7, 365 days a year, anytime of the day or night, and talk to a police officer”.
Wronko also contends that giving waivers to people like Tyler would also open the door to officials from the NJSPCA, the very people the state was trying to get rid of. “They could infiltrate the whole system again, and we’d wind up with the same system we had before,” she says.


More from News 12
1:12
EXCLUSIVE: Bridgeport truck driver whose flatbed was struck in fiery I-95 crash says he’s grateful to be alive

EXCLUSIVE: Bridgeport truck driver whose flatbed was struck in fiery I-95 crash says he’s grateful to be alive

1:43
Mild and muggy in Connecticut; rain returns by midweek

Mild and muggy in Connecticut; rain returns by midweek

2:11
Security camera footage shows onset of deadly Stamford house fire

Security camera footage shows onset of deadly Stamford house fire

1:48
'This was a remarkable recovery': I-95 officially operating at full capacity

'This was a remarkable recovery': I-95 officially operating at full capacity

0:36
Sen. Bob Duff recognizes employees who worked on reopening I-95 in Norwalk

Sen. Bob Duff recognizes employees who worked on reopening I-95 in Norwalk

0:20
Bridgeport PD: Pedestrian struck by car on Seaview Avenue

Bridgeport PD: Pedestrian struck by car on Seaview Avenue

0:43
New Indian vegetarian restaurant opens in Stamford

New Indian vegetarian restaurant opens in Stamford

1:05
National Water Safety Month: 40,000 free swim lessons offered across tri-state area offered across tri-state area

National Water Safety Month: 40,000 free swim lessons offered across tri-state area offered across tri-state area

0:36
Sen. Blumenthal to seek emergency help for Norwalk businesses impacted by I-95 shutdown

Sen. Blumenthal to seek emergency help for Norwalk businesses impacted by I-95 shutdown

0:56
Nonprofit builders group celebrates 20th anniversary with annual fundraiser in Darien

Nonprofit builders group celebrates 20th anniversary with annual fundraiser in Darien

0:49
Mother’s Day event in Greenwich looks to empower women

Mother’s Day event in Greenwich looks to empower women

0:59
Pickleball America hosts first Dinko de Mayo Tournament

Pickleball America hosts first Dinko de Mayo Tournament

2:15
Turn To Tara explores how to stay safe from ‘cyber kidnapping’ scams

Turn To Tara explores how to stay safe from ‘cyber kidnapping’ scams

Connecticut National Teacher Appreciation Week Photos

Connecticut National Teacher Appreciation Week Photos

0:42
Texas, prolific retired Connecticut State Police K-9, dies from illness

Texas, prolific retired Connecticut State Police K-9, dies from illness

0:44
Handball tournament honors former Bridgeport state representative

Handball tournament honors former Bridgeport state representative

0:30
Zibanejad has 2 goals and 1 assist, Panarin scores as Rangers beat Hurricanes 4-3 in Game 1

Zibanejad has 2 goals and 1 assist, Panarin scores as Rangers beat Hurricanes 4-3 in Game 1

2:06
New guidance says women need to be screened for breast cancer at 40 or younger

New guidance says women need to be screened for breast cancer at 40 or younger

0:34
State police: Merging car collided with tanker to cause I-95 overpass fire

State police: Merging car collided with tanker to cause I-95 overpass fire

0:32
Fairfield Avenue overpass damaged by fire fully demolished

Fairfield Avenue overpass damaged by fire fully demolished