Reopen Canada’s Doors To Desperate Rescue Dogs
Final signature count: 1,401
1,401 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Canada’s rescue dog import ban was meant to protect public health—but three years later, it’s condemning countless animals to die abroad while compassionate families at home wait with empty arms.
In 2022, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) imposed what it called a “temporary” ban on the import of rescued dogs from more than 100 countries deemed high risk for rabies1. Three years later, that ban is still in place. Every day it remains, countless dogs are denied safety and condemned to die abroad.
The ban was meant to protect Canadians after two imported dogs tested positive for canine-variant rabies—cases that were isolated and already preventable through stronger documentation and testing2. But instead of implementing science-based safeguards, the CFIA chose a sweeping prohibition that now blocks every rescued dog from entering Canada, no matter their health status or the reputation of the rescue group involved3.
Compassion Shouldn’t Stop at the Border
These aren’t abstract statistics—they’re living beings. Dogs from war-torn Ukraine, Afghanistan, Gaza, and Haiti are trapped in overcrowded shelters or left behind in disaster zones. Survivors of cruelty and the dog meat trade in China and the Philippines are being denied the chance to find homes in Canada4. Animal rescuers who once gave these dogs hope have been forced to shut down or turn them away, knowing that for many, the ban is a death sentence5.
Canada stands alone among Western nations in enforcing such an absolute policy. The United States, the EU, and the United Kingdom all allow controlled imports from higher-risk regions using proven measures—vaccination certificates, antibody tests, and quarantine—to keep rabies out while saving lives2. These safeguards are endorsed by the World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH) and the World Health Organization. There is no reason Canada cannot do the same.
A Cruel Policy With Ripple Effects at Home
The ban’s cruelty doesn’t stop overseas. With fewer rescue dogs available for adoption, Canadians are increasingly turning to puppy mills and unethical breeders who profit from misery6. Instead of preventing suffering, this policy is fueling it—both abroad and within Canada’s borders.
Science Can Protect Us. Compassion Can Define Us.
Rabies is deadly, but it is also entirely preventable. What’s missing is balance. Canada can protect public health without turning its back on vulnerable animals. By replacing the ban with a case-by-case, science-based import system—and creating exemptions for accredited rescues—our nation can ensure that compassion and safety coexist.
It’s time for Canada to do better. Dogs around the world are waiting, not for pity, but for action.
Sign the petition today to demand that the CFIA and the Government of Canada lift the rescue dog import ban and adopt a humane, science-based policy that saves lives.
