
Originally Posted by
Abigail
It turns out that the rehoming centre knew the dog had problems before they homed him. He was given new owners three times while he was in there before my sister took him. They even gave him to an old lady who thought he would walk himself

He's hyperactive, walking around a house isn't going to do much for him.
They have the facilities to retrain problem dogs but it was never mentioned and never offered. It's free to them because they are a charity. They don't care about dogs there, they have never done a home visit or inspection, or rang to see how he is getting on. Apparently there was warning signs that he was a "dangerous" dog long before this happened. They are blaming my sister for not noticing that she "was becoming a member of his pack and he was becoming aggressive." WTF, if they had done a home visit then maybe they would have picked up on it. Unless you're trained in that area, I don't see how you would recognise little insignificant things.
So in short, the rehoming centre could have done something to prevent this

That's bad. Write a letter or ring whoever regulates homing centres. Or lodge an official complaint against them or something like that. When we got Basil from the rescue center (Battersea) the only reason they didn't give us a home visit was because we had a cat already.
I've applied for a volunteer position driving old people to medical appointments/odd jobbing around the house/getting their shopping. Don't want a proper job yet, this will look good on my CV and be something nice to do.
And getting a new phone.
£40 off because its an upgrade as I was on a contract for ages.
I couldn't be bothered with the party. Got a bit of a cold and bleh...we had a chinese though it was yumm
Peter: So how many are there? Is it bad? Olivia: Did you eat? Peter: Yeah. Olivia: Well, that's unfortunate.