
For Immediate Release:
May 8, 2023
Contact:
Nicole Meyer 202-483-7382
Orlando, Fla. â With temperatures rising and summer around the corner, PETA is launching a messaging blitz in convenience stores across the city, alerting people to the danger hot cars pose to vulnerable animals and children. The warnings seek to prevent tragedies like an incident last year in which a dog died after a family left them and two cats in the car while they visited Disney World.
PETA points out that even when itâs 75 degrees outside, the temperature inside a parked car can soar to 94 degrees in just 10 minutes, and when itâs 90 degrees outside, the temperature inside a parked car can reach 109 degrees in just minutes. As the temperature climbs, dogs endure agonizing physical reactions to the heat: They go into shock, vomit blood, urinate, have diarrhea, and can experience multi-organ failure, cardiopulmonary arrest, fluid buildup in the lungs, muscle tremors, seizures, unconsciousness, and, finally, death.
âHot cars and dogs donât mix,â says PETA Senior Vice President Daphna Nachminovitch. âPETA is urging everyone to be âvehicle vigilantesâ this summer and do whatever it takes to keep vulnerable animals and children out of these death traps.â
In 2022 alone, at least 54 dogs died from heat-related causes and another 469 animals were rescued from potentially deadly situationsâbut since these numbers include only incidents reported in the media, the actual figures are surely far higher.
Anyone who sees a dog or a child in a parked car should never leave the scene and should take immediate action: Call 911. Then write down the vehicleâs make, model, color, and license plate number and rush to have nearby stores page the owner. If the owner canât be found and if authorities are unresponsive, do whatever it takes to save the individualâs life. PETA offers an emergency window-breaking hammer to help intervene in life-or-death situations. The group offers additional information on how to respond, including a handy five-step guide, here.
PETAâs ad will appear at the cash registers of 12 local convenience stores, including Quick Shop, Our C Store, Mera Bazar Halal Meats & Groceries, Cafe Latino, and M&M Philippine Mart. The group is also running the ad in stores in several other cities nationwide, including Las Vegas and Louisville, Kentucky, that have had fatal or near-fatal incidents involving hot cars.
PETAâwhose motto reads, in part, that âanimals are not ours to abuse in any wayââopposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information on PETAâs investigative newsgathering and reporting, please visit PETA.org, listen to The PETA Podcast, or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.
Source: Peta.org