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Panorama programme focuses on RSPCA
The charity says 98 per cent of investigations are concluded without going to court.
Charity’s governance and prosecutions explored 

The RSPCA faced scrutiny during the BBC’s latest Panorama programme, which looked at the charity’s governance and spoke to pet owners who felt they had been treated unfairly.

Reporter John Sweeney spoke to former staff members including Chris Lawrence, who was once the charity’s chief vet before becoming a trustee. Whilst he praised the charity as “essentially a great organisation” with “fantastic staff who work very hard”, Mr Lawrence said he had “real concerns about the way it was being run at a council level.

Similarly, Steve Carter, former national director for RSPCA Wales, said he believes the charity is currently “not fit for purpose” and its governance has remained largely unchanged since the 1970s. However, he added that the RSPCA is “overall a force for good” and the inspectors “do good work every single day.”

The programme revealed that two trustees ran the charity unpaid for two years while it didn’t have a chief executive. Andrew Hind, former chief executive of the Charity Commission, said that for a large charity this is “off the scale in terms of being so unusual”.

“I find it difficult to see how a large charity could properly run itself if it doesn’t have a permanent chief executive who is independent from the non-executive trustee team,” he added.

Sweeney also spoke to defence barristers who said they felt targeted by the RSPCA, and highlighted three cases where pet owners believe they were unfairly charged with animal welfare offences. However, the charity says 98 per cent of investigations are concluded without going to court, and it only prosecutes ‘as a last resort’, in cases where the mistreatment is serious and animal cruelty blatant.

In a statement ahead of the programme, the RSPCA said: ‘We understand that the programme will seek to portray an RSPCA that would not be recognised by its staff, volunteers, supporters or the many thousands of animals and people helped each year.

‘The programme will not recognise the frontline staff undertaking often difficult, distressing work twenty four hours a day, seven days a week. It will not recognise the family that have escaped domestic violence but whose animal is being fostered by us until they are settled in a new life.

‘It will not recognise the officers that abseil down ropes to rescue a stranded sheep or work in schools to educate young people. It will not recognise the thousands of animals given a second chance each year because of the compassion and commitment of our staff, volunteers and supporters.

‘It will not recognise these things because it has chosen not to.’

Although it says it does not accept the portrayal by Panorama, the charity stressed that it is ‘not complacent about any aspect of the working or leadership of the organisation’ and is committed to improving everything it does as an organisation.

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Equine Disease Surveillance report released for Q4 2025

News Story 1
 The latest Equine Disease Surveillance report has been released, with details on equine disease from Q4 of 2025.

The report, produced by Equine Infectious Disease Surveillance, includes advice on rule changes for equine influenza vaccination.

Statistics and maps detail recent outbreaks of equine herpes virus, equine influenza, equine strangles and equine grass sickness. A series of laboratory reports provides data on virology, bacteriology, parasitology and toxicosis.

This issue also features a case study of orthoflavivus-associated neurological disease in a horse in the UK. 

Click here for more...
News Shorts
NSA webinar explores sheep tailing and castration

The National Sheep Association (NSA) is to host a free webinar on the castration and tail docking of lambs.

The webinar, 'Understanding the tailing and castration consultation: A guide for sheep farmers', will be hosted online on Monday, 2 March 2026 at 7.30pm.

It comes during a government consultation into the methods used for these procedures. Farmers are encouraged to engage before the consultation period closes on Monday, 9 March 2026.

The webinar offers clear and actionable guidance to support farmers to contribute meaningfully to the consultation and prepare for potential changes.

On the panel will be former SVS president Kate Hovers, farmer and vet Ann Van Eetvelt and SRUC professor in Animal Health and Veterinary Sciences Cathy Dwyer. Each panel member will utilise their own specialism and expertise to evaluate risks and outcomes to sheep farming.

Find out more about the webinar on the NSA website.