Last week my neighbours' cat, Billie, was attacked and killed by a dog. The dog's owner, a woman, opened the gate to my neighbours' front garden and purposely set the dog onto the cat. This is the fourth known fatal attack within a year in just the two streets around where I live. Billie's injuries were so horrific (his spine was completely severed) that the emergency vet who put him to sleep is compiling a report to the RSPCA. I work in animal rescue at the Celia Hammond Animal Trust in Lewisham. We are seeing a phenomenal rise in the number of dog attacks upon cats. The Trust is increasingly wary of homing any of its cats anywhere where there is easy access to a street or communal area, not only because of traffic but even more so because of the possibility of dog attacks. In order to try to curtail this brutal sport, a number of us are campaigning to increase the number of designated areas within the borough where dog control orders apply - dogs in the street and on communal areas within estates to be kept on the lead at all times and on the spot fines to be imposed on those walking dogs off lead. Please write to your local councillors about this issue if you care about keeping your area safe for your pets. Please note: some of the recent feedback I have received regarding this post has made me realise I wrote slightly ambiguously about our local campaign to increase the number of areas where dog control orders apply, and failed to distinguish it sufficiently from my paragraph about the Celia Hammond Trust. I would like to make it clear that the campaign has nothing to do with the Trust itself and apologise for any confusion caused.