Sally was attacked while working. New laws would make streets safer for guide dogs like her
Sally the seeing eye dog retired after she was attacked. What happened to her inspired a push for harsher penalties for assaults on assistance dogs, which quickly gained momentum.
It happened out of nowhere. One moment, Phillip Chalker was walking down a street with his guide Sally. The next, the black Labrador was trapped as a rogue dog locked onto her neck, bit down and refused to let go.
As a self-described “totally blind” man, Chalker could do nothing but panic and listen to the onslaught.
Sally was eventually freed, and a stranger who rushed to help Chalker told him the other dog appeared to have escaped from under a nearby fence.
It was Sally’s second frightening incident in less than a year – the first involved an off-leash dog – and while the attack did not draw blood, it ended her career as a guide dog.
“I could not go out my door any more because my dog was traumatised,” Chalker said.
Sally had to be retired as a guide after the July 2025 attack and is now providing comfort to people with PTSD.
Following the second attack, Chalker, from Traralgon, was shocked to discover there were no specific penalties for assaults on service dogs, so he started a petition for stronger legal protections, which has gained more than 2100 supporters.
Vision Australia, Guide Dogs and Assistance Dogs Australia broadly support efforts to treat attacks on assistance dogs differently to attacks on pets.
“It’s like taking a walker off an old man or an old lady and just letting them be un-mobilised,” Chalker said.
Vision Australia is aware of five attacks on seeing eye dogs since July 2025, and Sally was one of two of the organisation’s dogs retired in the past year because of an attack. Guide Dogs knows of six incidents in NSW and Victoria since July 2024.
Unreported incidents and negative experiences such as being “rushed” by off-leash dogs were also a major concern, said Guide Dogs chief executive Nicky Long.
She said the impact could extend far beyond physical injuries and affect a dog’s confidence or trigger anxiety.
“The consequences can be immediate and life-changing for the person who depends on them,” Long said.
“We need clearer and more consistent regulation, greater public awareness and stronger enforcement to keep guide dog handlers and their dogs safe in the community.”
Vision Australia chief mission officer Christopher Edwards called on authorities to consider a legal overhaul similar to that in Britain, where attacks on assistance dogs are an aggravated offence.
It costs $50,000 to train a guide dog, and Edwards is concerned that after the boom in dog ownership since the pandemic, too many owners are complacent about interrupting working assistance dogs.
His own previous seeing eye dog, Odie, was “never the same” af
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