LOS ANGELES
Pet Owners Could Be in the Doghouse
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Jessica Garrison, Times Staff Writer
The Los Angeles City
Council, looking to give dogs a boost in their standard of living, voted
Wednesday to draft an ordinance that would set strict standards for
doghouses and outlaw the practice of permanently chaining the animals in
yards.
A $250 fine could await owners who fail to provide a clean, dry home for
dogs that are kept outdoors.
Cmdr. David Diliberto, director of field operations for the city's
Department of Animal Services, said the new rules would be a boon to
hundreds of dogs that pass their days tethered or that suffer in the
summer heat and winter cold.
"We have people who think proper shelter is
an old, rusted-out car
body," he said.
Other supporters of the crackdown told horrific stories of dogs with
chains embedded in their necks, living out miserable lives on a tiny
patch of dirt.
"These are the dogs that bite," said Robert Goldman, president of the
Southern California Veterinary Medical Assn. "When someone ties a dog to
a chain in their yard, you've got a dog that is a time bomb."
If the City Council approved the ordinance this fall, Los Angeles would
become the first city in California to mandate such care for dogs,
although other cities, including New Orleans and Washington, D.C., have
similar rules.
"A lot of people are watching Los Angeles and hoping to see some
leadership down there," said Hector Cazares, head of Sacramento's animal
services department.
Cazares said he intended to take a similar proposal to the City Council
there soon.
The ordinance would make it illegal for anyone to tie up a dog for an
extended period of time. If a dog must be restrained to keep it away
from the gardener, for example, or because a fence had broken owners
would have to tether the animals with a non-choke collar on a leash at
least three times the dog's body length.
The ordinance also would require that the dog have access to water and
shelter at all times.
Doghouses, meanwhile, would have to be leak proof and equipped with
clean, warm bedding. From November until May, doghouse windows and doors
would have to have flaps to keep out cold air. And from June until
October, dogs would have to be provided a refuge out of the sun.
Dogs kept inside the home or that have access via doggie doors would be
exempted from the doghouse rules.
City officials stressed that the intent of the law was to give animal
control officers a way to protect dogs from neglectful and abusive
owners not to punish people who occasionally chain their dogs up in
the backyard.
"This is not creating a whole new group of dog police," said
Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski. "It's mostly to empower animal control
when they get a complaint."
Goldman of the Veterinary Medical Assn. said, "This is not stuff that
the average dog owner is going to have to worry about."
Miscikowski said no one expressed opposition to the plan before the
council during public hearings.
The council passed the proposal unanimously Wednesday without any
discussion. But several council members seemed unaware of the details of
the proposed ordinance, possibly because the day's agenda stretched to
more than 100 items and the meeting lasted more than five hours.
At least one council member said he planned to study the proposal more
carefully after the city attorney drafted the specific language.
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