Monthly Archives: March 2009

Massachusetts: HB 1997 moved to committee

Edit 9/22: The committee has not made a decision on this bill yet (whether to report favorably or unfavorably). If no decision is made by March 30th, the bill will be dead.

Edit 7/14: Massachusetts House Bill 1997 is scheduled to be heard by the Joint Committee on Municipalities and Regional Government on July 14, 10:00 AM, in room A-2.

HB 1997, which would sanction and encourage BSL in Massachusetts, has moved to the Joint Committee on Municipalities and Regional Government. A hearing has not yet been scheduled.

These are the people to contact. Ask them to vote against this bill.

House Staff
Room 540, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-2090

Senate Staff
Room 213A, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-1120

Committee Members:

Senator James B. Eldridge of Middlesex and Worcester – Chair
Room 213-A, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-1120
Fax: (617) 722-1089
James.Eldridge@state.ma.us

Senator Patricia D. Jehlen of Second Middlesex – Vice-Chair
Room 513, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-1578
Fax: 617-722-1117
Patricia.Jehlen@state.ma.us

Senator Susan C. Fargo of Third Middlesex
Room 504, State House,Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-1572
Susan.Fargo@state.ma.us

Senator Anthony D. Galluccio of Middlesex, Suffolk and Essex
Room 213A, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-1650
Anthony.Galluccio@state.ma.us

Senator Thomas P. Kennedy of Second Plymouth and Bristol
Room 109-E, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-1200
Thomas.P.Kennedy@state.ma.us

Senator Richard R. Tisei of Middlesex and Essex
Room 308, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-1206
Fax: (617) 722-1063
Richard.Tisei@state.ma.us

Representative Paul J. Donato of Medford- Chair
Room 540, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2090
Facsimile: 617-722-2848
Rep.PaulDonato@hou.state.ma.us

Representative Joyce A. Spiliotis of Peabody- Vice-Chair
Room 236, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2430
Rep.JoyceSpiliotis@hou.state.ma.us

Representative David B. Sullivan of Fall River
Room 279, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2230
Facsimile: 617-722-2821
Rep.DavidSullivan@hou.state.ma.us  

Representative Sean Curran of Springfield
Room 473B, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2263
Rep.SeanCurran@Hou.State.MA.US

Representative Angelo J. Puppolo of Springfield
Room 146, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-2011
Facsimile: 617-722-2238
Rep.AngeloPuppolo@Hou.State.MA.US

Representative Pamela Richardson of Framingham
Room 448, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2582
Rep.PamRichardson@HOU.State.MA.US

Representative Katherine Clark of Melrose
Room 252, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2220
Facsimile: 617-722-2850
Rep.KatherineClark@HOU.State.MA.US

Representative Brian M. Ashe of Longmeadow
Room 540, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2090
Facsimile: 617-722-2848
Rep.BrianAshe@hou.state.ma.us

Representative Timothy R. Madden of Nantucket
State House, Room 167, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2810
Facsimile: 617-722-2846
Rep.TimothyMadden@hou.state.ma.us

Representative F. Jay Barrows of Mansfield
Room 542, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: 617-722-2488
Facsimile:617-722-2390
Rep.FJayBarrows@Hou.State.MA.US

Representative Hargraves of Groton
Room 237, State House, Boston, MA 02133
Telephone: (617) 722-2305
Facsimile: 617-722-2598
Rep.RobertHargraves@hou.state.ma.us

Emails in a block for easy cut and paste: James.Eldridge@state.ma.us; Patricia.Jehlen@state.ma.us; Susan.Fargo@state.ma.us; Anthony.Galluccio@state.ma.us; Thomas.P.Kennedy@state.ma.us; Richard.Tisei@state.ma.us; Rep.PaulDonato@hou.state.ma.us; Rep.JoyceSpiliotis@hou.state.ma.us; Rep.DavidSullivan@hou.state.ma.us; Rep.SeanCurran@Hou.State.MA.US; Rep.AngeloPuppolo@Hou.State.MA.US; Rep.PamRichardson@HOU.State.MA.US; Rep.KatherineClark@HOU.State.MA.US; Rep.BrianAshe@hou.state.ma.us; Rep.TimothyMadden@hou.state.ma.us; Rep.FJayBarrows@Hou.State.MA.US; Rep.RobertHargraves@hou.state.ma.us

Previous alert and more information about the bill: http://stopbsl.com/2009/03/20/massachusetts-hb-1997-would-encourage-bsl/

Pittsburgh and Allegheny County, PA: Whispers of BSL

It is not clear what will be proposed by lawmakers. Breed-specific legislation has been suggested by the media in at least one prior article.

Please keep correspondence polite and informative. These folks need helpful non-breed-specific solutions to their perceived “pit bull” problem.

Pittsburgh City Council contact information:
City Clerk (or fill in City Councilmember’s name)
510 City-County Building, 414 Grant St., Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Ph. (412) 255-2138
Email forms for city councilmembers: http://www.city.pittsburgh.pa.us/council/html/city_council_members.html

City Council meetings are every Tuesday at 10 AM. City Council meetings are held in Council Chambers (ADA accessible), located on the Fifth Floor of the City-County Building at 414 Grant Street.

Allegheny County Council contact information:
Office of the County Council, Courthouse, Room 119, 436 Grant Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Phone: (412) 350-6490
Fax: (412) 350-6499
council@alleghenycounty.us
http://www.alleghenycounty.us/council/members.aspx

Next County Council meetings: Tuesday, April 7, 5 PM and Tuesday, April 21, 5 PM
County Courthouse, 436 Grant Street, 4th Floor – Gold Room, Pittsburgh, PA 15219

Lawmakers Vow To Address Pit Bull Problem

Mar 24, 2009 9:36 pm US/Eastern

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – Local leaders are promising to address the growing number of abandoned pit bulls in the Pittsburgh area.

Reacting to a KDKA investigation on the problem, Pittsburgh City Councilman Bruce Kraus says the city will consider tighter controls.

[... Dan] Onorato says he will consider legislation to address the problem countywide.[...]

Full article retrieved 3/25/09 from http://kdka.com/kdkainvestigators/Pit.bull.problem.2.967094.html

Springfield, MO: City Council tables pit bull adoption proposal

City Council tables pit bull adoption proposal

By Wes Johnson
wjohnson@news-leader.com
March 24, 2009

A proposal to let animal rescue groups save salvageable pit bulls from the city pound – and adopt them out at least 100 miles away – was tabled Monday night.[...]

Several people spoke about the proposal, most objecting to the breed-specific nature of the city’s pit bull policy.

Full article retrieved 3/24/09 from http://www.news-leader.com/article/20090324/BREAKING01/90323049/1007/NEWS01

Pennsylvania: HB 671 would allow BSL

Update 6/6/09: Galloway has rewritten the bill. The new bill number is HB 1243. The language retains the statewide prohibition against BSL. HB 1243 can be tracked here: http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/billinfo/billinfo.cfm?syear=2009&sind=0&body=H&type=B&BN=1243 Because BSL is no longer a possibility with this bill, it is being dropped from the statewide alert list.

Edit 4/7/09: Based on comments here, it appears the bill may have been modified to remove the possibility of BSL. The revised version is not posted yet. Please wait to contact the bill author and committee until the revised version is presented and confirmed breed-neutral.

Rep. John Galloway is trying to pass BSL again.

Pennsylvania HB 671, introduced by Rep. Galloway and referred to the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Affairs, would remove the statewide prohibition against BSL and permit municipalities to pass BSL.

The section of the proposed legislation that would allow this is below. The underlined section is the text that would be added to current law.

(c) Local ordinances.–[Those provisions of local ordinances relating to dangerous dogs are hereby abrogated.] A local ordinance otherwise dealing with dogs may not prohibit or otherwise limit a specific breed of dog. This act shall not supersede or preclude the adoption of any municipal ordinance applicable to dangerous dogs.

What this means, in plain English, is that municipalities (cities) can’t institute breed bans or other breed-specific legislation except when it comes to “dangerous” dogs–then they are free to implement BSL.

Bill can be tracked here: http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/billinfo/billinfo.cfm?&syear=2009&sind=0&body=H&type=B&bn=0671

Please contact the members of the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Affairs and provide them with your polite objections to this bill.

There will also be a hearing on this bill (not yet scheduled).

Bill Sponsor

Hon. John T. Galloway
104 Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202140
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2140
(717) 787-1292
Fax: (717) 780-4780

Members of the Committee on Agriculture and Rural Affairs
http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/cteeInfo/cteeInfo.cfm?body=H&cde=2

Hon. Michael K. Hanna, Chairman
302 Main Capitol Building
PO Box 202076
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2076
(717) 772-2283
Fax: (717) 787-4137

Hon. David R. Kessler, Vice Chairman
115A East Wing
PO Box 202130
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2130
(717) 787-2769
Fax: (717) 780-4768

Hon. H. Scott Conklin, Secretary
101B East Wing
PO Box 202077
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2077
(717) 787-9473
Fax: (717) 780-4764

Hon. Mike Carroll
28A East Wing
PO Box 202118
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2118
(717) 787-3589
Fax: (717) 780-4763

Hon. Eugene DePasquale
111A East Wing
PO Box 202095
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2095
(717) 787-7514
Fax: (717) 780-4765

Hon. Richard T. Grucela
G-01 Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202137
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2137
(717) 705-1878
Fax: (717) 783-3180

Hon. Gary Haluska
114 Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202073
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2073
(717) 787-3532
Fax: (717) 783-7548

Hon. Tom Houghton
121B East Wing
PO Box 202013
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2013
(717) 772-2426
Fax: (717) 787-6727

Hon. Babette Josephs
300 Main Capitol Building
PO Box 202182
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2182
(717) 787-8529
Fax: (717) 787-5066

Hon. Rick Mirabito
25B East Wing
PO Box 202083
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2083
(717) 772-1314

Hon. John Myers
305 Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202201
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2201
(717) 787-3181
Fax: (717) 772-4038

Hon. Frank Louis Oliver
34E East Wing
PO Box 202195
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2195
(717) 787-3480
Fax: (717) 783-0684

Hon. Joseph Preston Jr.
332A Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202024
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2024
(717) 783-1017
Fax: (717) 787-7520

Hon. Timothy J. Solobay
G-14 Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202048
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2048
(717) 787-1188
Fax: (717) 705-1887

Hon. Jesse White
102B East Wing
PO Box 202046
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2046
(717) 783-6437

Hon. Sam Rohrer, Minority Chairman, srohrer@pahousegop.com
45 East Wing
PO Box 202128
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2128
(717) 787-8550
Fax: (717) 783-7862

Hon. Karen Boback, kboback@pahousegop.com
141B East Wing
PO Box 202117
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2117
(717) 787-1117
Fax: (717) 705-1889

Hon. Michele Brooks, mbrooks@pahousegop.com
153B East Wing
PO Box 202017
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2017
(717) 783-5008
Fax: (717) 705-1948

Hon. Jim Cox
412 Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202129
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2129
(717) 772-2435
Fax: (717) 260-6516

Hon. Gordon Denlinger, gdenling@pahousegop.com
163A East Wing
PO Box 202099
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2099
(717) 787-3531
Fax: (717) 705-1951

Hon. C. Adam Harris, aharris@pahousegop.com
51B East Wing
PO Box 202082
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2082
(717) 783-7830
Fax: (717) 772-9869

Hon. David S. Hickernell, Dhickern@pahousegop.com
B-12 Main Capitol Building
PO Box 202098
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2098
(717) 783-2076
Fax: (717) 787-9175

Hon. Mark K. Keller, mkeller@pahousegop.com
5 East Wing
PO Box 202086
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2086
(717) 783-1593
Fax: (717) 705-7012

Hon. Carl Walker Metzgar, Cmetzgar@pahousegop.com
402 Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202069
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2069
(717) 783-8756
Fax: (717) 783-3899

Hon. David R. Millard, dmillard@pahousegop.com
402B Irvis Office Building
PO Box 202109
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2109
(717) 783-1102
Fax: (717) 772-0094

Hon. Tina Pickett, tpickett@pahousegop.com
211 Ryan Office Building
PO Box 202110
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2110
(717) 783-8238
Fax: (717) 260-6536

Saginaw, MI: Whispers of BSL

The entire article below is rather unclear. Essentially, Buena Vista, MI, has breed-specific legislation but has not been enforcing it (why not?). Following a dog attack, Buena Vista has decided to enforce the ordinance.

Driven by fear, the neighboring city of Saginaw is now interested in pursuing BSL, possibly a ban on pit bulls and Rottweilers.

Contact information for the city of Saginaw–please keep your correspondence polite and informative.

City Hall, 1315 S Washington Ave, Saginaw, MI 48601
Phone: (989) 759-1400
Fax: (989) 759-1607

Joyce Seals, Mayor, eosjjs@aol.com
Larry Coulouris, Mayor Pro-Tem, lcoulouris@yahoo.com
Greg Branch, anngreg@chartermi.net
Dan Fitzpatrick, dlfitz@ameritech.net
Amanda Kitterman, akitterman@spsd.net
Amos O’Neal, amossam@charter.net
William G. (Bill) Scharffe, Ph. D., drbills@charter.net
Paul Virciglio, Ptvirciglio90@charter.net
Andrew Wendt, awendt@stcs.org

Addresses in a block for easy copy and paste:

eosjjs@aol.comlcoulouris@yahoo.com; anngreg@chartermi.net
dlfitz@ameritech.net; akitterman@spsd.netamossam@charter.net;
drbills@charter.netPtvirciglio90@charter.netawendt@stcs.org

Thomas H. Fancher, City Attorney, 1315 S. Washington Ave., Rm. 110, Saginaw, Michigan 48601
Phone: (989) 759-1550
Fax: (989) 759-1564

Next City Council meeting: March 23, 6:30 PM

Want to speak at the next meeting? Fill out and return this form by 1 PM on the day of the meeting: http://www.saginaw-mi.com/Government/Departments/CityClerk/Forms/Personal%20Appearance%20Request%20Form%20(City%20Council)%20-%20S.pdf

Buena Vista Township will enforce vicious dog’s ordinance. Saginaw will examine adding teeth to its ordinance

by LaNia Coleman and Justin Engel
The Saginaw News
Tuesday March 10, 2009, 8:45 AM

Buena Vista Township Police Chief Brian D. Booker says he knows he’s going to get a lot of complaints about the township’s vicious dog ordinance, but he’s willing to put up with the protests to make the township safer.

[...]“A pit bull is considered a vicious dog,” Booker said. “We may get some complaints, but that’s what the ordinance says. That’s it. Period.”

[...] [Saginaw councilmember William] Scharffe said he’s asked Thomas H. Fancher, City Hall’s attorney, to look into banning pit bulls or Rottweilers.

[...] [Saginaw] Councilman Paul T. Virciglio said City Hall should look into banning dangerous animals “before someone becomes a victim.”

Full article retrieved 3/11/09 from http://www.mlive.com/news/saginaw/index.ssf/2009/03/buena_vista_township_will_enfo.html

Denver, CO: Do dog breed bans work?

Apparently, if you are hospitalized by a dog that is not a pit bull in Denver (and Denver has had six times as many such hospitalizations as Boulder, a larger city without BSL), city officials do not see that as a problem. The call for non-breed-specific laws that might actually increase public safety is seen as some sort of ploy by dog fighters. How bizarre.

The Denver Daily News no longer exists. I hope they don’t mind if I reprint this article in its entirety here, since it can no longer be found anywhere else.

Do dog breed bans work?

Pit bull fans point to bite stats; ban backers cite that maulings stopped

Peter Marcus, DDN Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Despite killing at least 1,667 pit bulls since 2005, Denver city officials cannot say with certainty whether a ban on the breed has made the city safer.

But officials say there is no evidence to indicate that the ban is not working. Proponents of the ban point out that since it was re-enforced in 2005, there has not been any serious pit bull maulings.

There has actually not been a serious pit bull attack in Denver since the 1989 mauling of Rev. Wilbur Billingsley, who was left with more than 70 bites and two broken legs. Before that, there was the 1986 death of a 3-year-old boy.

But empirical data suggests that breed-specific legislation does not work. Several other Denver metro towns and cities – including Englewood and Lakewood – examined dog bite data and decided breed-specific legislation is not as effective as stricter aggressive and dangerous dog laws, which hold owners responsible for their pets.

Between 1995 and 2006, Denver had almost six times as many dog-related hospitalizations compared to Boulder, even though Denver’s population is less than twice that of Boulder. During that 12-year period, Denver experienced 273 dog-related hospitalizations, while Boulder experienced only 46, according to statistics provided by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

Boulder imposes no breed-specific legislation.

In Denver, however, there has been a ban on pit bulls since 1989 following the mauling of Billingsley. The incident resulted in the City Council banning pit bulls from the city. In 2004, Gov. Bill Owens signed a bill prohibiting local municipalities from enacting breed-specific legislation. Denver challenged the statute and enforcement resumed in May 2005.

Since then, hundreds of pit bulls have been killed, though animal control officials do not know how many of the breed are still left in the city.
Watch out for Labradors!

What they do know, however, is that pit bulls do not lead the pack when it comes to bites in the Denver metro area. Labrador retrievers are the most likely dog to bite, at 13.3 percent, according to data provided by the Colorado Association of Animal Control Officers and released last week by the Coalition for Living Safely with Dogs.

Pit bulls follow, at 8.4 percent, which is then followed by German shepherds at 7.8 percent.

The likelihood of a dog to bite also has to do with the popularity of the breed. Labrador retrievers are an extremely popular breed. But Michaela DeGraw, spokeswoman for the Colorado Veterinary Medical Association, points out that labradors are biting more than pit bulls, and there’s no ban on labs.

“Are we going to ban labs just because they are at the top of the list?” asked DeGraw. “I think not.”

Karen Delise, founder and director of research for the National Canine Research Council, said breed-specific legislation does nothing to educate owners on their responsibilities for owning a dog. She said without that component, there is no way to keep dog bites down.

“I find it interesting that the only area, region, county or city in Colorado with a breed ban happens to be the only county with a higher than normal rate of dog bite hospitalizations,” she said. “The breed ban isn’t working, it’s not addressing education or irresponsible owners.”

Englewood Mayor Jim Woodward said his city decided against breed-specific legislation because the research he conducted indicated that banning pit bulls would not cut back on dog bites. Because Englewood wanted a component that involved educating and holding owners responsible for their actions, it decided last summer to beef-up its dangerous dog laws rather than impose a ban.

“I have not seen any proof that (breed-specific legislation) is the way to go,” said Woodward. “I think what we have come up with is much more progressive.”

The mayor added that in speaking with code enforcement officers, they find the stricter dangerous dog ordinance much more effective because it supplies them with additional tools to go after irresponsible owners, as well as educate the owners on their mistakes.
Are we safer?

Denver Animal Control Director Doug Kelley is unable to say with any certainty whether the ban on pit bulls has made Denver a safer city.

“It’s a hard question to answer,” Kelley told the Denver Daily News in a recent interview. “We have not had a severe mauling or fatality involving a pit bull since its gone into effect. But then again, we continue to get more pit bulls every year … it depends on how you define success.”
Ban backer

Kori Nelson, a Denver assistant city attorney who lead the city’s fight to re-enact its ban on pit bulls in 2004, called pit bulls a unique breed with inherently dangerous characteristics.

He said the ban is working as evidenced by the fact that there has not been a serious attack since the ban was enacted.

“I don’t know anyone who argues that pit bull bans or restrictions are designed to prevent all dog bites,” he said. “It’s designed to prevent maulings and death attacks by pit bulls.”

Comparing pit bulls to grenades, Nelson said the purpose of banning the breed is to prevent unprovoked attacks.

“Once a grenade goes off, the damage is already done,” he said.
Hidden agenda?

The assistant city attorney also suggested a “secret hidden agenda” behind anti-BSL groups like the Coalition for Living Safely with Dogs and the Humane Society of the United States. Nelson pointed out that such groups rely on donations for their efforts, especially when the economy is down.

“It’s politically incorrect for them to admit the truth of this, which is that pit bulls are more dangerous,” said Nelson, who added that donations could come from anywhere, even including leaders of dog-fighting rings.

Meanwhile, the Denver health department said it is considering the recent dog bite statistics to perhaps in the future recommend a change in code.

“It’s too soon to tell what we’re going to do with that information, but we’re definitely taking it into consideration as to whether in the future we should be doing any modifications,” said health department spokeswoman Meghan Hughes.

Delise says the city should act quickly on policy changes if it is to hope for less dog attacks.

“Dogs are the property, for better or for worse, of their owners,” she said. “You can’t write a law that a dog is going to be able to read. You need to write laws that hold owners responsible for the behavior of their dogs and for them to have care and control of their dogs.”

Article used to exist at this link: http://www.thedenverdailynews.com/article.php?aID=3473

New Mexico: Proposed statewide BSL to be dropped

Edit 9/1/09: This bill is dead.

Confirmed per NM legislature website that a substitute bill has been filed for HB 667. However, the substitute bill is not available on the site (broken link), so I do not yet know what has been changed.

Edit 3/2/09: The broken link has been repaired. Confirmed that the substitute bill does NOT have breed-specific language.

http://www.cnjonline.com/news/lawmaker_32555___article.html/heaton_state.html

Dogged lawmaker changes his mind

By Sharna Johnson: CNJ staff writer
February 27, 2009 – 5:15PM

A state lawmaker is pulling a proposal to classify all pit bulls and rottweilers as dangerous dogs.

State Rep. John Heaton said Friday he’s been persuaded by negative public reaction. [...]