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When a dog bites, maims, or kills a person, savages livestock or other pets,
or is used in commission of a crime, people become justifiably outraged, the
media heavily promotes the story, and politicians scramble for answers.
Those answers are rarely well thought out and as a result have several
unfortunate consequences: they impact responsible owners and good dogs; they
polarize communities; they are costly; they don't address the problem; and they
don't work.
NAIA has long recognized the futility of breed specific laws and restrictions
and other band-aid solutions and has studied ways to get beyond BSL to help
devise workable solutions to keep people and pets safe from dangerous dogs
without impacting responsible dog owners. To this end, NAIA will bring together
a group of dog behavior experts and community problem-solvers in "Helping
communities solve dangerous dog problems: A conference
dedicated to finding answers" on May 15-16 near Greater Cincinnati Airport.
This important conference
will ...
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focus on community responses
to dog bites and attacks;
·
help shelters draw
distinctions between dogs that are responsibly-owned, dogs that have uninformed
or inconsiderate owners, and dogs with owners who scoff at the law;
·
propose guidelines that help
shelters and rescue groups work together;
·
offer help to public
health agencies dealing with dog bites and other issues;
·
bring responsible dog
owners, trainers and breeders into the process as experts; and
·
recommend laws that hold
owners accountable for the actions of their dogs.
For more information, visit the NAIA website at www.naiaonline.org
and follow the link in the upper left quadrant to conference info and a
registration form.
Norma Bennett Woolf, editor, NAIA News
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