By Matthew Hoekstra
Staff Reporter
May 26 2005
Pet owners can now be held responsible for dangerous dogs
City council has adopted tough new animal control measures
targeting dangerous dogs and hiked fines and licence fees less
than a year after bylaw officers took on the new enforcement
role.
Since September 2004, city bylaw officers have been enforcing
animal control regulations. Now the city's newly renamed animal
control regulation bylaw outlines new rules for dog owners
taking their pooches out for a stroll.
Pet owners can now be held responsible should their animal kill,
injure or harass a person or animal, and no person can have more
than three dogs off-leash in city dog parks.
Dangerous dogs, which include pit bulls, Staffordshire terriers,
crosses of these breeds and others deemed by officials as
dangerous, are no longer allowed in dog parks. Their owners will
also now face licence fees of up to $200.
This summer, bylaw officers will patrol dykes and parks on
bicycles to ensure dog owners are following the new bylaw
measures.
"We have the bikes, the officers have been equipped with
(uniforms), so we should be getting them out there shortly,"
said Don Pearson, community bylaws manager.
Judy Stone, president of Animal Advocates Society, welcomed the
restrictions for dangerous dogs, saying municipalities have to
protect children and other animals from breeds such as the pit
bull.
"A 40-pound pit bull can kill an adult. It can kill another big
dog," she said. "We're absolutely in favour of anything that
stops the breeding of the most dangerous dogs."
Other dog licence fees will also be hiked in 2006 "to reflect
fees charged in other municipalities in the Lower Mainland,"
according to a staff report.
Fees for spayed and neutered dogs will climb to $20 from $16.
For dogs that aren't spayed or neutered, the licence fee jumps
to $70 from $46.
Close to 5,000 dog licences have already been sold this year,
according to a staff report, and increased fees are expected to
generate $40,000 in new revenue.
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Most fines relating to welfare of animals have doubled-now
averaging $200 per offence-and new fines relating to how pet
stores house and sell animals have been added.
Stone said she's long been asking municipalities to make pet
stores improve the care of their animals.
"The standards we would like to see are not going to be met by
this bylaw, but we're really, really pleased to see that
municipalities are finally looking at the way pet stores treat
their goods."
The city has also adopted a new offence: "animal noise which
disturbs." In other words, owners of incessant barking dogs
could face a $250 fine.
The Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which operates
the city pound, will also be charging higher impoundment fees to
deal with higher shelter costs.