Reader comments
Sandy will study breed-specific rule
12 comments | Read story
1. There is a tremendous population of dogs who are in need of good homes. An animal shelter that tried to implement the kinds of rules you suggest would quickly find that it was forced to put increasing numbers of dogs to death as it ran out of space. And people who really wanted certain dogs but were unwilling to go through the red tape you suggest could simply buy them from "puppy mills" or unlicensed breeders, in-state or somewhere else.
2. It is not completely clear what a "pit bull" is (try looking for the name in the AKC--it doesn't exist!). Even a "rottweiler" mix can look more or less like a labrador or a Swiss Mountain Dog or a hundred other breeds. So when you get right down to specific cases--and especially with mixed-breed dogs--there's no way to determine what breed a dog is. Many cities and counties that have tried to ban specific breeds dogs have found that they run into this problem. Bottom line: it's the owner that matters, not the breed.
The CDC stopped tracking dog bites by breed in 1998 because they found two things were happening. 1) people were taking those numbers and trying to justify breed specific legislation with them and 2) the numbers were skewed towards different breeds during different periods of time. The breeds that ranked at the top of the list during different periods coincided with what was the popular "tough dog" of the time. German Sheppard Dogs topped that list for a 5 year period. Great Danes topped the list for a 2 year period. Right now it's Pit Bulls and Rottweilers.
My point is this, people will always find a breed which they can strengthen and teach to be aggressive. Those of us that happen to own those breeds, and love them dearly, do not deserve to be punished unfairly.
The identification of breeds is not specific. Unless the dog is a registered pure bred with a recognized association (such as the American Kennel Club) there is no way to know what the breeding of that animal is. Further, "mix breeds" are impossible to identify beyond a reasonable doubt.
Now who should identify breeds? There is no certification available that trains or proves that a particular individual can identify breeds. I can't tell you how many times in my decade of work in vet clinics where people have called their dogs a particular breed without any knowledge of that breed or proof that the dog is of that heritage.
I would argue that ANY dog who bites, from any breed, the vast majority are not registered pure-bred dogs.
There are many cities who have implemented Responsible Dog Ownership Legislation. These cities have PROVEN that their cities have been made SAFER due to these laws. Breed Specific Legislation has NOT proven safety. Which isn't that why it's being considered? For Safety? Then why consider a solution that isn't proven?
Good owners own good dogs. Bad owners typically don't. So who are you going to punish?
put out by the AVMA Task Force KIP.
It can be found on the AnimalFarmFoundation site.
Click on the Media Section,then click on the Expert Opinion on BSL.
The link for the AVMA report is right near the top of page.
It`s well worth the read and I hope the people making the decisions will read it.
Comment was only directed at you because of your query.
[quote]But I'm trying to ascetain from a dangerous dog versus being humane standpoint (not necessarily breed specific) what are good conscienious ways to deal with the problem.[/quote]
The AVMA report may help.
Add your comment
Comments are monitored. Any comments found to be abusive, offensive, off-topic, misrepresentative, more than 200 words or containing URLs will not be posted.
E-mail address: For internal use only. We may want to contact you to publish your comment (not your e-mail address) in the newspaper or for a separate story idea.
- Aggies beat Spartans in snowy Logan 4:31 a.m.
- TCU 55, Utah 28 4:24 a.m.
- BYU 24, New Mexico 19 4:21 a.m.
- Jazz game at a glance 3:00 a.m.
- Real Salt Lake: Game at a glance 3:00 a.m.
- Stanford ends Y's soccer season 2:20 a.m.
- Jazz hope D-Will returns soon 2:19 a.m.
- Snow, SUU lose 2:18 a.m.
- Toone saves day for Wildcats 2:15 a.m.
- Win in New Mexico good for Y? 2:15 a.m.
- SLC council OKs gay rights policies
358 - BYU happy to escape with victory
201 - Editorial: Mormons and gay rights
200 - TCU creams U.
148 - Will state consider gay rights law?
148 - Can BYU root for (ick) Utah Utes?
130 - Letters: Strange breed in Utah
129 - Utes remain silent about BCS
120 - Pratt pleads not guilty to sex charges
106 - Celtics crush Jazz
104
If you are looking for a bird on the cheap, the following specials from...
How do you handle kids and contests? Our oldest daughter, 7, is of the...
TCU beat Utah by 27. Check your math, bud.
I wrote to Hatch about simplifying and lowering our taxes. The Republican...
Great Win Tigers, We had to watch play by play on Desert News.com. It was...
Cannon's interpretation of the first amendment is absolutly correct. To imply...
After the way UNM performed in Orem, this was a big victory.
Good to hear your voice of reason again Tom!!
The loss of Terence Hooks (apparently for the rest of the season) really...
This guy just seems to hate all things Democrat. Me personally, I think all...
Is that total or per individual/group in each category? What will stop some...
I think it's safe to say that you are venting your anger because of the huge...
