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Friday 3 October 2014

Is it worth it?

Is it worth it?

LawsuitsLooks like the city of Denver is facing yet another lawsuit on their pit bull ordinance.  Three women in the area are suing them for damages that ensued by forcing them to either give up their homes and lives and move from the city or have their dogs killed.
Caveat has done a nice job of tracking the story, including having the entire complaint documentfor your viewing pleasure.
I would also like to point out the wonderful poll question by the Denver Post yesterday -- that pretty much assumes pit bulls are a problem in every response.
The Denver government is standing behind their ordinance of course.  But it makes me wonder why no one is complaining about the large amount of money that is getting tied up in BSL disputes.  Ontario has been dealing with a lawsuit to overturn their BSL, Toledo vs. Tellings is awaiting decision in the Ohio Supreme Court after its second appeal.  There is also a court case going on in Columbus, OH, and several in San Francisco over their MSN/BSL.  There is a LOT of money getting tied up in our legal system by cities trying to defend laws that have  been proven NOT TO WORK.
The government finds a lot of ways to waste taxpayer dollars, and this is another perfect example.  When the government looks for ways to interfere with people's lives, they are asking for problems.  I can't think of a single other type of ordinance (outside of maybe no-smoking laws in restaurants and bars) that causes the same types of problems as BSL from a legal front.
At some point they're going to get it.  Unfortunately, it's going to take a lot of waste of taxpayers dollars and civil employee's time before they do.

Laws Against Pit Bulls Soften As Attitudes Change


Laws Against Pit Bulls Soften As Attitudes Change

Posted: Updated: 
PIT BULLS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — For much of the past three decades, pit bulls have been widely regarded as America's most dangerous dog — the favorite breed of thugs, drug dealers and dog-fighting rings, with a fearsome reputation for unprovoked, sometimes deadly attacks.
Hostility toward "pits" grew so intense that some cities began treating them as the canine equivalent of assault rifles and prohibited residents from owning them.
But attitudes have softened considerably since then as animal activists and even television shows cast the dogs in a more positive light. The image makeover has prompted many states to pass new laws that forbid communities from banning specific breeds. And it illustrates the power and persistence of dog-advocacy groups that have worked to fend off pit bull restrictions with much the same zeal as gun-rights groups have defeated gun-control measures.
"Lawmakers are realizing that targeting dogs based on their breed or what they look like is not a solution to dealing with dangerous dogs," said Lisa Peters, a spokeswoman for the American Kennel Club.
Eighteen states now have laws that prohibit communities from adopting breed-specific bans. Lawmakers in six more states are considering similar measures, and some cities are reviewing local policies that classify pit bulls as dangerous animals.
Pit bull advocates hail the changes as recognition that breed-specific laws discriminate against dogs that are not inherently aggressive or dangerous unless they are made to be that way by irresponsible owners.
The dogs' foes complain that their message is being drowned out by a well-funded, well-organized lobbying effort in state capitols. The debate puts millions of pit bull owners up against a relatively small number of people who have been victimized by the dogs.
Ron Hicks, who sponsored a bill in the Missouri House to forbid breed-specific legislation, said he was surprised when nobody spoke against his proposal last month at a committee hearing.
"I figured a few parents would be there who would bring tears to my eyes," the Republican said. "Would it have changed my opinion or what I believe in? No."
A version of Hicks' legislation was endorsed by a House committee last month and needs to clear another committee before a full House vote. The state Senate is considering a comparable bill, as are lawmakers in Utah, South Dakota, Washington, Vermont and Maryland.
In Kansas, the communities of Bonner Springs and Garden City repealed their pit-bull bans earlier this year.
Summer Freeman did not know there was a ban when she moved to Bonner Springs last year after a divorce. She panicked when an animal-control officer discovered her pet and told her she had 15 days to get rid of the dog named Titan or move out of town.
"I think of him like my son," she said. "He's my dog-son, I guess you could say. He's at my hip all the time. He's just a big baby that wouldn't hurt a fly."
Freeman was forced to leave Titan at a shelter in Lawrence for nine months until she successfully fought to overturn the law in January.
For dog owners and pit bull opponents alike, the battle is as deeply personal as any gun-control or religious issue. Each side accuses the other of lying, exploiting emotions and using bullying tactics.
Pit bull owners insist their dogs are harmless, loving family members that shouldn't be blamed for something they didn't do. To opponents, they are a volatile breed whose genetics drive them to kill more than two dozen people in the U.S. each year, many of them young children.
Popular television shows such as "Pit Boss" and "Pit Bulls and Parolees" on Animal Planet glorify the animals and minimize the tragedies that occur when pit bulls turn on humans, pit bull opponents say.
"Everything is telling us these animals are safe if you raise them right," said Jeff Borchardt, a Stevens Point, Wis., man whose 14-month-old son was mauled to death a year ago by two pit bulls that tore the child from the arms of their owner, who was baby-sitting. "My son's dead because of a lie, because of a myth. My life will never be the same."
The two dogs that killed Borchardt's son had lived with their owner since soon after they were born, were well-cared for and had no history of aggressive behavior, he said. Both had been spayed or neutered.
That contradicts the contention that only mistreated, neglected or abused pit bulls attack people.
Colleen Lynn, founder of DogsBite.org, pointed to a friend-of-the-court brief her organization submitted in a 2012 case in which the Maryland Court of Appeals declared pit bulls "inherently dangerous."
"Appellate courts agree with us. Doctors and surgeons agree with us. That is credibility right there," Lynn said. "We also have the support of three divisions of the U.S. military, huge, massive bodies in the U.S. government."
The Marines, Army and Air Force all have banned dangerous dogs — including pit bulls and rottweilers — from their bases because of the "unreasonable risk" they pose to safety, Lynn said.
On the other side stand the American Bar Association and National Animal Control Association, which oppose breed-specific laws because they are discriminatory against a type of dog that isn't really a single breed.
Three main breeds — Staffordshire bull terrier, American pit bull terrier and American Staffordshire terrier — along with mixes of those breeds are generally considered pit bulls. But many muscular, square-jawed, boxer-type dogs often are misidentified as pit bulls, making breed-specific bans hard to enforce.
And because fatal pit bull attacks are a rarity compared with other causes of death such as auto accidents, dog advocates argue that breed-specific bans amount to legislative overkill.
"All communities deserve comprehensive dog laws that demand responsible dog ownership and that hold reckless owners accountable when their poor decisions wind up getting other dogs or other people hurt," said Ledy Vankavage, a top lobbyist for the Best Friends Animal Society.
Don Burmeister, assistant city attorney for Council Bluffs, Iowa, led the effort to pass a local pit bull ban that took effect in 2005. He recalled first reading about the issue in the July 27, 1987, issue of Sports Illustrated, which carried a full-cover shot of an angry pit bull baring its teeth. Across the top, it said "BEWARE OF THIS DOG."
After the Council Bluffs ban went into place, the number of pit bull attacks that resulted in hospitalization plummeted from 29 in 2004 to zero the past few years — proof, Burmeister said, that breed-specific bans work.
The opposition to pit bull bans, he added, is a sign that many American pet owners have lost touch with reality.
"Fifty years ago, you could take a sick animal behind a barn and put it out of its misery," he said. "That's just the way it was done. Now they would investigate you for doing that. The emotional irrationality of Americans and their dogs has never been worse than it is today."


Suggest a correction

BSL and those against it

Not a single dog or human safety expert organization has come out saying that breed-specific legislation is effective. All mainstream and professional animal welfare groups are totally against breed-specific legislation, here’s a partial list…
American Animal Hospital Association
American Bar Association
American Canine Foundation
American Dog Breeders Association
American Dog Owners Association
American Humane Association
American Kennel Club (AKC)
American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA)
American Temperament Test Society
American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)
American Veterinary Society of Animal Behavior
American Working Dog Federation
Animal Farm Foundation
Animal Legal Defense Fund
Association of Pet Dog Trainers
Best Friends Animal Society
British Veterinary Association
California Veterinary Medical Association
Canadian Kennel Club
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Coalition for Living Safely with Dogs
Humane Society of the United States (HSUS)
International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants
International Association of Canine Professionals
In Defense of Animals
Lawyers In Defense of Animals
MSPCA-Angell
National Animal Control Association
National Animal Interest Alliance
National Association of Dog Obedience Instructors
National Canine Research Council
No Kill Advocacy Center
United Kennel Club (UKC)
Even the United States government has weighed in on the issue:
United States Department of Justice
- See more at: http://www.swaylove.org/bslbdl/organization-opposition#sthash.fB3Dti3V.dpuf

The Truth Behind The Media's Mythical Monster

The Pit Bull Hoax DVD
The Truth Behind The Media's Mythical Monster
pitbullhoaxThe Pit Bull Hoax is an educational DVD. Its intended purpose is to remove existing Breed Specific Legislation (BSL) from the law books and prevent any cities, counties and states from enacting BSL.

As of 2009, 41 states have BSL or are considering it in its legislature. Additionally, various insurance companies, housing authorities and other groups have a list of "dangerous dogs" that totals 75 breeds.

Featuring interviews with: Dr. Nicholas Dodman, Jean Donaldson, Dr Ian Dunbar, Diane Jessup and Jane Berkey.

Copies of The Pit Bull Hoax DVD are offered free of charge to legislators, media and anyone who is attempting to educate people as to why BSL is not effective in reducing dog bites or human fatalities related to dog bites.
The shipping and handling fee is $6.95. When you click on the "Add to Cart" button, you will be redirected to a secure server (PayPal) to order the DVD and pay the shipping and handling fee by credit card (VISA, MC, AMEX, Discover).
To order your FREE copy of The Pit Bull Hoax DVD, email this request form and pay shipping and handling costs below. Please contact us for bulk shipping and handling rates if you need more than one copy for a special event. Use the ADD TO CART button below if you are requesting ONE copy. Thanks.
Pit Bull Hoax DVD is FREE ($6.95 Shipping and Handling)
 
Here's what people are saying about The Pit Bull Hoax:
"The Pit Bull Hoax is an outstanding tool for educating both legislators and the general public.  It hits the major points that need to be discussed in debates over Breed Specific Legislation and public safety.  I believe it is a great conversation starter and reminds all of us that dogs are unbelieveably safe and every dog attack can be traced right back to an irresponsible owner."
- Jean Keating Co-Founder Ohio Coalition of Dog Advocates

"Real passion cannot be bought, it cannot be learned and it cannot be faked.  Passion can only be as powerful and unique as the individual whom it consumes.  Drayton Michaels possesses an unrivaled drive to do right by the dogs he studies, trains and represents, and it is terrifically contagious.  His efforts not only help our best friends, they inspire others to follow their inner voice and make a difference -- and that is exciting."
- Jon Bozak, author Demo: The Story of a Junkyard Dog

"I just received a copy of your "The Pit Bull Hoax".  It is outstanding.  You did a great job with it and it is very professional.  God bless you for your promotion of the Pit Bull Breed and your battle against BSL.  It is obvious that you are not in this for monetary reasons since you only charged shipping.  Quite frankly I personally would have paid $25 or $30 site unseen (because of the subject matter) but after viewing it, in my opinion it is worth much more then that. I am big time Pit Bull Enthusiast and have attended two of BADRAP's annual Pit Bull Conferences out in Oakland. I volunteer at Liberty Humane Society in Jersey City. I live in Edison which has a large Pit Bull population. I'll definitly be spreading the word about this DVD!"
- Tony Gencarelli, Pit Bull Owner and Advocate

"Congrats on the whole thing. Very worthwhile effort, Drayton."
- Michael Mountain, Co-Founder of Best Friends Animal Sanctuary

"I am just baffled by the mysticism surrounding BSL. I think the most impressive thing in the Hoax DVD is the quiet, measured conviction of those professionals as they spoke on behalf of these dogs. No screaming, no diatribes, no fanatical or fancy speech...just plain and simple logic. As I watched the video, all I could think was that if the Pro BSL crowd can't comprehend what these folks are saying, well, then, what is it going to take?"
- Joann Prince, All Star Pet Rescue, Inc.

"Great Job! One of the most important aspects of The Pit Bull Hoax is how it illustrates that Breed Bans force local government resources and tax-payers' monies to be spent on non effective means. While many other dog abuse cases go unheard or ignored because the local governments don't have the resources for abuse task forces."
- Edel Miedes, Co-Founder and Co-Director Miami Coalition Against BSL

“The Pit Bull Hoax DVD is a most valuable tool being used to pave the way to repeal the Breed Ban or Breed Specific Legislation, in Miami ~Dade County. It clearly gets the visual point across! Thanks for your help!"
- Dahlia, Director Miami Coalition Against Breed Specific Legislation

"The Pit Bull Hoax DVD is a good example of this man's single minded determination to help lift the American pit bull from the sad state in which it finds itself. If the breed had but a few more fanciers of his calibre, dedication and spirit, Pit Bull dogs should soon see better days. Two thumbs up for The Pit Bull Hoax!"
- Diane Jessup, Pit Bull breed steward and author of The Dog Who Spoke With Gods

"The Pit Bull Hoax' is a wonderful DVD for fans of bully breeds and for those who are not yet converted to adoring Bully Breeds.This DVD pulls resources from various well-respected Industry experts and delivers compelling and intelligent arguments. I am so grateful to have this DVD as an education tool for our events, it's completes the circle necessary to dispel breed-specific mandates, poor media reporting, and proves why bully breeds get such a bad rap."
- Deirdre Franklin aka Little Darling, President & Founder www.pinupsforpitbulls.com
"The 'Pit Bull Hoax' is a must see and should be part of the resource library of every person or organization that is serious about working to protect the wonderful breed of dog commonly referred to as the 'pit bull'. This is a rare opportunity to hear from well-respected professionals who actually work with canines, more specifically with aggression cases. The truth about pit bulls is something needs more exposure and this short presentation will have you on the right path."
- Faith Hynoski, Co-Founder of Families Against Breed Bans

"At long last — some rational information about pitbulls."
- Dr. Ian Dunbar
Pit Bull Hoax DVD is FREE ($6.95 Shipping and Handling)
 

Wednesday 1 October 2014

ANIMAL AIDS POSITION STATEMENT ON BSL

Draft Policy on Dangerous Dog Strategies and Breed Specific Legislation (BSL) 
Animal Aid supports the creation of evidence based regulatory policy. 
While enforcing the enacted legislation, Animal Aid would seek to replace Breed related legislation aimed at reducing dog bite statistics on the grounds that: 

• BSL does not reduce the number of dog bites. 
• BSL does not address the number of bites that arise from other breeds and cross-breeds. 
• BSL ignores the fact that there may be highly sociable and well adjusted individuals in any breed. 
• The identification of Pitbull Terriers (the breed under scrutiny at present) and other banned breeds from visual standards cannot be determined with complete relaibility. 


The Facts
 

• Studies have shown that BSL has not reduced bites in the UK (Klaassen, Buckley, & Esmail, 1996), Germany (Schalke, Ott, & von Gaertner, 2008; Ott, Schalke, von Gaertner, & Hackbarth, 2008) or the Netherlands (Cornelissen & Hopster, 2010) and BSL has been repealed in Germany and the Netherlands. Only one study supports the effectiveness of BSL and that incorporated many other strong initiatives to promote responsible ownership (Villalbi et al., 2010). 

• Incontestably identifying a ‘restricted breed’ dog is currently impossible. Visual determinations of breed made by a Victorian government appointed ‘breed panel’ of experts was overturned by legal challenge. 

• There are no definitive objective criteria, such as a DNA test, to identify a Pitbull Terrier. 

• The Division of Local Government in NSW reports that in 2005 only 1-2% of attacking dogs were identified as restricted breeds i.e. 98% were not. The percentage of bites attributable to restricted breed dogs has been steadily decreasing (0.06% in 2008 and 0.2% in 2009). Therefore, BSL could only ever be expected to reduce the number dog bites by a very small amount. 

• Any breed of dog breed can bite regardless of breed. The challenge is identifying which one is likely to do so before they actually do it. Recommendations 

• Identifying strategies that work elsewhere and implementing them. For example,   Calgary, Canada has reduced dog bites and shelter euthanasia; increased desexing and regulatory compliance without BSL or mandating desexing. Incidentally, Calgary has a very high population of Pitbull Terriers
(see http://www.petsmartcharities.org/resources/the-calgary-model-for-success.html). 

• Develop the ability to identify individual dogs that have a propensity to bite, regardless of species by establishing if there are genetic markers of canine aggression. 

• Provision of widespread, low-cost dog training targeting problematic and anti-social behaviour to proactively prevent issues developing. 

• Development of validated assessments for good temperament and only breeding with dogs that have passed such tests to reduce aggression. While all dogs have the ability to bite, the risk is mediated by the size and sociability of the dog, genetic factors, specific breed characteristics (which are the focus of current attention) and owner responsibility. The Calgary experience indicates that owner responsibility is the key variable. Animal Aid believes that society’s interests are best served by moving away from BSL and using a combination of strategies to reduce dog bites including rewarding responsible owners who register, socialise and train their dogs while rigorously enforcing registration requirements and owner liability for the offences that their dog’s commit. Reference List

Cornelissen, J. M. & Hopster, H. (2010). Dog bites in The Netherlands: a study of victims, injuries, circumstances and aggressors to support evaluation of breed specific legislation. Veterinary Journal, 186, 292-298.
Klaassen, B., Buckley, J. R., & Esmail, A. (1996). Does the dangerous dogs act protect against animal attacks: a prospective study of mammalian bites in the accident and emergency department. Injury, 27, 89-91.
Ott, S. A., Schalke, E., von Gaertner, A. M., & Hackbarth, H. (2008). Is there a difference? Comparison of golden retrievers and dogs affected by breed-specific legislation regarding aggressive behavior. Journal of Veterinary Behavior: Clinical Applications and Research, 3, 134-140. Schalke, E., Ott, S. A., & von Gaertner, A. M. (2008). Is breed-specific legislation justified? Study of the results of the temperament test of Lower Saxony . Journal of Veterinary Behavior: Clinical Applications and Research, 3, 97-103. 
Villalbi, J. R., Cleries, M., Bouis, S., Peracho, V., Duran, J., & Casas, C. (2010). Decline in hospitalisations due to dog bite injuries in Catalonia, 1997-2008. An effect of government regulation? Inj.Prev., 16, 408-410.