Tag Archives: Animal control

Barks or bites – changes to L.A. animal control law

For many dogs, barking is part of their job description; they bark to warn off intruders and to keep their human and animal family members safe. But spending a little too much time on the job can land the pet and their owner in the dog house, at least for some living in Southern California.

On Tuesday the Los Angeles City Council amended the city’s existing law about barking dogs. The original version, similar to statutes in Sacramento and other cities across the country, referred to “excessive barking” without explaining exactly how much is too much.

The amended version defines barking for ten minutes, or for 30 minutes during a three-hour period, to be excessive.

The first citation issued to the owner of an excessively barking dog in the city of L.A. now comes with a minimum penalty of $250.00; by the third citation the cost is up to a minimum of $1,000.00.

By contrast, L.A. County’s barking dog statute carries penalties for the owner of up to six months in jail on misdemeanor public nuisance charges.

Some complaints are true cases of disturbing the peace; other complaints appear to be made for the sole purpose of getting a disliked neighbor in trouble. Regardless, the complaint and resolution process requires a large amount of time on the part of an Animal Control Officer (ACO).

City of Sacramento Chief Animal Control Officer Dan Torres says that the staffing needed for such complaints locally is “a resource I don’t have”.

Torres leads a team of seven ACOs handling issues in the city, far below the 22 to 30 officers needed for the area according to a study done in 2000 by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS).

The population of the city has grown by more than 60,000 residents since that determination was made.

Funding cut-backs have caused the low number of ACOs for the city, but the number of issues they need to handle has done nothing but grow.

Torres says that the most critical issue that City ACOs must respond to is dog or cat bites, due to the possibility of fatal rabies infections. Next are reports of “loose, aggressive strays at schools”, another immediate and serious safety concern.

Then there are sick and injured animals on the roadways, coyotes, raccoons and skunks in residential areas, potential abuse and cruelty cases, strays on the street, getting animals out of locked vehicles, transporting injured strays and wildlife for veterinary care, removing deceased animals and assisting the Police, Fire Department, Highway Patrol, SPCA and Sacramento County Animal Services with larger cases. Just to name a few.

Oh, and complaints about barking dogs. Many hours of an ACO’s time must be used for the investigation, follow-up and required paperwork of a barking dog complaint, particularly if an appeal is filed by the pet owner.

Each Sacramento City ACO is responsible for a specific area and each officer’s typical day starts with a list of 40-60 calls they must respond to. More issues and complaints come in throughout the day and night.

It is understandable then, why complaints about how much noise an animal is making had to be looked into after public health and safety issues are handled.

As of July 1, 2011 City complaints about barking dogs are routed to Sacramento Mediation Services; doing it in-house was simply a poor use of very limited resources.

Unless Los Angeles has a full contingent of Animal Control staff and a small number of issues to handle – which are highly unlikely – the newly amended barking dog law may not help solve any problems.

Click here for tips from the City of Sacramento Animal Shelter on how to help your dog bark less.

Shopping, reptiles and faces only a mother could love

Most yard sales offer gems like deflated basketballs, stained baby car seats and faded clothes from the back of some grandmother’s closet. Not many of them sell heating and UV lighting equipment, cages, food supplements and oh, yes, snakes and lizards.

Actually the snakes and such are up for adoption, not for sale. And best of all, everything you do buy is tax-deductible.

At least that is the case with the Northern California Herpetological Society’s (NCHS) yard sale taking place this Saturday. The Sacramento-based nonprofit will be selling reptile supplies, books and many other items for reptile and amphibian enthusiasts.  

On-site adoptables may include pythons, boa constrictors, a Chinese water dragon, crested geckos and a gorgeous Savannah Monitor named Max. Some are shown in the attached slide show, but all adoptables can be found either on Petfinder or the group’s website.  

Don’t be put off by traditional notions of such creatures; they can be very intelligent and enjoyable pets.

Just ask Mark Plotnick of the NCHS, who “knew nothing about reptiles” until some friends needed a new home for a ball python snake.  Later he volunteered with the SPCA doing cat adoptions and ending up taking home a red-tailed boa constrictor that was found outside the shelter.

Plotnick attended an “alternative pet expo” about ten years later and met volunteers from NCHS, and the rest is history.

Today, Plotnick says, “my house is nothing but reptiles”.  This includes a permanent resident; a 150-pound, 16-foot long Albino Burmese python named Anna Banana.

All proceeds of the sale go towards paying the large vet bills that the group incurs when providing proper housing, diet, and medical care to animals that are abandoned, abused, neglected, picked up by animal control agencies or found by the general public.

For more information please call Mark at (916) 283-4499 or e-mail mslither@gmail.com.

Rescue group president in potential hoarding situation – again

A Sacramento animal rescue group may be part of a hoarding situation for the second time in five months. More than 50 cats are allegedly being housed in a home in Rancho Cordova by Mary Klatt, president of Purrs For You.

The home, on the 2000 block of Dawes Street, was visited last night by a Sacramento resident on the invitation of Klatt. According to the visitor the house had very few furnishings, only one interior light and no human residents.

The person states they contacted Klatt regarding a litter of un-weaned kittens that had been found.  Klatt reportedly agreed to meet the caller at the Dawes Street home so that the kittens could be left with a lactating mother cat that could nurse them. 

The Sacramento SPCA and the City of Rancho Cordova Animal Services were contacted after the witness reported seeing at least 50 cats in cages or roaming free inside the home. The litter of kittens was not left with Klatt as originally planned; another rescue option was found for them.

In January of this year police and Sacramento City Animal Care staff removed 85 cats and dogs from a College Glen house that Klatt owned and lived in.  Many of the animals were reportedly euthanized due to serious and infectious diseases. 

Klatt did not receive animal cruelty or other charges as a result of the College Glen raid. This was reportedly part of a deal negotiated with Klatt so that the animals could be surrendered and given veterinary care immediately. Klatt was ultimately allowed to get seven of the healthy animals back, the maximum number allowed by law.

Rancho Cordova Animal Services has not responded to inquiries regarding the Dawes Street complaint.

A car’s headlights flashed on two nooses dangling from a telephone pole on a dark rural road in Elverta.  In the nooses were two small kittens, each strung up by the neck from a noose.

The driver of the car stopped and was able to cut the nooses down before the kittens suffocated.  

One of the kittens, a black and white “tuxedo”, reportedly ran away as soon as it was freed.  The other, an all black kitten presumed to be female, was taken back to the driver’s home where she is being temporarily fostered.

The kitten sustained injuries in the incident and is believed to have a dislocated hip.  HART, a local non-profit animal rescue group, is arranging for veterinary care to be provided.  Once the kitten is healthy and has been spayed and immunized, she will be placed up for adoption through HART.

The attempted lynching of the animals occurred in a section of Elverta that runs between 16th Street and Watt Avenue.  The area includes…

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Aging with grace during “Adopt a Senior Pet Month”

Finnegan, a rescued senior, knows how cool he is

A fine wine is said to improve as it ages, growing more interesting, complex and multifaceted over time.  The same is true of senior pets, except that caring for them can often be less complex than it is for younger animals.

Puppies are wonderful and loving balls of fluff.  But puppies need constant attention and you might do a lot of cleaning up when he gnaws through, digs up and chews on everything you own.  An older dog has already been there, done that – and doesn’t waste his time with such foolishness.

Kittens are adorable and fun. But they only have two speeds – on and off.  When on she can hurtle at high speeds, careening off surfaces and breaking everything she can kick over.  Then her switch flips to off and she falls blissfully asleep in the middle of the mess.

Older cats generally have better things to do with their time

According to Petfinder.com, November is the time for people to adopt pets that are, um, of a certain…

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