The Law That Never Worked
Posted: Wed Aug 23, 2017 5:28 am
Let's just call the dog ban for what it is, a massive fail that has cost the city thousands of dollars and wasted countless hours. Lakewood has had many opportunities to repeal Ordinance 506.01. The one that sticks out in my head the most is the incident with Leonard Shelton. The dog didn't even have "pit" in it. There are plenty more examples like Leonard and Roscoe.
Leonard & Roscoe's Story - http://btoellner.typepad.com/kcdogblog/ ... ation.html
So here we are today, another good resident and good dog being bullied because of the way the dog looks. When will this stop? When will the city invest all that time and money wasted since 2008 on the dog ban and put it toward enforcement, communication and education related to companion animal safety in Lakewood?
There will never be a magic wand that decreases dog bites in Lakewood to zero. However, a failed law banning a dog based on looks does not make a city safer. The city created a false sense of safety in 2008 by implementing the dog ban and during that time has bullied too many good people and good dogs.
For those of you that don't understand the law, it's not black and white. It's very subjective. We must move to stronger objective breed-neutral laws that are enforceable.
There are “pits” all over Lakewood. All you have to do is look. Look at people walking them. Look down people’s driveways. We are aware of many of them. We see some of the same ones daily. We've been DNA testing many of them to confirm they're over 50%.
The Lakewood law states that a dog that is majority "pit" is illegal in Lakewood. What does that mean? It means that a dog over 50% "pit" is banned from Lakewood. There are many problems with this. Let's assume that DNA tests are accurate. A dog that DNA tests at 62.5% pit may look like a mutt and not have a blocky head that people associate with pits. I have a friend with a dog that is 75% pit and you would never guess it. A dog that DNA tests as 37.5% may very well have the blocky head that makes it look "pit." Most "pits" are just mutts. They're multiple different types of dogs. There are "pits" all around you in Lakewood. You just have to look. A dog is legal at 50% "pit." A dog that is 55% is illegal. What happened in that 5%?
Here’s how they are getting into our city.
- Animal Control approves them, thinking they are under the 50% threshold. But sometimes they’re over the 50%. Multiple different people are visually approving them. Different opinions, different set of eyes…It’s subjective, not objective. I did a public records request and combed through 2 years worth of emails that visual acceptance/denials are all over the place. They have a very difficult job and it's a shame the city has tasked them with approving a pet based on looks. The City of Lakewood approved a dog a few years ago based on photos. That dog was later DNA tested for fun by it's owners. It DNA tested as 100% Amstaff, which is considered a "pit" and illegal in Lakewood. The City of Lakewood approved the very dog they deemed vicious to live in their city. How many other times has this happened over the past 9 years? More that a few times, I can assure you that.
-People move to Lakewood with a dog over 50% “pit” not aware of the law. Because who would ban a dog based on looks? Good people, good dogs. I’ve met many of them. Families with children. Now they fear their furry family member getting taken away.
-People move to Lakewood knowing they’re dog is over 50% “pit” OR they just don’t care, because dangerous is not the way a dog looks. For some people, circumstances require them to move to the city. Why give up a perfectly well behaved family dog?
-As puppies. People rescue puppies from a local shelter, saving a life. The puppy grows up to be a dog over 50% "pit."
The city has an opportunity to do what is right and fix a mistake. It's what we do when we realize that we made a mistake that matters. Let it stand? Or fix it? This issue is not about being right. It is about doing what is right. It's actually very simple and the city is making it very complicated, by putting another good dog on trial. Your tax dollars, down the toilet again.
We are having a peaceful gathering outside of city hall today starting at 2pm in support of Charlie, all the people that have been pushed out of this city because of their dog's looks and all the pits that are currently in Lakewood. Charlie's family had to hire a lawyer....His hearing starts at 3pm.
Dangerous is not the way a dog looks.
I'm With Charlie.
- Greg
Leonard & Roscoe's Story - http://btoellner.typepad.com/kcdogblog/ ... ation.html
So here we are today, another good resident and good dog being bullied because of the way the dog looks. When will this stop? When will the city invest all that time and money wasted since 2008 on the dog ban and put it toward enforcement, communication and education related to companion animal safety in Lakewood?
There will never be a magic wand that decreases dog bites in Lakewood to zero. However, a failed law banning a dog based on looks does not make a city safer. The city created a false sense of safety in 2008 by implementing the dog ban and during that time has bullied too many good people and good dogs.
For those of you that don't understand the law, it's not black and white. It's very subjective. We must move to stronger objective breed-neutral laws that are enforceable.
There are “pits” all over Lakewood. All you have to do is look. Look at people walking them. Look down people’s driveways. We are aware of many of them. We see some of the same ones daily. We've been DNA testing many of them to confirm they're over 50%.
The Lakewood law states that a dog that is majority "pit" is illegal in Lakewood. What does that mean? It means that a dog over 50% "pit" is banned from Lakewood. There are many problems with this. Let's assume that DNA tests are accurate. A dog that DNA tests at 62.5% pit may look like a mutt and not have a blocky head that people associate with pits. I have a friend with a dog that is 75% pit and you would never guess it. A dog that DNA tests as 37.5% may very well have the blocky head that makes it look "pit." Most "pits" are just mutts. They're multiple different types of dogs. There are "pits" all around you in Lakewood. You just have to look. A dog is legal at 50% "pit." A dog that is 55% is illegal. What happened in that 5%?
Here’s how they are getting into our city.
- Animal Control approves them, thinking they are under the 50% threshold. But sometimes they’re over the 50%. Multiple different people are visually approving them. Different opinions, different set of eyes…It’s subjective, not objective. I did a public records request and combed through 2 years worth of emails that visual acceptance/denials are all over the place. They have a very difficult job and it's a shame the city has tasked them with approving a pet based on looks. The City of Lakewood approved a dog a few years ago based on photos. That dog was later DNA tested for fun by it's owners. It DNA tested as 100% Amstaff, which is considered a "pit" and illegal in Lakewood. The City of Lakewood approved the very dog they deemed vicious to live in their city. How many other times has this happened over the past 9 years? More that a few times, I can assure you that.
-People move to Lakewood with a dog over 50% “pit” not aware of the law. Because who would ban a dog based on looks? Good people, good dogs. I’ve met many of them. Families with children. Now they fear their furry family member getting taken away.
-People move to Lakewood knowing they’re dog is over 50% “pit” OR they just don’t care, because dangerous is not the way a dog looks. For some people, circumstances require them to move to the city. Why give up a perfectly well behaved family dog?
-As puppies. People rescue puppies from a local shelter, saving a life. The puppy grows up to be a dog over 50% "pit."
The city has an opportunity to do what is right and fix a mistake. It's what we do when we realize that we made a mistake that matters. Let it stand? Or fix it? This issue is not about being right. It is about doing what is right. It's actually very simple and the city is making it very complicated, by putting another good dog on trial. Your tax dollars, down the toilet again.
We are having a peaceful gathering outside of city hall today starting at 2pm in support of Charlie, all the people that have been pushed out of this city because of their dog's looks and all the pits that are currently in Lakewood. Charlie's family had to hire a lawyer....His hearing starts at 3pm.
Dangerous is not the way a dog looks.
I'm With Charlie.
- Greg