H.B. 101 is Dead For This Year
Update: The Florida legislature adjourned without passing this bill.
Original story: Fla. Chpt. 767.14 prohibits breed specific legislation by state and local governments except Miami-Dade County which has had a ban on pit bulls since 1989.
But there is a bill pending in the Florida House of Representatives, H.B. 101, that would repeat this and allow any county or city in the state to pass breed bans. In fact, under this proposed law, the state could pass breed bans statewide.
A copy of H.B. 101 can be found in Animal Law Coalition's Pending Bills.
Help stop H.B. 101! Contact the following officials and let them know breed bans don't work, that breed specific legislation should remain illegal.
Dogs don't bite because of their breed and communities are not safer unless responsible leaders address the real reasons dogs bite. Contact Florida officials and legislators below and let them know breed bans don't work, but here is what they can do to help reduce dog bites and attacks and make communities safe: Assign dogs a level of potential danger, Require spay/neuter, education and training to encourage owners to take responsibility before a serious injury or death occurs. Dogs and owners can earn lower levels 90% of fatal dog attacks are by dogs that have not been spayed/neutered: There is not a single case of a fatal dog attack by a spayed/neutered pit bull type dog (National Canine Research Council); 81% of dogs involved in bite incidents were not spayed/neutered (Texas 2002 Severe Animal Attack and Bite Surveillance Summary) 3. Mandate spay/neuter for: Dogs adopted from shelters or rescues or sold by pet stores or online Dogs impounded more than once after being found at-large or off-leash Dogs declared potentially dangerous or dangerous Dogs owned by felons 4. Ban tethering or chaining dogs (also a popular technique by dog fighters to make the dogs more aggressive; the CDC has found tethered or chained dogs are 2.8 times more likely to bite) Lawrence County, Kansas, adopted an anti-tethering ordinance. From 2005 to 2006, the number of calls concerning cruelty and dog fighting dropped from 800 to 260. Officials attribute the decline in large part to the anti-tethering law. The USDA and even the AVMA has said tethering dogs is inhumane. 5. Pass and enforce strong at large or leash laws or enforce such laws and encourage micro chipping 82% of dog bites occur as a result of dogs that are running loose (JAVMA, September 15, 2000) After passing a leash law, the city of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, reported a 35% drop in dog bites. 6. Address through strong laws and education the problem of animal cruelty Well over half (61%) of fatal dog attacks are by dogs who were not humanely controlled, or who had in some way been abused or neglected (Delise, Fatal Dog Attacks: The Stories Behind the Statistics)) 7. Offer free or low cost training and education about the importance of socializing dogs early and making them part of the family. 81% of dogs involved in fatal dog attacks were isolated and not part of the family (Delise, Fatal Dog Attacks: The Stories Behind the Statistics)) 8. Pass and enforce strong dog fighting laws that make all aspects of dog fighting illegal and include bonding and forfeiture provisions; organize a dog fighting task force 9. Require dog breeders to register or obtain licenses, limit breeding by age and numbers, ban breeding for aggression and fighting, ban the sale of dogs in pet stores and along roadsides, street corners or sidewalks; require inspections of breeders' facilities and track sales of dogs by breeders. 10. Stop the cultural glorification of violence especially involving pit bull type dogs.
with restrictions and penalties for each level.
and dogs can even be declared no longer potentially dangerous.
Contact:
Charlie Crist
Charlie.Crist@MyFlorida.com
Office of Governor Charlie Crist
State of Florida
PL - 05 the Capital
Tallahassee, Fl. 32399-0001
Capital Office
1401 The Capitol
402 South Monroe Street
Tallahassee, FL 32399-1300
Ultimately the following people are the representatives who will say YES or NO to the bill:
This is the e-mail list of those Representatives, including the chair:
martin.kiar@myfloridahouse.gov
carlos.lopez-cantera@myfloridahouse.gov
ralph.poppell@myfloridahouse.gov
juan.zapata@myfloridahouse.gov
denise.grimsley@myfloridahouse.gov (Chair)
bryan.nelson@myfloridahouse.gov
debbie.boyd@myfloridahouse.gov
bill.galvano@myfloridahouse.gov
bill.heller@myfloridahouse.gov
Petition Sites
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/stop-breedspecific-legislation-in-florida
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/oppositionto-florida39s-hb-101

