
A poster protesting Denver's anti-pit bull ordinance
Denver has an ordinance banning any dog that is entirely or predominantly pit bull (APBT, AST, and/or SBT). One day, when a dog named Dexter was at his pet sitter’s in Denver, officials who were in the neighborhood for another reason spotted him and confiscated him. A 3-person panel employed by the city subsequently decided that Dexter was indeed a pit bull, and therefore condemned to be euthanized.
Fortunately for Dexter, his owner, Kevin O’Connell, successfully challenged the finding at a hearing. He presented evidence from four veterinarians, a UKC judge, an AKC judge, and a veterinary technician that Dexter is not a pit bull, but a boxer or mastiff mix.
The hearing officer found that Dexter’s side had presented “stronger and more detailed” evidence, and that the city had not met its burden of proof that Dexter is a pit bull.
More dog owners are planning to challenge the city’s findings, and many dog lovers are fighting to overturn the law altogether, charging that it unfairly condemns good family dogs with muscular builds, regardless of their actual breed.
Human studies have previously linked high cholesterol to panic attacks and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Now, a new study says the same thing appears to be true of dogs.
The study took blood samples from 15 compulsive tail-chasers and 15 non-chasers; both groups were otherwise healthy. The tail-chasing dogs had significantly higher cholesterol, both LDL and HDL, than the control dogs.
The study also found that female dogs are more likely to be tail-chasers than male dogs, though they’re not sure why.
After a decade of struggle, dog lovers in Wisconsin are one step closer to stopping puppy mills in their state.
The state Assembly has unanimously passed a law that would require operations that sell more than 25 dogs a year to be licensed. The bill also permits authorities to investigate breeders and suspend their licenses.
The bill now moves to the state Senate for consideration.
A little-known group of pilots donates their valuable time and skills to help animals find loving homes. Pilots N Paws flies animals from kill shelters around the country to places where willing adopters await. There’s video at the link.
Amelia Glynn gives us the scoop on San Francisco’s, and other cities’, dog-doo dilemma and potential responses, including a group in Ithaca, New York that thinks it can profitably compost its 50,000 dogs’ waste.









