Dog-tethering bill tied up in state House
Home
Success Stories
Membership
Get Laws!
Volunteer
Donations
Adopt Me!
Area Reps
In The News
In Memory Of
Pictures of Chained Dogs
Articles and Links
Information/Tips
Dog Links

Dog-tethering bill tied up in state House
By Liz Zemba
TRIBUNE-REVIEW

November 3, 2006

Kathy Burkley is all too familiar with animal cruelty.

But the executive director of the Humane Society of Westmoreland County said a recent case involving a dog that was found outside a Hempfield Township house with a collar embedded in its neck ranks among the worst she has encountered.

"The neck had grown around the chain," Burkley said. "When we cut the chain out, each link had to be cut out individually."

A humane agent confiscated the dog immediately upon investigating neighbors' complaints regarding the animal, which was tethered outside a residence in Grapeville. It was taken to the humane society's shelter near Greensburg's Lynch Field, where it underwent surgery to have the links removed.

The dog, which has since been named 'Ernie,' nearly died during the procedure. But the animal pulled through, Burkley said, and will be made available for adoption once he has fully recovered.

Three Grapeville residents face animal cruelty charges. Burkley declined to name the individuals.

Ernie's plight might have been averted entirely had a proposed state law that places time limits on tethering been in effect.

House Bill 1911 would make it a summary offense to leave a dog tied or penned outdoors for more than 16 consecutive hours. The bill has been stuck in the judiciary committee since shortly after it was introduced in 2005.

State Rep. Mario Scavello, a Montgomery County Republican who introduced the bill, did not return a phone call seeking comment.

Burkley said the proposed law might have prevented Ernie's injuries because his owners would have been required to take him indoors at least once daily. Had they done so, they could not have ignored the fact the dog's chain was becoming embedded in the animal's neck.

"This happened over a very long period of time," Burkley said. "It happens from total neglect. No one looked at this dog to see that this happened."

In addition to preventing physical abuse, the proposed law would curb antisocial behavior often found in dogs that are kept outdoors and provided little interaction with humans.

Marsha Robbins, a dog trainer with Western Pennsylvania Humane Society, said dogs are pack animals that thrive on interaction with others. Tethering deprives dogs of such interaction, giving them little opportunity to learn and interpret human body language.

As a result, said Burkley, tethered dogs that get loose are more likely to bite than are their peers.

Dogs that are isolated from humans also develop bad habits, including digging, eating their own feces or barking constantly, Robbins said.

"They bark at everything because they are looking for interaction," Robbins said. "They just bark and bark and bark."

Robbins said tethered dogs are protective of their territory, food and house because they have nothing else.

"When you tether a dog and deprive them of all social activities, it's like putting a person in solitary confinement," Robbins said. "The deprivation ... usually manifests itself in learning behaviors people don't like."

The only problem with the proposed legislation, said Gretchen Fieser, spokeswoman with the Western Pennsylvania Humane Society, is enforcement.

"Everybody thinks it's a good idea. The only problem is enforcing it," Fieser said. "Unless you have the manpower behind it, how do you prove it?"

Liz Zemba can be reached at lzemba@tribweb.com or (724) 836-6646.

You can help Dogs Deserve Better anytime you shop online through iGive.com.

Contact Info: Dogs Deserve Better, Inc. • P.O. Box 23 • Tipton, PA 16684 • Toll Free 1.877.636.1408 • 814.941.7447
email: info@dogsdeservebetter.org • Website designed and maintained by Crescent Communications