Dog Control– Questions and answers
Hon Nanaia Mahuta
Associate
Minister of Local Government
WEDNESDAY 31 OCTOBER 2007
Dog
Control– Questions and answers
What
is the government's basic approach to dog
control?
Dog safety depends on
• good
law
• effective enforcement by local councils
• community support for the councils'
work
• responsible dog ownership
Central government can provide support to councils, communities and dog owners, but central government action is not the whole answer.
Will the proposals announced mean an end to dog attacks?
No. There is potential for injury wherever there is contact between dogs and people. The government proposals are intended to balance the need for dog safety with the benefits of responsible dog ownership.
Would any of these proposals have meant that any recent dog attack would not have happened?
Good law alone is not enough to stop dog attacks. In combination, good law, effective enforcement, community support and responsible dog ownership are effective in preventing attacks.
Why is the government not simply banning the dogs which cause all the trouble – e.g. Pitbulls?
Various pit bull terrier strains have bred with other breeds in the existing dog population. This means an outright ban could be difficult or even impossible to effectively enforce. On the other hand, by strengthening the laws, and the enforcement of the laws, dogs with undesirable tendencies can be brought under more effective control and their prevalence in the gene pool can be reduced. The proposals announced today support this approach. The government wants discussion on the possible banning of further breeds to continue, and will include this issue in the discussion paper to be released this year.
When were the decisions announced today made?
A paper was considered by Cabinet on 9 October 2007.
How do we know what issues were
discussed?
A copy of the Cabinet paper is
being released with this announcement.
What is in the
Cabinet paper?
• The first part of the
paper reviews dog control under the Dog Control Act 1996.
The second part of the paper discusses and recommends
options to improve public safety around dogs.
What has
Cabinet decided?
Cabinet has decided to
• look
at ways of enhancing the data available on dog safety and
control
• enhance voluntary measures and
regulation
• bring in new legislation to improve the
dog control laws
• issue a discussion paper to ensure
full consultation on further measures
Describe the way
data, voluntary measures and regulation will be enhanced
• The Department of Internal Affairs will
investigate how data could be improved, collected in a more
consistent way, and made available to assist policy
development and decision making. Data is currently
collected by various agencies, which makes it difficult to
build an overall picture of the effectiveness of the dog
control regime.
• The Department of Internal Affairs
will facilitate, in consultation with the sector, national
guidelines for enforcement based on the experience of
councils and professional opinion on best practice.
The
Department of Internal Affairs has developed consistent
safety messages for children (see www.dogsafety.govt.nz) The
Department will facilitate the development, in consultation
with councils and other organisations, an agreed set of
wider messages about dog safety.
• The Presa Canario
dog will be added to Schedule 4. This means the dog, not
known to be in New Zealand, cannot be imported.
What
new legislation is proposed?
• The law will require
mandatory neutering of Schedule 4 menacing dogs (that is,
dogs of a type classified menacing because of their breed).
• The law would allow more rapid responses to changing
circumstances by allowing changes to the mandatory
components of dog policy to be made by
regulation.
• The process of adding a breed to Schedule
4 will be simplified.
What ideas are still up for
discussion?
Before Christmas the
Department of Internal Affairs will produce a discussion
document on options introducing substantially new ideas into
the regime, or involving substantial cost. These
include:
• the addition of breeds of dog to Schedule 4
of the Act;
• the mandatory destruction of dogs
classified as dangerous;
• elevating controls on
menacing dogs to the level now applied to dangerous dogs;
• making it more explicit that owners are to provide
proof as to the breed of a dog at the time of registration
if required;
• preventing probationary owners from
owning dogs that have been classified as dangerous or
menacing (Councils may now disqualify someone from owning a
dog or declare them to be a probationary owner if they incur
more than three infringement offences within two years or
are convicted of various dog-related offences);
• increasing the standard of containment required for
dogs beyond the current provision of ensuring that the dog
cannot “freely leave”;
• compulsory round-ups
and/or faster destruction of unregistered dogs;
and
• general or targeted dog owner
licensing.
When does all this
happen?
• Cabinet has agreed that the proposed new
legislation be introduced and the intention is for it to be
referred to a Select Committee before the House rises at the
end of 2007.
• The Department is finalising drafting
instructions for the Order in Council to add the Presa
Canario breed of dog to Schedule 4 of the Act. This order
requires a parliamentary resolution to come into force.
• The discussion paper will be issued before
Christmas
Didn’t the government change the
law in 2003? Why does it have to be changed again so
soon?
The government will keep the dog control laws under review and may act to improve them again in the light of experience and changes in the way people own, house and manage dogs of different types. A wide range of changes to strengthen dog control were introduced in 2003 and it is now possible to see how these have worked, and where further improvements are needed.
Draft
Background – present laws as strengthened in
2003
• It is unlawful to import any of the following
breeds/types of dog (either live or semen, ova, or
embryo):
• American Pit Bull Terrier
• Dogo
Argentino
• Brazilian Fila
• Japanese
Tosa
This list may be added to by Order in Council agreed
to by Parliament.
• The 2003 Amendment Act established
a category of ‘menacing dog’. If a council considers
that a dog may pose a threat to any person, stock, poultry,
domestic animal, or protected wildlife because
of:
• any observed or reported behaviour of the dog; or
• any characteristics typically associated with the
dog’s breed or type;
the council may declare the dog to
be a menacing dog.
• If a council has reasonable
grounds to believe that a dog belongs wholly or
predominately to one or more of the four breeds/types listed
above it must classify the dog as menacing.
• Menacing
dogs must be muzzled when in public and may be required by
the council to be neutered.
• Councils may now
disqualify someone from owning a dog or declare them to be a
probationary owner if they incur more than three
infringement offences within two years or are convicted of
an offence (not being an infringement offence) under the Dog
Control Act, Parts 1 and 2 of the Animal Welfare Act 1999,
section 26ZZP of the Conservation Act 1987, or section 56I
of the National Parks Act 1980.
• A council may
require probationary owners to undertake a dog education
programme and/or a dog obedience course approved by the
council.
• Those taking dogs out in public are be
required to use or carry a leash at all
times.
• Dangerous dogs must be leashed and muzzled
when in public. Owners of dangerous and menacing dogs must
advise anyone to whom they give their dog of the requirement
that it be muzzled and leashed in the case of dangerous dogs
when in public.
• Owners whose dogs are required by
the courts to be destroyed are required to produce to the
council within one month a certificate from a vet or dog
control officer/ranger that the dog has been destroyed.
• It is an offence to attempt to unlawfully release a
dog from a pound as well as to be in possession of a dog
that has been unlawfully released from a pound.
• The
most significant penalty is for owning a dog involved in an
attack causing serious injury. The penalty was increased
from a maximum of 3 months imprisonment or a fine of up to
$5,000 to 3 years imprisonment or a fine of up to $20,000.
Infringement fees have also increased by varying amounts.
• A dog owner must ensure at all times that, when
their dog is on their property, it is either (a) under the
direct control of a person, or (b) confined in such a manner
that it cannot freely leave the property. If this
requirement is not met the dog may be seized.
Powers
of councils
• In 2003 the powers for dog control
officers to seize unregistered dogs, dogs that have attacked
or rushed (i.e. dogs in public places that have rushed or
startled a person or animal and caused injury, endangerment,
damage or death); and dogs not receiving adequate food,
water, or shelter were clarified and in some cases
strengthened.
• Dog control officers and rangers can
seize a dog on private land where the dog is not constrained
or under the control of a person over 16 years, and if the
dog has been off the property not under control, i.e.
roaming at large.
• Councils have the power to request
information about the name, gender and description of a dog
from its owner.
• Dog rangers can issue infringement
notices.
Obligations on councils
• Councils
are to report annually on their dog control policies and
practices. The report is to contain certain specified
information such as the number of dogs registered, the
number of dogs declared dangerous and menacing, and the
number of probationary or disqualified owners.
• Councils are required to revise their dog control
polices, applying a strengthened criteria which places
greater emphasis on public safety.
Microchipping
• All dogs first registered on or after 1 July 2006
(except working farm dogs) and all dogs classified as
dangerous or menacing since 1 December 2003 are required to
be microchipped. Dangerous and menacing dogs classified
before 1 July 2006, had to be microchipped within two months
of that date. Unregistered dogs released from pounds after 1
July 2006 are required to be microchipped, and registered
dogs impounded twice by the territorial authority are also
required to be microchipped.
• Territorial authorities
are required to participate in a national dog control
database that contains specified records/information.
Territorial authorities can be levied to meet the on-going
cost of the database.
• Regulations are in place
governing the type of microchip to be used and the procedure
for
insertion.