|
DENVER (AP) - A few weeks ago, two police
cars and two animal control vehicles
pulled up at the home of Stef'ny Steffan
looking for her beloved 4-year-old pit
bull, Xena. Seven officers hauled the
animal off to the city shelter, putting
her on death row.
Xena became an outlaw after Denver
won a court fight and reinstated one
of the toughest pit-bull bans in the
nation. Since May, more than 380 dogs
have been impounded and at least 260
destroyed - an average of more than
three a day.
Dog owners are in a panic. Some are
using an underground railroad of sorts,
sending their pets to live elsewhere
or hiding them from authorities. City
officials would not estimate how many
people might be violating the ordinance.
Some owners, like Steffan, have won
a reprieve for their pets with help
from a rescue group. The group got
Xena released by signing an affidavit
stating that the animal would never
return to Denver. The group took the
dog to Mariah's Promise in Divide,
an animal sanctuary that has accepted
more than three dozen pit bulls from
Denver.
For Steffan and her partner, Gina
Black, leaving Xena 60 miles from
home was a lousy option but the only
one they had.
``It's safer than animal control.
Safer than keeping her underground
- at least she'll be able to play
now,'' Steffan said. ``But she'll
miss us. We're her pack.''
Denver is one of three major metropolitan
areas, along with Miami and Cincinnati,
to ban pit bulls, according to Glen
Bui, vice president of the American
Canine Foundation.
Pit bull typically describes three
kinds of dogs - the American Pit Bull
Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier
and the Staffordshire Bull Terrier.
Bbut Denver's ban applies to any dog
that looks like a pit bull. The animal's
actual behavior does not matter.
City Councilman Charlie Brown said
that in his judgment, ``pit bulls
are trained to attack. They're bred
to do that.''
Critics of the ban use words like
``annihilation'' and ``genocide,''
and the city shelter has received
e-mails likening animal control officers
to Nazis.
``Breed bans are just a knee-jerk
reaction to something that happened
in the community,'' Bui said.
Denver banned pit bulls in 1989 after
dogs mauled a minister and killed
a boy in separate attacks. The Legislature
passed a law in 2004 that prohibited
breed-specific bans, but the city
sued and a judge ruled in April the
law was an unconstitutional violation
of local control.
Critics of the ordinance say that
a blanket ban on an entire breed is
misguided that the law should instead
target irresponsible owners and all
dangerous dogs.
``If anyone says one dog is more
likely to kill - unless there's a
study out there that I haven't seen
- that's not based on scientific data,''
said Julie Gilchrist, a doctor at
the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention who researches dog
bites.
The CDC, the American Veterinary
Medical Association and the Humane
Society of the United States examined
20 years of dog-bite data and concluded
that pit bulls and Rottweilers caused
the most deaths.
But the researchers also noted that
fatal attacks represent a small proportion
of dog-bite injuries and that the
number of bites per breed simply seems
to rise with their popularity.
At the city shelter, pit bulls are
cordoned off from other dogs in what
has become death row. Nearly 100 pit
bulls have been released to live outside
the county. A nonresident must guarantee
the dog will never return to Denver.
Sonya Dias, who is moving out of
Denver because of the ban, said she
was a little intimidated by her pit
bull when she first saw him. But ``when
I said, `Hey little doggie,' his whole
body just started wagging.'' Gryffindor
is staying at Mariah's Promise until
Dias sells her home.
``He's been dangerous to a couple
of pairs of shoes and some mini-blinds,''
Dias said. ``But otherwise he's a
jewel.''
^---
On the
Net:
American
Canine Foundation: http://www.acavet.com
|