Wave of Dog Surrenders Possible In Wake of NYCHA Dog Breed/Weight Ban

Some city public housing residents are already finding themselves entangled in eviction proceedings since a rule banning Pit Bulls, Rottweilers and Dobermans, and any dog over 25 pounds, was enacted May 1st.

"The New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) has commenced tenancy eviction termination proceedings against [some] residents, although we don't know how many at this point," Debora Bresch, legislative liaison in government relations for the ASPCA says. "We do know that NYCHA residents have relinquished a number of dogs since April '09, some explicitly because of the pet policy." Other residents may have relinquished their newly-banned dogs for the same reason without expressly stating so at the time of surrender, Ms. Bresch says. "Of course, the dogs belonging to residents against whom proceedings have been initiated are at risk - as is any dog in violation of the policy."

The percentage of dogs who may find themselves back in the shelter system after having found homes with families who live in public housing may quickly reach the double-digits if early numbers obtained by New York Tails staff are any indication. Six percent of all dogs available for adoption from Animal Care and Control were adopted by public housing residents between January and April of this year, according to the ASPCA's preliminary count, approximately 172 dogs in total. Under the NYCHA housing rule, 107 of these 172 dogs are not supposed to be there, making them at risk for being returned back into the shelter system. Additionally, the rule states only one dog or one cat is allowed per apartment.

Memos informing tenants of their rights and ways they might be able to keep their pets are available at city shelters in the hopes they might prevent some surrenders. However, in an effort to reach people before they've brought an animal to the surrender point, the ASPCA and others are working with grass-roots organizations and local community groups to distribute the memos throughout public housing residences. Efforts are underway to translate the memos into Spanish, Chinese, and Russian and to publish them in respective foreign language newspapers. A copy of the memo can be found here: http://www.aspca.org/aspca-nyc/nycha-tenants-rights.html. "The purpose of the memo is to help guide residents through these adversarial proceedings," Ms. Bresch says.


Please check back often as New York Tails Magazine continues our in-depth coverage of this story.

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