The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Proposed seat belt law for dogs draws howls

- By Karin Brulliard Washington Post

A Maine lawmaker recently proposed a bill that would require dogs to be harnessed or tethered in moving vehicles.

In other words: No more dogs joyously hanging out the window, jowls and ears flapping in the breeze. No more small pooches perched on drivers’ laps like mini co-pilots.

If comments on local news stories about the idea are any guide, this proposal did not go over particular­ly well.

“My dog’s going to be so pissed when he finds out,” Andrew Hesselbart wrote on the Facebook page of the Portland Press Herald. “Stop trying to control everyone,” wrote Jeremy Collison. “Opioids destroying lives across the state and these people are wasting time on legislatio­n like this?” Robert Alan Parry asked.

On Wednesday, one day after the newspaper’s story on the bill ran, state Rep. Jim Handy (D) withdrew the bill he had sponsored, which was soberly titled “An Act Concerning the Transporti­ng of Dogs in Passenger Vehicles.” In a statement, Handy said the constituen­t who had suggested it had changed his mind.

Handy, for his part, seemed pretty lukewarm on the idea from the start. He told the New England Cable Network that he wanted pets to “have the freedom to stick their head out of the window,” and that his own dog “loves the fresh air coming into his face.”

“As a dog owner myself, I had reservatio­ns about whether that’s a good idea from the beginning, but it’s my job as a legislator to hear and represent the concerns of my constituen­ts,” Handy said in his statement on withdrawin­g the bill.

Had it progressed, the measure would have made Maine a pioneer in pet seatbelt legislatio­n. Some states have laws that restrict unsecured dogs in open pickup truck beds, and others allow police to charge dog-holding drivers under distracted driving laws. Only Hawaii explicitly prohibits driving with a dog on your lap and letting an animal roam loose in a vehicle.

New Jersey has a law restrictin­g the “improper transport” of animals, and in 2012, a state-sponsored event about pet safety in vehicles seemed to suggest that authoritie­s would be keeping an eye out for dogs hanging out windows — and ticketing their owners.

“You wouldn’t put your child in the car unrestrain­ed so you shouldn’t put your pet in the car unrestrain­ed either. What people come to realize only too late is that animals act like flying missiles in an impact and cannot only hurt themselves but hurt their human family members too,” Col. Frank Rizzo, superinten­dent of the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which co-sponsored the event, said at the time.

There are plenty of strappy doggy seat belts on the market. But tests of harnesses by the Center for Pet Safety and Subaru resulted in only one being crash-test certified by the center; similarly, just one brand’s pet travel carriers, which can be strapped to car seats, earned certificat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States