Montreal Gazette

City seeks input on animal control following suspension of pit bull ban

- MORGAN LOWRIE

Following the suspension of the city’s pit bull ban, Montrealer­s weighed in on the future of animal control in the city in a series of public consultati­ons that began Saturday.

The city’s Projet Montréal administra­tion lifted the pit bull ban in December, following through with an election promise to do away with the most controvers­ial aspects of a 2016 bylaw, and promised to consult with citizens before tabling new legislatio­n in May.

City councillor Craig Sauvé said a central theme of the discussion­s has been the need for more education for dog owners.

“(Citizens) want to make sure owners are understand­ing that if they’re going to have a dog or a cat, they have to be responsibl­e and take care of their animal so it doesn’t cause any anxiety or security risks,” he said.

He said the city is also considerin­g barring some people from pet ownership if they have a criminal background or past history of animal abuse.

At a consultati­on in the Plateau neighbourh­ood, about a dozen citizens offered suggestion­s including mandatory obedience classes, obligatory sterilizat­ion, microchip identifica­tion, tighter regulation­s on pet stores and simplifyin­g the registrati­on process.

Ben Jackson, a longtime pet owner, said he wants the city to focus on aggressive animals instead of ticketing responsibl­e owners for minor infraction­s. “I think the city has a terrible history of ignoring the real problems, and attacking people and animals that haven’t done anything,” he said.

Anjali Choksi, who owns two dogs and two cats, said she wants the new bylaw to set out how complaints will be handled.

She said she’s been hesitant to call the city about troublesom­e dogs because she worries they’ll be automatica­lly euthanized.

“What’s important is to have a framework that makes all the steps public,” she said.

Former mayor Denis Coderre enacted the pit bull ban in 2016 after a 55-year-old Montreal woman died after a dog attack in her backyard.

The bylaw prevented people from buying or adopting new pit-bull-type dogs and required existing dogs to be sterilized and muzzled in public.

Sauvé said the new bylaw will focus on reducing dog bites without targeting any specific breed.

Last week, a Quebec man was convicted of criminal negligence causing bodily harm after his pitbull-type dog left a seven-year-old girl with severe damage to her face and skull in a 2015 attack.

Rather than condemning one breed, Sauvé said the incident is proof of the importance of ensuring owners are responsibl­e for their dogs.

He said numerous studies have shown that breed-specific legislatio­n is inefficien­t, unenforcea­ble, and does little to keep people safe.

“All dogs can bite, all dogs can be dangerous,” he said. “Best practices worldwide state you can’t target one breed.”

In addition to the consultati­ons, the city has created a website and online survey where residents can leave suggestion­s.

Sauvé said the city plans to have a new bylaw in place by summer.

 ?? PETER MCCABE ?? City councillor Craig Sauvé, right, speaks during the first day of consultati­ons on changes to the city’s animal-control bylaw at Espace La Fontaine on Saturday.
PETER MCCABE City councillor Craig Sauvé, right, speaks during the first day of consultati­ons on changes to the city’s animal-control bylaw at Espace La Fontaine on Saturday.

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