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Here is just a small part of what animal advocates are up against (see below from the American Sporting Dog Alliance). These people are not animal advocates. Their intent toward dogs is use them at will. They don't want interference from humane laws and therefore, they oppose the proposed Dallas Animal Ordinances to be voted on June 25. If you think your voice for animals is not important or that your attendance at animal advocacy events does not matter, please think again. We need every single voice for animals that we can get. There are many more of "them" than there are us. "Them" includes the ignorant, the uncaring, and the

malicious. Maybe we can not do much about the latter two categories, but we can educate and overcome ignorance. Every time you make a polite telephone call, send a fax or an email, and participate in an educational leafleting, you have a chance to change hearts and minds and convert the ignorant into the educated. That is how we win, by turning "them" into "us." The animals need you. They have no one else, but you. If you have not yet called Dallas City Council to politely urge passage of the proposed animal ordinances, please do so Monday morning. Thanks to all who actively advocate for animals. Margaret MorinVegetarian Network of Dallas/********************************************http://forum.akccoonhounds.org/viewtopic.php?t=5614 & sid=522f9d43bd9c56c92062b802\

f2c3373fDallas Ordinance Will Destroy Hobby

 

Dog Breeding, Trample Constitution

 

 

Radical Animal Rights Agenda Infiltrates Metro Area Government

 

 

by JOHN YATES

 

The American Sporting Dog Alliance

 

http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org

 

 

DALLAS, TX – Texas may seem like the most unlikely of places for animal

rights groups to infiltrate and take over local government. This state

has the reputation for vigorous defense of property rights and the

traditional relationships between animals and people.

 

However, the entire Dallas metropolitan areas has become a case

study of how this can happen in the absence of vigilance, and how dog

owners can pay a devastatingly high price when it does.

 

The City of Dallas is facing a series of animal control ordinances

that will strip dog owners of all property rights to their animals,

eliminate private breeding of purebred dogs, subject dog owners to

unconstitutional searches and seizures and, in fact, impose the full

animal rights dream agenda of the radical People for the Ethical

Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the only slightly less radical Humane

Society of the United States (HSUS).

 

People who are closely affiliated with PETA and HSUS have, quite

literally, taken over both city and metro advisory councils. These

extremists not only have written the ordinances, but they also will

enforce them.

 

Dog owners in the City of Dallas face a city council vote on the

ordinances, possibly within days, and every municipality within the

metro area faces similar ordinances because of the actions and

influence of the quasi-official Metroplex Animal Coalition, which is

dominated by HSUS and PETA members and supporters, an investigation by

The American Sporting Dog Alliance shows. No known representatives of

dog owners groups or kennel clubs are listed as members of either the

Metroplex or City of Dallas boards.

 

This group also has exported it’s agenda to other cities, such as

Houston, where the animal control program now is administered by a

former Dallas animal control board President, Kent Robertson, who has

worked closely with HSUS and conducted training seminars for the

radical group. In 2002, Robertson brought in a team of six officials

from the HSUS national office to review Dallas animal control programs

and make recommendations.

 

Robertson barely let the ink dry on his contract before he

convinced city council to institute restrictive breeders licenses in

Houston last year. The Associated Press reported that no one had

applied for the required breeders’ permits three months after the

ordinance took effect, and thus were running the risk of fines of up to

$2,000 a day.

 

This time, Dallas dog owners are in the crosshairs and animal

rights groups have won the support of Mayor Tom Leppert, Mayor Pro Tem

Dr. Elba Garcia, and several members of City Council, according to a

report of a closed-door “briefing†between animal activists and city

officials by Metroplex Animal Coalition President Elaine Munch.

 

Munch is closely aligned with HSUS. In a description about how the

Metroplex Complex was formed, she wrote: “We asked our regional office

of HSUS and other national groups for help in identifying those to

invite.â€

 

Also, HSUS representative Lou Guyton is a member of the Metroplex

Coalition Advisory Board, as is long-time PETA ally and award winner

Robert “Skip†Trimble, an animal rights attorney who also is president

of the City of Dallas Animal Shelter Commission, chairman of the board

of the PETA-like Texas Humane Legislative Network and a director of the

radical fringe Animal Legal Defense Fund.

 

Another member of both the Dallas and Metroplex boards is Jonnie

England, who was drafted recently by HSUS to judge that organization’s

annual “Pets For Life†award.

 

Munch quoted Mayor Leppert as telling people at the briefing that

he has a “sense of urgency†to pass the ordinances in 30-to-45 days.

Councilwoman Pauline Medrana was quoted as calling the ordinances

“fair, firm and comprehensive,†and Council Members Dave Neumann,

Mitchell Rasansky and Ron Natinsky reportedly expressed their support.

 

“Almost all council members stressed being aggressive in getting

the ordinances ready ASAP/with a sense of urgency,†Munch wrote of the

briefing. “(…The ordinances) were received very well with no council

members showing any opposition to these proposed

ordinances.â€

 

 

Trimble and Munch are key players in the animal rights takeover of the

Dallas Metroplex. Both hold leadership positions on both the City and

metro advisory boards, and both have close ties to radical animal

rights groups that oppose the private ownership of animals.

 

PETA awarded Trimble its 2001 “Activist Award†for his work on

Texas animal rights issues, and he also was honored by HSUS in 1997

with a “Legislative Achievement Award†and by a New Mexico group in

2000 for “lifelong commitment to animal rights.â€

In a published article, Trimble described himself as a former

“animal abuser,†and his description says a lot about what he now

thinks is abuse. “I’m a former animal abuser,†Trimble says. “I used to

own racehorses, raise roping steers, hunt and eat meat.â€

Now, Trimble describes himself as a vegan vegetarian, deplores

traditional farming and ranching, and echoes the animal rights agenda

of opposition to breeding animals, hunting, rodeos and competing with

horses.

The American Sporting Dog Alliance believes that only a handful of

Dallas residents would agree with Trimble’s idea of animal abuse, and

that a large majority would describe his views as radical fringe - if

not fruitcake fringe! We urge City Council to reject these views and

uphold the values and beliefs of the large majority of Dallas

residents. No state has fought harder than Texas to protect the rights

of individuals from unwarranted intrusion by government, beginning with

the Alamo and continuing into the modern era.

As an attorney, Trimble has developed a specialty of using the law

as a tool to advance the animal rights agenda, and is credited with

playing the major role and banning the slaughter of horses in Texas. In

one case, his work bolstered PETA in shutting down a Texas primate

sanctuary. Trimble was with the police on the raid, and the effort

received direct praise from PETA President Ingrid Newkirk on the

organization’s website. Trimble also is capitalizing on the Michael

Vicks dog fighting scandal, and has been quoted as saying that it is a

major problem in Dallas. Dog fighting is a major animal rights battle

cry that HSUS is using as a false justification for new laws against

dog owners, almost none of whom have ever been involved with this crime

in any way.

Munch has close ties to HSUS through the Metroplex and city animal

control boards. HSUS has nothing to do with local Humane Societies,

which help animals. Instead, HSUS is a national political action and

lobbying group for animal rights issues.

Wayne Pacelle, the head of HSUS, has been quoted extensively about

his radical views on animal rights that oppose eating meat, pet

ownership and hunting.

He wrote: “We have no ethical obligation to preserve the different

breeds of livestock produced through selective breeding ...One

generation and out. We have no problems with the extinction of domestic

animals. They are creations of human selective breeding.â€

 

Pacelle also said, “I don’t have a hands-on fondness for animals…To

this day I don’t feel bonded to any non-human animal. I like them and I

pet them and I’m kind to them, but there’s no special bond between me

and other animals… In fact, I don’t want to see another dog or cat

born.â€

The Metroplex board also is endorsed by a wide range of animal

rights groups, including the radical Animal Connection of Texas and a

Buddhist group called Ahimsa. Both of these groups advocate vegan

vegetarianism.

 

Trimble also works to end the breeding of dogs through his leadership role in the Texas Humane Legislation Network.

On its website, Trimble’s group attacks dog breeders: “Do not buy

from breeders. No matter how caring they appear to be about the animals

they are selling, they are still contributing to the overpopulation

crisis. At least 25 percent of dogs entering shelters are full-bred

dogs.â€

 

Another quote: " ‘Don't breed or buy while animals in shelters die’ is a bumper sticker slogan worth taking to heart.â€

 

 

What’s The Problem?

 

 

Proposed solutions such as the Dallas animal ordinance presume that there is a problem to solve.

 

City officials have been quoted extensively as saying that Dallas

has a severe problem with “pet overpopulation.†What does that mean?

 

"We have to do something,†Acting Shelter Director Willie McDaniel

said. He described an epidemic of stray dogs running loose in

low-income neighborhoods, and also complaints by people who don’t like

their neighbors’ dogs.

 

McDaniel then went on to bemoan the fact that Dallas’ free spay and

neuter program isn’t working, and that tougher laws are needed to force

people to sterilize their pets.

 

The answer, in the eyes of McDaniel, is to eliminate the private

breeding of dogs that are owned by the people who do not cause the

problems. People who breed dogs for show, hunting or competition are

very selective, do not allow indiscriminate matings, and confine their

dogs so that they cannot get bred accidentally.

 

Several newspaper articles say that Dallas has very poor compliance

with required dog licensing rules, and Animal Control almost never

prosecutes people who violate a strict “leash law†by allowing their

pets to run loose. It also is reported that very little effort has been

given to promote the free spay and neuter clinics.

 

Thus, it would appear that City Council has done little to try to

solve the problem by means that are available now, are pressing for new

laws when they refuse to enforce the current ones, and are targeting

the wrong people with the new laws. In doing so, they have been led by

the nose into embracing the animal rights groups’ agenda to take a

giant leap toward eliminating responsible breeding and private

ownership of all animals.

 

 

Shelter statistics for Dallas are hard to find, as they are combined with Plano and Fort Worth in data published by the state.

 

A Dallas Morning News Article from 2006 said 28,686 dogs and cats

were impounded in 2004. The article did not separate dogs from cats in

the data. In 1994, 10 years earlier, 38,294 dogs and cats reportedly

were impounded.

 

 

Those figures indicate that there has been a 25-percent improvement in the situation during that 10-year-long period.

 

The improvement continues at an even more rapid rate. The most

recent statistics show that 26,979 dogs and cats entered the city

shelter in FY 2006-07. That is a 6-percent reduction in the most recent

two years.

 

Trimble’s legislative advocacy group maintains that 25-percent of

the dogs entering the animal shelter are “full-bred†animals – that is,

dogs that resemble a recognized breed of dog and may or may not be

purebreds. That figure is standard HSUS rhetoric.

 

What HSUS doesn’t say is that about 20-percent of dogs entering

shelters are brought by their owners specifically for euthanasia

because of old age, severe illness or debilitating injuries. They also

don’t say that dogs of the “pit bull†breeds and crosses comprise

between 25-percent and 70-percent of shelter admissions nationwide,

with large cities like Dallas tending to be on the high end of the

scale.

 

These two categories of dogs account for almost all of the

“full-bred†or purebred dogs entering shelters, nationwide statistics

show.

 

Moreover, national research of the major reasons for pet

abandonment rank too many dogs or puppies sixth and 10th on the list of

major causes. The biggest reasons are social factors, such as landlord

issues, moves for job changes and divorce. Thus, the research shows,

any effort toward forced population control would have a minimal impact

on the problem, because most of the abandoned pets are wanted by their

owners.

 

 

The Shotgun “Solutionâ€

 

 

The animal rights groups are asking City Council to make a logic-defying leap with the proposed new ordinances.

 

While there is not one shred of evidence that hobby breeders

contribute to the problem in any significant way, the ordinances target

them for the elimination of activities that are done responsibly,

involve hundreds if not thousands of law-abiding and conscientious

Dallas residents, and play a large role in the city’s economy.

 

Pets are a multi-million-dollar business in Dallas, and hobby

breeders play a major role in purchasing veterinary services, food for

their animals, supplies, equipment, fencing, building materials,

advertising, business services and sporting goods at hundreds of

businesses in the city. Hundreds of jobs are directly and indirectly at

risk from these ordinances.

 

Here is how the ordinance targets those innocent and responsible

people who also are the geese that lay a golden egg for Dallas’

economy:

 

 

· A person or family would be prohibited from keeping more than six dogs, cats, or a combination of dogs and cats.

 

· All dogs and cats must be spayed or neutered at four months of

age, or the owner will face confiscation of the animal and fines of up

to $2,000 a day. This requirement flies in the face of much modern

veterinary science research, and also exposes the city to devastating

lawsuits (see below).

 

· This provision would effectively outlaw dog shows and other

canine events in the City of Dallas, because anyone who lives outside

of the city would be subject to citations and stiff fines, and would

risk having their dogs confiscated and subjected to forced

sterilization if they are not spayed or neutered. This would have a

major negative economic impact on Dallas businesses.

 

· There are some provisions for obtaining a breeding permit, but

McDaniel and other city officials have been quoted as saying that

breeders’ permits will not be issued in residentially zoned areas,

where most people who raise dogs live. It’s a classic “Catch 22.â€

People can get a breeder’s permit in theory, but not in practice.

 

· In the unlikely possibility that someone does not live in a

residential area, breeders’ permits are available at the cost of $500

per year for each dog or cat, but only if the owner and animal qualify.

All other animals must be spayed or neutered. To qualify, the animal’s

owner must be a member of an approved club for the breed of dog or cat.

 

· Breeders’ permits are available only for dogs that are registered

with a registry that meets the city’s approval. To be approved, the

registry must convince city officials that it “maintains and enforces a

code of ethics for dog and cat breeding that includes restrictions from

breeding of dogs and cats with genetic defects and life threatening

health problems that commonly threaten the breed.†This also is a

“Catch 22,†as this would be unenforceable by a registry in the absence

of personal inspections, discussing it with the dog’s veterinarian, and

mandating prohibitively expensive genetic tests (thousands of dollars

for some tests) that are not available for many conditions. No registry

would meet this standard. Thus, no registry could qualify.

 

· Anyone who owns a dog would be subject to unannounced inspections

of his or her home and property by animal control officers to assure

compliance with the ordinance. A search warrant would not be required,

and probable cause would not have to be established. This is in direct

violation of protections contained in the Bill of Rights of the both

Texas and U.S. Constitutions.

 

· If anyone is found with a dog that is not spayed or neutered,

animal control officers are empowered to seize and impound the animal.

To get the animal back, an owner would have to either obtain a breeding

permit of sterilize the dog. Dogs that are not reclaimed under this

provision become city property, and can be adopted or euthanized.

 

· Tethering is banned except for short periods, and all kennels

used to house dogs must be a minimum of 150 square feet. That size

limitation makes sense for a large dog, but is absurd for a Chihuahua.

 

· Several other provisions would stringently regulate dangerous

dog, animals used for research, circuses and other performance events.

Possession of certain kinds of animals is prohibited or severely

restricted.

 

 

· Fines of up to $2,000 for each day of noncompliance are provided, with higher fines for repeat offenders.

 

It is clear that the intention of the writers of this ordinance has

nothing at all to do with reducing the number of stray dogs in poor

neighborhoods of Dallas. It is a naked attempt to deny people the right

to raise and breed dogs, and clearly is part of the animal rights plan

to eliminate dogs from the lives of people. Sterilize now and, as Wayne

Pacelle of HSUS said, “one generation and out.â€

 

It must be emphasized that hobby breeders play a vital role in

helping people to obtain companion animals that will be an intergal

part of their family for more than a decade. Dedicated hobby breeders

work hard to improve temperament, genetic health, beauty and utility in

the various breeds of dogs, and offer an important alternative to

shelter and rescue dogs whose health background, history, disposition

and genetic backgrounds are unknown.

 

Hobby breeders do not contribute to the problem. Indeed, they are the

most important element in the solution. In this regard, too, the

proposed Dallas ordinances are wholly counterproductive. Hobby breeders

and other people who own purebred dogs are not responsible for people

who allow mixed-breed dogs to roam the streets and breed

indiscriminately. There is utterly no justification for restricting or

eliminating hobby breeding. Indeed, there are many excellent and proven

reasons why it should be strongly encouraged!

 

 

But Lawyers Will Love It

 

If City Council approves these ordinance revisions, one thing is

certain. The City of Dallas will become embroiled in a nonstop series

of lawsuits by dog owners who can claim damages if their pet is

diagnosed with one of the many serious and sometimes fatal medical

conditions that have been linked by recent research to spaying and

neutering, especially at a young age.

 

They also will have to face legal challenges based on the Texas

property law, and for violations of due process and search and seizure

protections enshrined in the Texas and U.S. Constitutions.

 

The American Veterinary Medical Association has long advocated

spaying and neutering of dogs, and continues to do so, under the belief

that the benefits outweigh the risks. However, recent research has led

many individual veterinarians to seriously question this premise, and a

majority of the most recent research indicates that there are

substantial risks involved with sterilization. This has the strong

potential to become a major liability issue for City of Dallas

taxpayers.

 

 

A 2007 analysis of the research by Dr. Larry Katz of Rutgers University concluded:

“Tradition holds that the benefits of (sterilization) at an early

age outweigh the risks. Often, tradition holds sway in the

decision-making process even after countervailing evidence has

accumulated. Ms (Laura) Sanborn has reviewed the veterinary medical

literature in an exhaustive and scholarly treatise, attempting to

unravel the complexities of the subject. More than 50 peer-reviewed

papers were examined to assess the health impacts of spay / neuter in

female and male dogs, respectively. One cannot ignore the findings of

increased risk from osteosarcoma, hemangiosarcoma, hypothyroidism, and

other less frequently occurring diseases associated with neutering male

dogs. It would be irresponsible of the veterinary profession and the

pet owning community to fail to weigh the relative costs and benefits

of neutering on the animal’s health and well-being. The decision for

females may be more complex, further emphasizing the need for

individualized veterinary medical decisions, not standard operating

procedures for all patients.â€

 

 

Sanborn’s review of the research concluded:

 

 

The number of health problems associated with neutering may exceed the associated health benefits in most cases.

 

 

On the positive side, neutering male dogs

 

· eliminates the small risk of dying from testicular cancer

 

· reduces the risk of non-cancerous prostate disorders

 

· reduces the risk of perianal fistulas

 

· may possibly reduce the risk of diabetes (data inconclusive).

 

 

On the negative side, neutering male dogs

· if done before 1 year of age, significantly increases the risk of

osteosarcoma (bone cancer); this is a common cancer in medium/large and

larger breeds with a poor prognosis.

 

· increases the risk of cardiac hemangiosarcoma by a factor of 1.6

 

· triples the risk of hypothyroidism

 

· increases the risk of progressive geriatric cognitive impairment

 

· triples the risk of obesity, a common health problem in dogs with many associated health problems

 

· quadruples the small risk of prostate cancer

 

· doubles the small risk of urinary tract cancers

 

· increases the risk of orthopedic disorders

 

· increases the risk of adverse reactions to vaccinations.

 

For female dogs, the situation is more complex. The number of

health benefits associated with spaying may exceed the associated

health problems in some (not all) cases. On balance, whether spaying

improves the odds of overall good health or degrades them probably

depends on the age of the female dog and the relative risk of various

diseases in the different breeds.

 

 

On the positive side, spaying female dogs

 

· if done before 2.5 years of age, greatly reduces the risk of mammary tumors, the most common malignant tumors in female dogs

· nearly eliminates the risk of pyometra, which otherwise would

affect about 23% of intact female dogs; pyometra kills about 1% of

intact female dogs

 

· reduces the risk of perianal fistulas

 

· removes the very small risk from uterine, cervical, and ovarian tumors

 

 

On the negative side, spaying female dogs

· if done before 1 year of age, significantly increases the risk of

osteosarcoma (bone cancer); this is a common cancer in larger breeds

with a poor prognosis

· increases the risk of splenic hemangiosarcoma by a factor of 2.2

and cardiac hemangiosarcoma by a factor of greater than five; this is a

common cancer and major cause of death in some breeds

 

· triples the risk of hypothyroidism

 

· increases the risk of obesity, a common health problem in dogs with many associated health problems

 

· causes urinary “spay incontinence†in 4-20% of female dogs

 

· increases the risk of persistent or recurring urinary tract infections by a factor of 3-4

 

· increases the risk of recessed vulva, vaginal dermatitis, and vaginitis, especially for female dogs spayed before puberty

 

· doubles the small risk of urinary tract tumors

 

· increases the risk of orthopedic disorders

 

· increases the risk of adverse reactions to vaccinations

 

Sanborn concluded: “One thing is clear – much of the spay/neuter

information that is available to the public is unbalanced and contains

claims that are exaggerated or unsupported by evidence. Rather than

helping to educate pet owners, much of it has contributed to common

misunderstandings about the health risks and benefits.â€

 

It is ASDA’s opinion that these research findings cast enough doubt

on the practice of universal sterilization to make it inadvisable if

not reckless for any level of government to mandate spaying or

neutering at this point in time.

 

Moreover, such a mandate would expose any governing body to

substantial legal and financial liability if individual pet owners

successfully claim damages based on current or future research.

 

 

Other Legal Concerns

 

 

There will be many grounds to take the City of Dallas to court if this ordinance is approved.

 

Many will be based on the simple fact that similar ordinances have

proven to be completely counterproductive in several cities around the

country, including San Antonio, Texas. San Antonio’s rates of shelter

admissions doubled in the year following enactment of a similar

ordinance, as did euthanasia rates. Thus, any lawsuit would begin on

very solid legal ground: The city should have known beyond a shadow of

a doubt that there would be no possibility that these kinds of

ordinances would solve the problem, and to ignore that evidence is

reckless and negligent.

 

 

The jury is in on several communities that have tried this approach, and the verdict is unanimous: They failed miserably.

 

We have examined Dallas zoning codes, and can see nothing that

would prohibit hobby breeding of dogs. The zoning code clearly permits

residents of residentially zoned areas to make occasional sales of

personal property, as long as it does not constitute a business.

 

 

Thus, there is no legal basis for denying breeding permits in residential areas.

 

Under Section 42.002(a)(11) of the Texas Property Code, a state law

defining property rights, government is expressly prohibited from

seizing “household pets†for any reason, including actions of eminent

domain and bankruptcy.

 

 

This state law clearly prohibits the City of Dallas from seizing any pet for any reason.

 

The Bill of Rights in the Texas Constitution clearly states: “The

people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and

possessions, from all unreasonable seizures or searches…,†and that a

warrant shall be required in all cases. To obtain a warrant, probable

cause of a legal violation must be shown.

 

The Bill of Rights also is equally clear that people must be

properly compensated if any level of government seizes or destroys

their property for any reason: “No person's property shall be taken,

damaged or destroyed for or applied to public use without adequate

compensation being made…â€

 

Thus, under the Bill of Rights, it would appear that the City of

Dallas would be required to compensate a dog owner for the fair market

value of any dog that is seized or destroyed, as dogs are considered to

be personal property under Texas law.

 

This issue of taking may extend farther, as a mandate to spay and

neuter also would be a taking of the value of the property, since a dog

could not be used to provide valuable stud services or raise valuable

puppies. Simply put, a spayed or neutered dog is not worth as much

money as a dog that is intact. The city thus would be taking the value

of this dog, and would be required by law to provide the owner with

fair compensation.

 

 

Lawyers truly would love this ordinance, all the way to the bank

 

 

Please Help Dallas Dog Owners

 

The American Sporting Dog Alliance is urging all of our members and

supporters to offer assistance to Dallas dog owners in this vital fight

to preserve their fundamental rights.

 

The proposed ordinances are slated to be discussed at a meeting of

City Council’s Quality of Life Committee on Monday, April 28. The

announcement did not state the time or place of this meeting, or if the

public will be allowed to attend or participate. Trimble’s Texas Humane

Legislation Network, a radical animal rights group, prepared and

distributed the official announcement.

 

The American Sporting Dog Alliance urges all Dallas residents to

contact City Council members (contact information is given below) prior

to this meeting.

 

We are supporting the efforts of two Texas groups to fight these

proposed ordinances: The Responsible Pet Owners’ Alliance

(www.responsiblepetowners.org) and The Texas Kennel Club (contact Nancy

Wright at OrielPWCs).

 

Dog owners have retained an attorney, Zandra Anderson, to represent

them before City Council. Residents of Dallas should forward

information to Ms. Wright or The American Sporting Dog Alliance, to be

passed along to the attorney. She needs to know that you are a resident

of Dallas, your profession, the kinds of dogs that you own, and the

events in which you participate. This information will be submitted to

City Council.

 

The American Sporting Dog Alliance also urges dog owners who do not

live in Dallas to offer their support to dog owners in that city.

Please contact Ms. Wright and let her know how you can help, or contact

us at asda, and we’ll pass on your information to the appropriate people.

 

 

We strongly suggest letters of protest to the Dallas Morning News as a

letter to the editor, and also to each member of Dallas City Council.

The American Sporting Dog Alliance has written to all of them, but it

is vital that citizens respond vocally, too.

 

 

Here are their email addresses:

 

 

Dallas Morning News

 

Letters to the Editor bmong

 

 

City of Dallas

 

1500 Marilla Street

 

Dallas, Texas 75201

 

 

Mayor Tom Leppert

 

Phone: (214) 670-4054

 

Fax: (214) 670-0646

 

Tom.leppert

 

 

City Manager Mary Suhm

 

Phone: (214) 670-3296

 

Fax: (214) 670-3946

 

Mary.Suhm

 

 

Asst. City Manager David Brown

 

(supervises Animal Services)

 

Phone: (214) 670-3390

 

Fax: (214) 670-4965

 

David.brown

 

 

Mayor Pro Tem Dr. Elba Garcia

 

Phone: (214) 670-4052

 

Fax: (214) 670-3409

 

Elba.garcia

 

 

Councilmember Pauline Medrano

 

Chairman: Quality of Life Committee

 

Phone: (214) 670-4048

 

Fax: (214) 670-5117

 

Pauline.medrano

 

 

Deputy Mayor Pro Tem Dwaine Caraway

 

Phone: (214) 670-0781

 

Fax: (214) 670-3409

 

Dwaine.caraway

 

 

Councilmember David Neumann

 

Member: Quality of Life Committee

 

Phone: (214) 670-0776

 

Fax: (214) 670-1833

 

David.neumann

 

 

Councilmember Vonciel Jones Hill

 

Vice-Chair: Quality of Life Committee

 

Phone: (214) 670-0777

 

Fax: (214) 670-5117

 

Vonciel.hill

 

 

Councilmember Steve Salazar

 

Member: Quality of Life Committee

 

Phone: (214) 670-4199

 

Fax: (214) 670-5115

 

Steven.salazar

 

 

Councilmember Carolyn Davis

 

Quality of Life Committee

 

Phone: (214) 670-4689

 

Fax: (214) 670-5115

 

Carolyn.davis

 

 

Councilmember Tennell Atkins

 

Phone: (214) 670-4066

 

Fax: (214) 670-5115

 

Tennell.atkins

 

 

Councilmember Sheffield Kadane

 

Quality of Life Committee

 

Phone: (214) 670-4069

 

Fax: (214) 670-5115

 

sheffield.kadane

 

 

Councilmember Jerry Allen

 

Phone: (214) 670-4068

 

Fax: (214) 670-5115

 

Jerry.allen

 

 

Councilmember Linda Koop

 

Phone: (214) 670-7817

 

Fax: (214) 670-5117

 

Debra.brown

 

 

Councilmember Ron Natinsky

 

Phone: (214) 670-4067

 

Fax: (214) 670-5117

 

District12

 

 

Councilmember Mitchell Rasansky

 

Phone: (214) 670-3816

 

Fax: (214) 670-5117

 

Mitchell.rasansky

 

 

Councilmember Angela Hunt

 

Phone: (214) 670-5415

 

Fax: (214) 670-5117

 

Angela.hunt

 

The American Sporting Dog Alliance represents owners, hobby

breeders and professionals who work with breeds of dogs that are used

for hunting. We are a grassroots movement working to protect the rights

of dog owners, and to assure that the traditional relationships between

dogs and humans maintains its rightful place in American society and

life. Please visit us on the web at http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org.

 

 

The American Sporting Dog Alliance also needs your help so that we can

continue to work to protect the rights of dog owners. Your membership,

participation and support are truly essential to the success of our

mission. We are funded solely by the donations of our members, and

maintain strict independence.

 

PLEASE CROSS-POST THIS REPORT AND FORWARD IT TO YOUR FRIENDS_________________http://www.americansportingdogalliance.org

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