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Bully Breed Resource News

Tonight I preformed yet another upgrade.
So I had some free time tonight and I preformed another upgrade to the site. It should fix some of the problems we had in the past. with my code and the vbulletin software.

Any problems you may have please post them here in this thread.


Regards,
George
Posted on 08/30/10 11:07 PM

What shall I do with BBR?
Well as many of you know I have been really busy with work. I haven't had much time to put into the site. Plus I have two kids, three dogs, three ferrets, and on top of that I am starting a Ferret and Reptile Rescue 501c3 the whole nine yards. To be honest most of you moved on to other sites or left forum community's all together. I still spend money on this site every month to keep it open for every one as there is a great bit of information here.

Most of the mods barely come here, I do not have time to update everything by my self. So I been wondering what I should do with this site? Any ideas from any one would be great.

I could sell it, Close it, Leave it dormant, Let it run its course, Any other ideas?

I figured I would see what all of you thought before I did anything with it. I have always said I started this website to help people and I am sure we have helped a few people out. I would like for it to be more active but I doubt that will happen any time soon. Seems all that anyone is really here for is the Pedigree database. Not that any of you really care but I have spent close to $2000 to operate this website from day one. Seems silly to just keep paying money for no one to use it.

How ever I do know that we have close to 500 people a day visit this site. So they are using it for something. So what should I do with BBR?

Any and all suggestions are welcomed and appreciated.

Regards,
George
Posted on 09/02/10 08:30 AM

Happy Father's Day
Happy Father's Day to all the fathers...past, present and future.
Hope you all have a wonderful day!
Posted on 06/20/10 09:48 AM

Breed Specific Legislation News & Alerts

Fortville, IN: Attack spurs call for quick action
Pit bull attack spurs call for quick action
Posted: August 31, 2010



Fortville -- A mother is asking Hancock County officials to take action against the owners of a pit bull that attacked her 7-year-old daughter while she was riding her bicycle on the sidewalk near her home Friday.



Sarah Brown said the 7-month-old pit bull that bit her daughter, Rachel, had chased her at least six times before, but the dog's owners refused to keep it leashed when it was outside.

The dog bit Rachel's buttocks. She was treated at a hospital and released.

The dog was confiscated by animal-control officers and will be held for 10 days, as

workers observe its temperament.



The dog was not vaccinated and also will be tested for rabies.

http://www.indystar.com/article/2010...r-quick-action
Posted on 09/03/10 10:38 PM

Westland, MI: Attack revives pit bull debate
Last Updated: August 31. 2010 1:42PM
Westland attack revives pit bull debate

Christine Ferretti and Valerie Olander / The Detroit News
Westland -- William Dickey scrambled into action late Sunday after hearing screams and seeing a pregnant woman "tossed like a rag doll" by a large pit bull.

Dickey, 60, said the dog dragged the woman into the middle of Dorsey Road, near Venoy and Palmer, while a second, smaller pit bull joined the attack.

Dickey said he grabbed a wicker basket from a neighbor's trash heap and put it over the larger dog's head. He began punching the animal to free its hold on the woman's arm. She was also bitten in the face, leg and chest.

"It was like fighting a brick, the dog had so much muscle," Dickey said, noting the dog quickly broke free of the basket; both pit bulls took off when police arrived.

"She was afraid the dogs were going to come back. I assured her I wouldn't let them."

Westland Police say one of the dogs was shot to death by an officer, and the other is quarantined at the Michigan Humane Society's Berman Center for Animal Care in Westland.

Neighbors say the owner of the two dogs had been warned repeatedly to keep them locked up.

Police say the investigation continues. It is unclear if the dog owner will face charges. The condition of the woman, who is five months pregnant, is not known.

The mauling is the latest of several recently in Metro Detroit. For some communities, the attacks heighten the stigma associated with "bully breeds" and revive the debate over pit bulls and laws limiting dogs considered dangerous.

In 2009, Westland officials amended a breed-specific ordinance that required pit bulls to be kept on a leash or other restraint. The rewritten law applies only to dogs that have attacked a person or another animal.

Attacks have occurred this summer from Jackson County to Warren and Sterling Heights.

In Warren, 8-year-old Khalil Rocks was mauled Aug. 11 by a pit bull that escaped from a yard. He suffered injuries to both legs, his shoulder and an eye, and is unable to walk. The dog owner, Jenny Lin Angel, is facing up to four years in prison on felony charges of harboring a dangerous animal.

Another Warren woman shot her neighbor's pit bull Aug. 14 after it attacked her shih tzu. The woman was not charged.

In other cases, Tyah Norris, 6, of Jackson County was severely mauled by three pit bulls Aug. 24.

A 59-year-old Sterling Heights bicyclist was bitten on his ankles and wrist by four pit bulls in June. Days later, two pit bulls attacked a female resident who was attempting to protect her two cocker spaniels.

The city will hold a "pit bull workshop" next month to get input on possibly strengthening its animal control ordinances.

Last year, Macomb County communities including Warren and Eastpointe revisited their dog laws after an Eastpointe toddler, Leonard Lovejoy Jr., was mauled by the family pit bull. Eastpointe City Council tightened rules for owners of dangerous dogs. Members decided not to ban pit bulls. Warren City Council members last summer considered prohibiting pit bulls from parks and business and commercial properties. No action has been taken.

Center Line changed its ordinance last year after a pit bull attacked a young girl.

Public Safety Director John Riley said the law addresses dangerous animals and some breeds, including pit bulls. Owners are required to microchip the dogs, obtain liability insurance and submit a photo of the dog to police, he said.

Advocates for pit bulls and other breeds targeted for restrictions say the dogs are unfairly singled out.

"They are loyal, obedient family dogs," said Mike Davis, co-founder of the Great Lakes American Pit Bull Terrier Club in Macomb Township.

Davis says irresponsible owners, not dog breeds, should be accountable: "It keeps coming back to responsible dog ownership. "It doesn't matter if it's a Lab or a poodle."

John Russell of Westland, who heard the screams from Monday's pit bull attack, agrees. "If you can't control your animals, you shouldn't have 'em," he said.

http://detnews.com/article/20100831/...#ixzz0yHIijcHa
Posted on 09/03/10 10:36 PM

Alloway, NJ: Township considering ordinance dealing with vicious/potentially dan
Alloway Township considering ordinance dealing with vicious/potentially dangerous dogs
Published: Wednesday, September 01, 2010, 9:40 PM
Phil Dunn / Today's Sunbeam


ALLOWAY TWP. — The township committee here has passed a new ordinance on first reading that will strengthen township code on the ownership of vicious or potentially dangerous dogs.

Mayor Ed Masker said the drafting of the ordinance was related to a few incidents the township has had with vicious dogs in the past.


“We have had a few issues the past couple years that triggered the adoption of this ordinance,” he said. “It was time we brought this issue to the forefront.”

The ordinance states that animal control officers will be authorized to seize and impound a dog which may be vicious or potentially dangerous. Notice of the seizure will be given to the municipal court, the municipal health officer, and the owner of the dog.

The owner of the dog will incur the expense of the impounding in a facility other than the municipal pound, regardless if the dog is ultimately found to be vicious or potentially dangerous.

“The ordinance follows the state statute, but it directs fees that are needed to offset the cost associated with the animal control officer,” said Masker.

The mayor said after a dog is labeled vicious or potentially dangerous there are a lot of measures the animal control officer must follow, to make sure the home is safe and the dog is kept away from the general public.

This includes monthly visits and inspections of the owner’s property, said Masker.

“These types of visits are put into place by a judge to protect the people,” he said. “Monthly visits make sure the owner’s animals are following the guidelines of the court system.”

Masker said this is very important because these dogs are in homes where people walk by and ride their bikes on the street.

One of the more recent dog cases in Alloway Township involved a Rhodesian ridgeback named Duke.

This case began when the McVeighs were visiting the new goat farm owned by Haddonfield’s Dr. Robert Taffet on Commissioners Pike in Alloway Township on Nov. 18, 2009.

At the farm, Taffet’s daughter, then 19-year-old Elizabeth Taffet, offered to show the McVeigh children a puppy. She took 3-year-old Claire McVeigh and 5-year-old Patrick McVeigh into the barn, where Claire fell and was bitten by one of the four Rhodesian ridgeback dogs present.

After Claire’s ear was severed, Elizabeth Taffet identified Duke as the aggressor. She later said she was unsure whether Duke was to blame.

In July, Duke was ruled by Judge Nicholas Lacovara as a potentially dangerous dog.

In addition, owners of vicious or potentially dangerous dogs will pay an annual fee of $700 a year on top of the normal license fees for the dogs.

“This helps take the tax burden off the taxpayers,” said Masker. “We want to try and be as proactive as we can with these types of serious issues.”

Solicitor for the township, Adam Telsey, said these types of ordinances are common in many municipalities.

“This is common in a lot of municipalities — it parrots the state statute,” said Telsey. “What is specifically covered here is the license fee and that provides a range of what townships wish to charge.”

Telsey said the township chose the maximum amount to charge for a vicious or potentially dangerous dog.

The final adoption of the ordinance will be discussed on Sept. 16 during the next township committee meeting.

Masker said the committee is cognizant of the town’s safety and they hope this ordinance will help better handle any future situations.

http://www.nj.com/salem/index.ssf/20...idering_o.html
Posted on 09/03/10 10:17 PM

Lebanon, TN: Sept. 7 Vote on Whether to Kill Dogs for Barking
Posted Aug 29, 2010 by lauraallen Regulation of PetsThe City Council of Lebanon, Tennessee, a suburb of Nashville, will vote on September 7, 2010 at 6:00 p.m, about whether to override Mayor Philip Craighead's veto of an ordinance allowing euthanasia of dogs thought to bark too much or which are otherwise a nuisance or deemed "dangerous".

The deadly solution for dogs whose owners are negligent or even criminal is the brain child of City Council member William Farmer.

Farmer claims pet owners will have an opportunity to correct the animal's behavior. But it is the owner's negligence that results in dogs expressing fear or distress through barking. It is the owner's negligence that results in dogs running loose or biting, not the dog's. As one resident put it, "They are going to kill a dog because the owner leaves him outside all the time on a chain and so he barks in frustration?"

WHAT YOU CAN DO

Plan to attend the Sept. 7 city council meeting. Also, contact the following Lebanon city council members and urge them NOT to override the mayor's veto of this ill-conceived ordinance. Tell them city resources are better spent on owner education and training and penalties as well as incentives for owners to manage and care for their dogs properly.

Ward One
Alex Buhler
1003 N. Cumberland
Lebanon, TN. 37087
615-449-3945
Email: abuhler21@bellsouth.net

Ward Two
Kevin Huddleston
224 Sycamore Street
Lebanon, TN. 37087
615-444-8042
Email: khut615@aol.com

Ward Three - this one is the sponsor, so be sure to say hi!
William Farmer
406 Martin Ave.
Lebanon, TN. 37087
615-444-0477
Email: wefarmer.Lebanon@att.net

Ward Four
Joe Hayes
517 Terry Lane
Lebanon, TN. 37087
615-444-4600
Email: j.a.n.hayes@juno.com

Ward Five
Haywood Barry
103 Oak Hill Circle
Lebanon, TN. 37087
615-444-6371
Email: Haybay1938@hotmail.com

Ward Six
Kathy Warmath
2032 Blue Ribbon Downs
Lebanon, TN. 37087
Home: 615-449-1907
Work: 449-0045
Email: kwarmath@charter.net

You can also sign a petition in opposition to the ordinance that will be presented to the city council.

http://www.animallawcoalition.com/re...s/article/1430
Posted on 08/31/10 05:00 PM

Jackson County, MI: Officials: No easy fix for pit bulls
Published: Saturday, August 28, 2010, 11:54 PM Updated: Sunday, August 29, 2010, 9:46 AM
Aaron Aupperlee | Jackson Citizen Patrio...


Charley Norris got a pit bull when it was 2 days old. He bottle-fed it for months, and it was docile and friendly. The dog loved to play with people, especially Norris' young niece, Tyah.

"I loved him to death," Norris said. "He was like a kid to me."

But as the dog grew, Norris noticed it getting more aggressive. After an attack by another dog, it no longer played. Norris made the tough decision to part with the animal.

"I didn't want something like this to happen," he said Wednesday, a day after Tyah, his 6-year-old niece, was attacked by three pit bulls in Blackman Township.

Norris ran to his niece Tuesday and used a piece of lumber to club the dogs attacking her. Tyah's blood stained his clothes and hands. Once a pit bull owner and lover, Norris thinks differently about the breed today.

He wants them banned.

"It's just a dangerous breed. It's in their blood to kill," Norris said. "They're not pets; they're vicious animals. You can't make a family pet out of them."

Tuesday's attack left Tyah with 500 stitches and a long recovery ahead of her. Doctors expect her to remain at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital in Ann Arbor for months.

It also left residents wondering what can be done to prevent future attacks.

Two children were attacked by dogs Tuesday — Tyah, at 118 Mantle Ave., and a 6-year-old girl in Parma Township who was bitten by a lab-shepherd mix. In July, a pit bull attacked Joe Williams near Union and Grinnell streets. He needed about 100 stitches.

Local elected officials agree action should be taken but are not sure a ban is possible. It is difficult to forbid ownership of one breed. Other breeds also can be dangerous, they said.

Whether pit bulls are more likely to hurt people than other breeds is debated.

"Although media reports and rumors often give the impression that certain breeds of dog are more likely to bite, there is little scientific evidence to support those claims," says the American Veterinary Medical Association's brochure on dog-bite prevention.

Before Tuesday, Jackson County Animal Control officers responded to six severe dog bites in recent months, Undersheriff Tom Finco said. Of the attacks, three were by pit pulls, two by shepherds and one by a rottweiler.

Finco said Sheriff Dan Heyns plans to meet with other county and law enforcement officials to address pit bulls or aggressive dogs. It could involve more licensing checks, for example.

Prosecutor Hank Zavislak said he would be involved: "I think there is a problem with any animal that attacks and does that kind of injury to any human being or another animal."

On Friday, Zavislak's office charged Brian Nace, 35, and his girlfriend, Jasmine Bailey, 19, with keeping a dangerous animal that caused serious injury. They owned the dogs that hurt Tyah.

The charges send a message about dog owners' accountability in the event of an attack, Zavislak said.

Keeping pit bulls as a status symbol seems to be a trend, Zavislak said. This "translates into, ‘I am bad. Don't mess with me,' " Zavislak said, reading a statement at a Friday news conference.

Many put the blame on the owners who neglect pit bulls or train them to be fighters.

"I don't think they should be banned," said Destiny Kidd of Blackman Township. "It's all how you raise them."

Kidd had a pit bull for 10 years before it died last year. The dog was not aggressive, Kidd said, and loved to play with her children.

"My daughter could ride her like a horse," Kidd said.

Kidd's children, Maya, 5, and Antonio, 6, are good friends with Tyah and could have easily been playing with her Tuesday when she was attacked, she said. They were not.

Some, like Charley Norris, want pit bulls out of their communities. Waterford Township near Detroit has enacted a ban. Jackson County officials have not seriously considered one.

"Pit bulls can be a mean dog. There are good pit bulls, too," said county Commissioner Jeff Kruse, who represents Leoni Township. "And people have been bitten by other breeds of dogs. Do you ban all dogs from the county? I don't think you can do that."

Blackman Township Trustee Chuck DeBruler said his gut reaction to Tuesday's attack is to ban pit bulls in the township. He said he would never own one and would be nervous if his neighbors did.

DeBruler, however, thinks more laws and regulations surrounding ownership of potentially vicious dogs might protect residents better. Licenses, insurance and education should be a part of owning a pit bull, he said.

"I think they're dangerous, and I think we have to make people, especially the owners, aware of the responsibility they take on when they own a dog like that," he said. "There's been too many people bit and hurt."

DeBruler expects to talk about dogs at the Sept. 6 Blackman Township meeting.

Township Treasurer Sherry Brockie brought up the issue in January after a man paying taxes in the township office asked Brockie if the township could mandate permits for pit bulls and rottweilers. Public Safety Director Mike Jester took the question to the Public Safety Committee in March.

"The committee discussed the idea and decided that they were not interested in pursuing this matter further," read the minutes from that meeting. "They felt that animal-control issues are handled at the county level."

"I think the whole county needs to be policed on it, not just one township," said township trustee David Sercombe, who sits on the committee. The rules should be consistent throughout the county, he said.

There has been some discussion about countywide pit bull regulation, and there will be more talk of it, county Commissioner Clifford Herl said.

Like others, he said it is difficult to legislate only one breed: "Every dog could be vicious."

Stricter licensing enforcement is one strategy. The dogs in the recent attacks were not licensed, but licenses do not raise enough money for the county to hire someone to go out and check all dogs.

Licenses, which require proof of rabies vaccination, are $10 to $30, depending on when a resident buys a license and whether the dog is spayed or neutered. Seniors pay half.

If the county raised the prices, fewer people might bother to get licenses.

"I wish there was an easy answer," Jackson Mayor Karen Dunigan said.

City officials have talked about legislation for pit bulls or vicious dogs in recent years but opted to operate under the county's guidelines.

The city's only pet ordinance regulates the number of pets, Dunigan said.

It is difficult to determine which dogs are aggressive or what dogs should be regulated. Asked Dunigan: "Where do you start and where do you stop?"

— Jackson Citizen Patriot staff writer Danielle Quisenberry contributed to this report.

Levels of dangerous animals

Jackson County's animal control ordinance addresses dangerous and vicious animals. The county assigns levels to different behaviors to classify how dangerous animals are and regulate them properly.

• Level 1: Animal continuously runs loose.

• Level 2: Animal indirectly causes injury or damage to a person, animal or property.

• Level 3: Animal, while at large, is found to menace, chase, display threatening or aggressive behavior, or otherwise threaten or endanger the safety of any domestic animal.

• Level 4: Animal bites or scratches another animal in a less-than-dangerous manner.

• Level 5: Animal bites or scratches a person in a less-than-dangerous manner.

• Level 6: Animal, while at large, is found to menace, chase, display threatening or aggressive behavior or otherwise threaten or endanger the safety of any person.

• Level 7: Animal, while confined, aggressively bites or causes physical injury less than serious to any person or animal.

• Level 8: Animal, while at large, aggressively bites or causes physical injury less than serious to any person or domestic animal.

• Level 9: Animal, whether or not confined, causes the serious injury or death of any person, kills or causes serious injury to any domestic animal, engages in or is found to have been trained to engage in exhibitions of fighting, or has been classified as level 7 or 8 and repeats the behavior.

Under the ordinance, animals classified as level 1 through 5 must be restrained so that they do not reach any public sidewalk or adjoining property when not on a leash.

An animal at level 6 must be confined inside a secure enclosure whenever not on a leash or in the owner's house. The animal must also be microchipped.

Level 7 is the same as level 6, but the owner must post warning signs. Level 8 is the same as level 7, but the animal cannot leave the owner's property unless it is muzzled.

Animals at level 9 can be euthanized by a court order or be subject to level 8 restrictions.

http://www.mlive.com/news/jackson/in...x_for_pit.html
Posted on 09/03/10 10:24 PM

Dodge County, GA: Dog Ordinance 'Necessity' According to Some
Dog Ordinance in Dodge County a 'Necessity' According to Some
Amy Aubert


A pitbull in a Dodge County neighborhood just outside of Eastman has some people scared to leave their homes, but they say there isn't much they can do about it.
The reason, Dodge County has no dog ordinance.
"I don't care if you're 6 years old or 16, when a dog jumps you, you're gone," says Judy Williamson.
Williamson says her favorite thing to do is sit on her back porch and watch the animals, but she says ever since a neighbor's pitbull chased her into her house, she is too scared to enjoy her own backyard.
"I feel unsafe. I can't go get the mail," she says. Douglas Holder lives next door to the pitbull's owner and says his wife is scared to leave the house.
"She's even afraid to stop and get out of the car and get the mail in the evenings when she comes home," he says.
Some of the neighbors say the pitbull has been running up and down Maple Drive, chasing cars and growling at people.
One neighbor says that his lab actually stepped in and fought the pitbull to keep it from getting his 16-year-old son.
"He fought him hard. He got a couple spots, ya know, one there and one on the side of his face and his nose is a little skinned, but he came through in a pinch. And he put that dog in his place," says Donald Jones.
But Jones says they need to count on more than just his dog, Chief, to keep them safe.
Captain Tony Winborn with the Dodge County Sheriff's Office says they get about two to three dozen dog complaints a month, but he says officers' hands are tied.
"The sheriff's office has yet to receive a signed copy of the ordinance for us to enforce," says Winborn.
If the ordinance is approved, officers could seize threatening pets if the owners don't control them.
But until the ordinance is law, all neighbors can do is wait.
"We need a regulation. We need some kind of ruling done. And we don't need to wait another month, another year, another day actually," says Williamson.
Captain Winborn says the County Commissioners Office is working on an ordinance, but he does not know when it will be finished.
He encourages people to attend the County Commissioners meeting and request the issue be put on the agenda.
To be fair and balanced, we tried to reach the Commissioners for comment today but we were told they were in a meeting, and unavailable.

http://www.13wmaz.com/news/mostpopul...5&provider=top
Posted on 08/31/10 04:09 PM

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