Ní feidir an dubh a chur ina gheal ach seal
You can’t hide the truth for long
Dublin City Council bans 'dangerous dog
breeds'
Olivia Kelly
Saturday, July 7, 2007
Eleven breeds of dog, including Rottweilers, Bull
Terriers and German Shepherds have been banned from all Dublin City
Council properties, including houses, flats and estates, with
immediate effect.
The council has said it will give tenants an opportunity to rehouse
the animals but if alternative suitable accommodation cannot be
found for them they will be destroyed.

The council has taken the step to remove all "dangerous breeds" due
to the increasing numbers of complaints from tenants and because of
the legal implications associated with an attack taking place on one
of its properties. The ban initially applies to council housing and
all public areas within council estates.
However, the council plans to amend its bylaws to include public
parks in the ban. This would mean that anyone owning a dangerous dog
could not walk it in a public park, even if they lived in private
housing.
The council has also written to the Minister for the Environment
asking him to ban all breeds of fighting dogs nationally. The 11
breeds are not banned for general ownership in Ireland but must be
muzzled, kept on a special leash and be under the control of a
person over 16 years old.
The breeds are: English Bull Terrier, Staffordshire Bull Terrier,
American Pit Bull Terrier, Rottweiler, German Shepherd (Alsatian),
Doberman, Rhodesian Ridgeback, Japanese Akita, Bull Mastiff,
Japanese Tosa and Bandog. Cross-breeds of these dogs or crosses of
these dogs with any other breed are also banned.
Executive manager of the council's housing department Michael
O'Neill said tenants would be asked to remove any banned dogs but if
they failed to comply the council would take them away. "Our
information on these dogs is that that they can be very aggressive
and while they might be family pets, that has to come secondary and
would be no defence to us if a child or other vulnerable person was
attacked on our property."
Labour councillor Kevin Humphreys said he understood council tenants
may feel discriminated against, but he hoped that this was just the
first step to banning these breeds nationally.
© 2007 The Irish Times
Source: The Irish Times