Letter #4
Source: Jan Cooper
Notes: Please copy and RETYPE on your
own paper prior to sending, being sure to insert your name at the
bottom. If you type this with a 10 point font it will fit on one
page.
(TO:..insert name here) (address) (city, state,zip)
(from:..Your name) (Your address) (your city, state, zip) Dear
(insert name here):
To be useful, legislation must be effective, enforcible, economical,
and reasonably fair. Recently, a bill (CITE BILL NUMBER HERE) has
been placed before (RELEVANT BODY ie., city council, etc,) that
fails all of these tests. This legislation is motivated by fear
and lack of relevant knowledge. It is discriminatory, impractical,
and unenforcable. Worst of all, it will not solve the problem. I
urge you to vote against it.
The proposed bill would restrict the ownership of certain types
of dogs, specifically (INSERT breed/s here). These breeds have been
the subject of irresponsible and sensationalist reporting across
the country. The media and the inexperienced would have you believe
that these breeds are vicious and should be prohibited.
The plain fact is that there is no relationship between the type
of the dog and the number of incidents. If your town has 100 German
Shepherds and 1 Poodle, you'll soon learn that the German Shepherds
are responsible for 100 times as many incidents as the Poodles.
Does this mean that German Shepherds are intrinsically vicious?
Of course not.
Taken as a whole, the (INSERT breed/s here) breeds have proven
their stability and good canine citizenry by becoming Search &
Rescue dogs, Therapy dogs working inside hospitals, professional
Herding dogs and family companions for years.
A five year study published in the Cincinnati Law Review in 1982,
vol. 53, pg 1077, which specifically considered both Rottweilers
and "pit bulls," concluded in part that:
- statistics do not support the assertion that any one breed
was dangerous.
- when legislation is focused on the type of dog it fails, because
it is ... unenforceable, confusing, and costly.
- focusing legislation on dogs that are "vicious"
distracts attention from the real problem, which is irresponsible
owners.
In light of the studies, the facts, and the discriminatory nature
of the proposed legislation, we urge you to take the following actions:
1. Reject the current legislation, which is contrary to fact and
distracts from the real issue: responsible ownership.
2. Work to establish reasonable guidelines for responsible pet
ownership, and encourage legislation that supports owner responsibility
without reference to specific breeds.
Study after study shows that ANY dog, regardless of breed, will
be whatever its owner makes of it....nothing more, nothing less.
Owners can and should take responsibility for their pets. We suggest
that the appropriate policy is "blame the owner, not the dog."
If a dog attacks a person, the law should treat it as though the
owner attacked that person.
Voting for this proposal as it stands will harm both the law abiding,
responsible dog owners and the victims, but it won't solve anything.
(YOUR NAME)
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