Orange County NC Website
Tethering Committee Report <br />July 30a`, 2007 <br />• <br />• The implementation phase will involve a year -long period of extensive public outreach and <br />education regarding the ordinance amendment and practice of tethering followed by a six- <br />month period in which only warnings are issued. This is to ensure that dog owners have <br />ample notice of the new ordinance and time to transition to other methods of confinement <br />and take advantage of community resources to help with the implementation of alternatives. <br />• Public outreach should include resources to help dog owners implement alternatives to the <br />restraint of dogs by tethering as well as information about the new ordinance. The <br />Committee believes that public outreach and education is pivotal to its recommendations. <br />These pursuits would presumably be led by the Animal Services Department, working in <br />concert with its citizen advisory board and perhaps other stakeholders. <br />Enforcement <br />• Upon initial contact for noncompliance with the new ordinance,- after the six -month phase -in <br />period, a dog owner will receive a warning, that gives him or her thi& (30) dys to come <br />into compliance. As with the initial implementation period itself, this initial enforcement <br />approach is designed to ensure that dog owners are aware of and able to comply with the <br />tethering ordinance. <br />• Civil citations with a monetar�penaI on a progressive or graduated) schedule ordinarily <br />will be issued for noncompliance after issuance of a warning to come into compliance. <br />• An animal may be impounded after the issuance of a citation for a violation of the tethering <br />ordinance —which itself would occur only after the issuance of a warning -- subject to an <br />appropriate process of appeal by the animal owner. Given the right to and requirements of <br />"due process," there would not only be an appeal process but a specific legal mechanism for <br />determining possession and ownership of an animal in the event that an appeal failed. <br />101 <br />