Florida State Rep. Perry E. Thurston, Jr. has filed House Bill 543, to repeal the state’s prohibition on breed specific legislation. An identical Senate version, S.B. 1276, has also been filed by Florida State Sen. Tony Hill, Jr.
Currently, Florida law bans breed discrimination throughout the state except basically in Miami Dade County where there is a long standing ban on pit bull type dogs. Fl. Stat. Sec. 767.14.
Read about successful challenges to Miami Dade County Animal Services confiscations of dogs said to be “pit bulls”.
Under H.B. 543/ S.B. 1276 local governments would be allowed to enact breed specific laws.
A similar effort has been unsuccessful in the last 2 legislative sessions.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
H.B. 543 has been assigned to the Agriculture & Natural Resources Policy Committee. Find committee members and their contact information here and write (faxes or letters are best) or call and urge members to vote no on H.B. 543. If one of the members is your representative, be sure to let him or her know that! Above all, be polite.
Use talking points from this article or links or contact Animal Law Coalition for help!
WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT BSL
There is not one major animal or health organization including the American Veterinary Medical Association, the Centers for Disease Control, among many others, that supports breed discrimination.
Breed specific legislation does not work to make communities safe. Study after study has proven this. Dogs don’t bite because of breed or appearance; they bite out of fear that could have been the result of poor socialization, neglect, abuse, tethering or confinement or isolation. In other words, it is the owner’s negligent or criminal actions that are responsible, not the dog’s breed or appearance.
BSL penalizes responsible dog owners and means the death of dogs that are not in any way dangerous.
It is also well-established that people cannot look at a dog and determine its breed. Recently, in Denver Dr. Victoria Voith did a little test on animal shelter directors, dog trainers and others who work with dogs.
They were asked to view 20 dogs on a videotape and identify each one by breed including whether the dog was a purebred or a mix. The professionals were surprised by how few dogs they identified correctly by breed. Voith believes as many as 75% of the pit bull identifications made by shelter workers, animal control or law enforcement are wrong. She is the author of Shelter Medicine: A Comparison of Visual and DNA Identifications of BREEDS of Dogs. As DNA testing becomes more reliable, it is proving that many of the dogs identified as pit bull are actually a mix of dozens of breeds with little or none of the DNA of pit bull type dogs.
That means a lot of dogs condemned by BSL are not even “pit bull” breeds.