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Dog Management in our Parks iCare Presentation to District of West Vancouver May 5, 2008
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 2 Contents iCare Vision Objectives Vancouver Situation Analysis 1997 - 2008 Calgary Model West Vancouver Situation Analysis Licensing Enforcement No Dog Parks Park Criteria Recommendations Page 3 4 5 6-7 8 9 10 11 12 13-15
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 3 Vision iCare: Informed Citizens Advocating for Responsibility and Enforcement iCare envisions a caring community where people behave responsibly and respect each other.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 4 Objectives An approach that will result in dog owners & non-dog owners enjoying park space in safety & harmony. For West Vancouver to learn and benefit from dog management experiences in Vancouver and Calgary.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 5 Vancouver Situation Analysis 1997: Off-leash program begins. 26 parks rolled-out quickly with only input from dog-related groups, not the community. Results: #1 complaint to Park Board: dogs. (Source: Ian Robertson) Synovate Research telephone poll in 2003: 60% have witnessed or experienced problems with an off-leash dog. 82% want Animal Control bylaws enforced. Education-based program failed (10 years).
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 6 Calgary Model Vancouver now adopting the Calgary model Calgary has most successful program in North America Highest licensing compliance (>90%). $3.5 million annual operating budget, generated through license and penalty revenue Return lost dogs and enforce the Animal Control Bylaw without any funding from taxes. West Vancouver should use the most successful program in North America as a model.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 7 Calgary Model Encourages responsible pet ownership through: Licensing Public education Enforcement. Zero tolerance for unlicensed dogs ($250 fine). A licensed dog is one phone call away from going home.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 8 Situation Analysis West Vancouver vs Calgary: West VancouverCalgary Licensing~50%>90% # of dogs~2,750 licensed100,000 Off-leash tickets issued/month5.5120 2007 Revenue Earned~$50k$3.5M Off-leash Areas per City sq km0.170.15 No dog parks per Total parks~25%38%
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 9 Licensing ~$50k not paid in licenses for West Vancouver. Increasing licensing was first step for Calgary. Licensing conduit for responsible dog ownership. “The best way to have more … dog areas is to have better dogs.” - Bill Bruce, Director, Bylaw and Animal Services, Calgary
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 10 Enforcement & Public Safety Why do we enforce? Dogs bite 460,000 Canadians annually, 75% of whom are under the age of 10. (Source: Canada Safety Council) 107 dog attacks reported in 2007 in West Vancouver (Source: E.S. Holitzki). Education instead of enforcement failed in Vancouver. Year-round enforcement is essential part of Calgary’s success.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 11 Proposed Changes: # of No Dog Parks Report shows that tiny % of park space will be no dog. Calgary 38% (3,400 ha) of park space is no dog. “You need no dog areas, as then the people who don’t want to be around dogs, for whatever reason, have places to go.” - Bill Bruce, Director of Animal and Bylaw Services, Calgary
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 12 Park Criteria 5 m not sufficient for children or picnic areas. Respect feeding birds & wildlife along the shoreline. Public health is compromised whenever dog waste hits the ground. Pathogens can live in soil or sand for up to 2 years from dog feces and from remnants that remain when picked up. (Source: ENCAMS) Roundworms may cause permanent nerve or eye damage. Hookworms can cause serious damage to the intestines. Children who play outside most at risk.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 13 Recommendations 1.Get licensing up to 90%. Invite Bill Bruce to West Vancouver to discuss Calgary’s responsible dog model and success. 2.Year-round dedicated bylaw officer for ticketing, paid for through licensing. 3.Choose two appropriate parks to open up to dogs when licensing reaches 65%, and monitor results.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 14 Recommendations 4.Establish more rigorous health & safety and environmental criteria Entire parks with playground equipment should be no dog. Respect current no dog parks for children (e.g. Tantalus, Park Verdun, Horseshoe Bay, Whytecliff) Respect school walking routes that reduce driving (e.g. Tantalus, Batchelor Bay) Respect current Picnic areas & parks (e.g. Whytecliff west of Marine) Respect 100% of swimming beach parks (e.g. Radcliffe, Sandy Cove, Stearman, Pilot, Larson, Bachelor, Copper Cove, Whytecliff) No dog access for streams due to dog waste, as well as for salmon, & for shorelines where wildlife feeds.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 15 Recommendations 5.Improve existing off-leash areas, as has been done in Seattle (Coladog.org) through empowering owners to fundraise for amenities. 6.Seek community support, not just consultation Conduct statistically valid telephone survey regarding any proposed park changes and ensure neighborhoods support changes to their parks. Establish community planning group as per Ambleside.
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iCare Parks and Pets Presentation – May 5, 2008 16 For more information or to join iCare: www.icarevancouver.org
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