The recent fatalities of two elderly people in Georgia underscore the potential danger packs of dogs present to the public.
Unbreakable release Hounddog rip
In this August 2009 instance, approximately a dozen dogs were roaming in a rural part of northern Georgia, and encountered an elderly lady who the dogs attacked and killed. Shortly thereafter, her husband, a retired professor at the University of Georgia, went looking for her, he then encountered the dogs and likewise was mauled to death
What is it going to take for local public health authorities and animal control agencies to wake up and realize this clear and present danger? The danger packs of dogs present to the public has long been known, and was previously documented in a report by several animal behaviorists, appearing in the academic journal, Public Health Reports in 1983. Since this report over 25 years ago, dog maulings by packs of dogs have occasionally occurred, and in the last two years people have been killed in this fashion on at least three occasions (in California and Texas).
Obviously, local municipalities need to become more focused on the danger packs of dogs present to the public, and act accordingly. Unfortunately, most local animal control organizations in the United States lack the manpower and training to act meaningfully. In Los Angeles, I have seen no concrete steps taken by the Department of animal services to deal with the problem of packs of stray dogs. Given this state of affairs, children, particularly in rural areas, need to be cautioned about this public safety hazard, and adults rather than feeding packs of stray dogs (as was the case in the Georgia incident), need to persisted in their complaint about their presence to local animal control authorities. If local municipalities fail to act, then legal action needs to be taken to force meaningful action.
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