Guest guest Posted August 13, 2003 Report Share Posted August 13, 2003 South China Morning Post http://hongkong.scmp.com/hknews/ZZZGLSI67JD.html Wednesday, August 13, 2003 Solutions studied include allowing owners to keep animals until they die, and exempting the elderly and disabled by HEIKE PHILLIPS Public housing tenants may be able to keep their pets until the animals die in a concession being considered by the Housing Authority to pet owners facing eviction under a post-Sars hygiene scheme. The elderly and the disabled could also be allowed to keep pets as companions. In what animal welfare groups have welcomed as a " very promising step forward " , the government agency yesterday said it was considering the " grandfathering procedure " to phase out pets rather than forcing owners to give up their animals or risk being evicted. Under the original demerit points scheme - to be implemented at Hong Kong's 160 public estates from October following a two-month grace period - pet owners face eviction if they lose 16 points over a two-year period. Pet ownership is one of 19 offences for which tenants will lose points. But Poon Kai-tik, the Housing Authority's head of information and communications, indicated that the rules were likely to be changed ahead of the deadline. " We are adopting an open attitude and are not ruling out any [of the recommendations], " he said, adding that consideration was also being given to other proposals made by a group of concerned pet owners during a two-hour meeting on Monday. " A second request made by the pet owners is to allow the elderly or disabled people, or people with emotional problems, to keep companion animals, " he said. " A third recommendation under consideration is to remove smaller animals such as goldfish, birds and rabbits from the list of prohibited pets and to be open to the number of such pets. " Mr Poon stressed that while the requests were " reasonable " , the authority also had a responsibility to those tenants who were concerned about the animals causing a nuisance or compromising hygiene standards. More " ambitious " changes such as permanently lifting the ban on pets in housing estates and the practicalities of introducing some of the proposals would also need to be further discussed, he said. " Some of the ideas could be difficult to implement; for example, the keeping of pets would require a change to the tenancy agreement and the licensing of all pets would be a tremendous job which somebody would have to pay for. " Pauline Taylor, a spokeswoman for the Coalition of People Concerned about Pets in Housing Estates, which met the Housing Authority on Monday, said costs could be recouped through registration fees, payable by pet owners. " A small fee would be warranted. We estimate there are about 300,000 animals in public housing in Hong Kong, so even charging a $10 fee can get a lump sum of money that would pay for a registration system, " she said. Dr Taylor, who is also the deputy executive director of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said she understood the authority's concerns about irresponsible pet owners but said existing laws and fines could serve as adequate safeguards for other tenants. " I agree that if a dog barks non-stop or fouls a public area, the owners should be fined. All we're asking for is a relaxation of the concrete ban of domestic pets, " Dr Taylor said. Mr Poon said further meetings will be held with the coalition of pet owners over the next few weeks to find a balanced solution. The Housing Authority will decide on any changes to the scheme or the need for a further extension on the grace period ahead of the deadline. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.