Guest guest Posted September 23, 2003 Report Share Posted September 23, 2003 South China Morning Post http://hongkong.scmp.com/hknews/ZZZZWTGMWKD.html Tuesday, September 23, 2003 The Housing Department has climbed down from its near-total animal ban by ELAINE WU The Housing Department has proposed that existing dog owners in public housing estates be allowed to keep their pets until the animals die, a climbdown from its no-pet policy. Under the proposal, residents with dogs that weigh less than 20kg can keep them until they die. The department also amended its pet policy to recommend that residents be allowed to keep cats and small pets in their flats. These recommendations were sent yesterday to the subsidised housing committee of the Housing Authority, the policymaking body which will make a final decision on Thursday. The decision came after two angry protests by animal groups and pet owners forced the Housing Department to postpone enforcement of its almost total ban on pets. A government source said the new guidelines were an attempt to strike a balance between animal rights groups and people who do not want pets in public housing. " We are happy about that, " Doris Yiu Wai-fun, spokeswoman of Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said of the move. " The only thing we are not happy about is the 20kg limit for dogs. But we still accept it because I think we cannot fight anything further. " The department also wants to prohibit dogs from travelling in lifts from 7am to 9pm. Tenants organisations can make amendments to this rule, to allow such travel during a two-hour window within that restricted period. Dogs are also not allowed in children's playgrounds and cannot urinate or foul on public housing properties. Dogs that weigh more than 20kg, or are fighting dogs, will be banned from public housing estates. Their owners will be given one-month notices to vacate them. Exceptions are made to service dogs that assist those with medical problems. Under the proposed policy, dog owners will be forced to move their pets if they receive two verified complaints from residents about their pets being a disturbance. The department estimates 17,000 households, or 2.8 per cent of all public homes, have dogs. In May, the Housing Authority passed a demerit points system to force pet owners to dispose of their pets or face eviction. elaine.wu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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