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<br /> Hugh Carroll <br /> 15-2724 Ina St. <br /> <br /> Pahoa HI 96778 <br /> <br /> April 18, 2006 <br /> County Council <br /> County of Hawaii <br /> Deaz Counci] Members, <br /> I am Sony that work requirements do not allow me to attend today's meeting on <br /> animal abuse and regulation. I will try to make my points succinctly in this letter. <br /> • Animal abuse here chiefly involves dogs. Other animals may be abused or come <br /> to the attention of the Humane Society, but the vast majority of all social <br /> problems with domestic animals on this island involve dogs. <br /> • There is a lazge and evident clash of cultures at the root of many conflicts. Some <br /> of the cultures of the South Pacific, Micronesia and Asia have no concept of <br /> "animal abuse." There is no Humane Society in these countries, and in fact <br /> people regulazly eat dogs. Cockfights and dogfights are common forms of <br /> amusement. <br /> • If you visualize a situation where these peoples are put together at close quarters <br /> with people from American/European backgrounds, cultures where the humane <br /> treatment of animals, especially dogs, is a matter of enforced law, you might <br /> easily imagine that the stage is set for ongoing cultural friction. This is exactly <br /> the demogntphics we have here in many neighborhoods on the Big Island. <br /> What to do? Is it fair to impose the limitations and restrictions placed on the <br /> treatment of dogs that exist in the rest of the United States? If we do, who will <br /> enforce the new laws? I would recommend that the guidelines of whatever behavior <br /> is enforced should be very understandable and as simple as possible. <br /> I think one point of law should be unmistakable. Dogs can be very loud, and dogs <br /> can be dangerous. If your dog is loud or dangerous, your dog is a social problem. If <br /> your dog is loud or dangerous, you are adversely impacting the quality of life of those <br /> around you. To my own specific problem: if your dog, tied up on a six-foot chain <br /> 24 / 7, barks constantly, wakes the neighbors up in the middle of the night, erodes the <br /> enjoyment of the neighbors on their own properties, howls, moans and projects his <br /> daily misery into the surrounding environment, your dog is just as much of a social <br /> problem as a siren set up on your roof that is constantly wailing and disturbing the <br /> neighborhood. <br /> County Planning Department enforces setback regulations for all construction so <br /> that adjoining properties do not negatively impact each other. How about some <br /> dog/noise setbacks? A person should not keep a dog tied so close to neighbors that <br /> Comm. No. Z Z . <br /> Ref. To•~reseatOd <br /> Re#. Uate <br /> <br />