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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Pit-bull owners may get reprieve

Nicki Breaux pets her foster dog Buster, a pit-bull mix, Monday at her home in Houma.

HOUMA — Nicki Breaux became a pit-bull owner by default when no rescue group had room for the now 1-year-old Buster Brown. The dog was found beaten and abandoned five months ago in someone’s yard, said his 28-year-old foster mom.

Breaux has been keeping tabs on a Terrebonne debate over a proposed law targeting pit bulls.

“I don’t think that a particular breed of dog is more vicious than another breed,” Breaux said. “It really has to do with training, socialization and the pet owner. … Any dog can bite, any dog can attack and, given the right situation, any dog can kill.”

Dealing with dangerous pit and pit mixes is a sensitive topic for owners like Breaux, but Terrebonne Parish lawmakers say something needs to be done to combat a rash of local pit-bull attacks.

The debate was rehashed at Monday’s Parish Council committee meetings, but no decision was made. Members plan to consider an alternative proposal from local animal-control officials that addresses vicious dogs, rather than a specific breed. That proposal is to be presented at the May 9 committee meetings.
houmatoday.com

2 comments:

  1. did you hear about the shitzu that bit a canadian home depot greeter in the nose? took a good chunk of skin off the nose.

    when i ride my bike through the park it's always the little yappers that chase me and snap at my feet.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Billy - I didn't hear about that.

    Australian Shepherds and little dogs seem the worst to me.

    The dog in the pic looks a lot like Bob.

    ReplyDelete

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