Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Outdoor cats aren’t legal many places, including DC. If you see sn outdoor cat in DC, it’s either a stray or someone is illegally letting their cat out without a leash.
We treat our cat lijj my e a small dog in this respect. We let him go out in our backyard under supervision, but otherwise he stays in with us. I’d definitely worry about him wandering the neighborhood on his own. I once saw a possum in our backyard that was probably 30 pounds. It’s really not safe to let your cats roam free in the city.
Citation, please? Because that is not what I am seeing.
https://doh.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/doh/publication/attachments/Animal%20Control.pdf
If you mean Montgomery County (and someone has been posting erroneously about that this morning, already), cats ARE allowed to roam "at large." If they go onto private property, they can be humanely trapped and returned to the owner or humanely transported to an animal shelter.
Holy crap this legislation is funny when you are coming at it cold:
906.2 No person shall drive or conduct swine, beeves, or other cattle between the
hours of 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m.
903.8 Lofts, aviaries, nests, and other places where pigeons are kept shall be open
at all reasonable times to inspectors of the Department of Human Services.
902.8 No fowl shall be kept or permitted to run, fly, or stray within fifty feet (50 ft.)
of any building used for human habitation, or onto property other than the enclosure
designated in the application for permit; except where a permit has been approved
by the Mayor and issued under § 902.9.
Anonymous wrote:If you don't understand the difference between how much damages aggressive dogs can do vs cats' scratch, I can't help you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Outdoor cats aren’t legal many places, including DC. If you see sn outdoor cat in DC, it’s either a stray or someone is illegally letting their cat out without a leash.
We treat our cat lijj my e a small dog in this respect. We let him go out in our backyard under supervision, but otherwise he stays in with us. I’d definitely worry about him wandering the neighborhood on his own. I once saw a possum in our backyard that was probably 30 pounds. It’s really not safe to let your cats roam free in the city.
Citation, please? Because that is not what I am seeing.
https://doh.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/doh/publication/attachments/Animal%20Control.pdf
If you mean Montgomery County (and someone has been posting erroneously about that this morning, already), cats ARE allowed to roam "at large." If they go onto private property, they can be humanely trapped and returned to the owner or humanely transported to an animal shelter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because some of us don't want to live in a post-Soviet republic with packs of stray dogs milling about trash heaps on the side of the road?!
This poster wins for top-notch imagery.![]()
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Anonymous wrote:Because some of us don't want to live in a post-Soviet republic with packs of stray dogs milling about trash heaps on the side of the road?!
Anonymous wrote:Because some of us don't want to live in a post-Soviet republic with packs of stray dogs milling about trash heaps on the side of the road?!
Anonymous wrote:DCUM would like to outlaw bird feeders.
Anonymous wrote:We have a little dog (about 8lbs) and we'll sometimes let him out. He'll roam the neighborhood, sniff around have a little fun, then comes home, barks and we let him in. How is that so different than people having "outdoor" cats where they are outside all day unleashed or supervised?
If it's because dogs bite....well cats scratch. And ours is so little, he's smaller than a regular cat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cats are all one size and they rarely attack people or chase cars.