Anonymous wrote:A dog can be off leash and unattended at home and on the balcony
OP is being a nuisance
Park elsewhere if you are afraid of a dog on a balcony!!
Dogs do fine in small homes, provided that the owner walks the dog 2 times a day
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If these breeds are not allowed in the building, and you know these dogs are such breeds, then obviously you can complain formally to the management.
But honestly, the dog you describe sounds perfectly sociable, so personally, I wouldn't be officious just because I can be. The dogs who attack are the ones who are not socialized from a young age, and the ones who are fearful. Nothing you describe suggests the least little hint that this is an unsocial, fearful dog.
Except this is seldom the case in any of the constant pit bull mauls child or innocent person walking by stories. It’s always a sweet family dog that was never aggressive.
That's a lie, to put it mildly. It's what some (not all) owners will say, and it's what the anti-pitt people will play up, to highlight the danger of this breed, but it's simply not true. Any dog who is willing to bite your throat out will have shown you multiple times before that he is not comfortable around humans or in certain situations. But incidents happen because some humans just don't want to read the signs!
Anonymous wrote:A dog can be off leash and unattended at home and on the balcony
OP is being a nuisance
Park elsewhere if you are afraid of a dog on a balcony!!
Dogs do fine in small homes, provided that the owner walks the dog 2 times a day
Anonymous wrote:Doberman Pinschers were the "bad" dog years ago. There's nothing inherently bad about pit bulls. Just some owners who want them to be aggressive. Sounds like these owners are not that type.
But you should take it up with your apt management team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Are you sure that the German Shepherd (GSD) isn't a service dog?
The Pit definitely wouldn't be a service dog, but the GSD may be.
Service dogs are always allowed to live in housing that otherwise have pet-free policies or breed restrictions, because as service dogs, they go through such extensive & intensive training to become service dog certified.
My GSD is a service dog, but you'd know it as soon as you saw him, as he doesn't act or react like a pet dog would (although, in our home, he's our lovable & loving PET, once he walks out those front doors, he knows he's working & on the clock, so no saying hi to other dogs, no sniffing the grass for an hour, no distractions, period).
Sadly, all your neighbor would have to do is tell the landlord that their GSD is in actuality a service animal, and your landlord would NOT be allowed to ask what their disability is that requires a service dog, nor is the landlord allowed to ask for proof of certification -- it's against ADA laws, and ADA laws are VERY strict.
As such, people will always look to take advantage of them.
So, if your neighbor with the GSD says that it's a service dog (even if it's totally obvious to you that the dog is untrained & undisciplinled, so not really a service dog) your landlord is NEVER allowed to ask for proof or certification, nor what the nature of the disability is... sorry.
Anonymous wrote:
Unfortuantely, this could be true of almost any dog.
I do know someone with a pitbull therapy dog. I believe the same rules apply to a therapy dog (i.e. landlord not allowed to ask about disability or proof of certification). She is in an apt that has a "no dogs" policy.
That's 100% not true -- while service animals are accepted everywhere, and emotional support animals are covered in some states, therapy dogs are NOT, and there are no legally protected statuses for therapy dogs.
Landlords are allowed to make their own mind up about whether to allow a resident to own and live with a therapy dog.
Source: The Therapy Dog Alliance
Anonymous wrote:A dog can be off leash and unattended at home and on the balcony
OP is being a nuisance
Park elsewhere if you are afraid of a dog on a balcony!!
Dogs do fine in small homes, provided that the owner walks the dog 2 times a day
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Are you sure that the German Shepherd (GSD) isn't a service dog?
The Pit definitely wouldn't be a service dog, but the GSD may be.
Service dogs are always allowed to live in housing that otherwise have pet-free policies or breed restrictions, because as service dogs, they go through such extensive & intensive training to become service dog certified.
My GSD is a service dog, but you'd know it as soon as you saw him, as he doesn't act or react like a pet dog would (although, in our home, he's our lovable & loving PET, once he walks out those front doors, he knows he's working & on the clock, so no saying hi to other dogs, no sniffing the grass for an hour, no distractions, period).
Sadly, all your neighbor would have to do is tell the landlord that their GSD is in actuality a service animal, and your landlord would NOT be allowed to ask what their disability is that requires a service dog, nor is the landlord allowed to ask for proof of certification -- it's against ADA laws, and ADA laws are VERY strict.
As such, people will always look to take advantage of them.
So, if your neighbor with the GSD says that it's a service dog (even if it's totally obvious to you that the dog is untrained & undisciplinled, so not really a service dog) your landlord is NEVER allowed to ask for proof or certification, nor what the nature of the disability is... sorry.
Anonymous wrote:
Unfortuantely, this could be true of almost any dog.
I do know someone with a pitbull therapy dog. I believe the same rules apply to a therapy dog (i.e. landlord not allowed to ask about disability or proof of certification). She is in an apt that has a "no dogs" policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If these breeds are not allowed in the building, and you know these dogs are such breeds, then obviously you can complain formally to the management.
But honestly, the dog you describe sounds perfectly sociable, so personally, I wouldn't be officious just because I can be. The dogs who attack are the ones who are not socialized from a young age, and the ones who are fearful. Nothing you describe suggests the least little hint that this is an unsocial, fearful dog.
Except this is seldom the case in any of the constant pit bull mauls child or innocent person walking by stories. It’s always a sweet family dog that was never aggressive.
That's a lie, to put it mildly. It's what some (not all) owners will say, and it's what the anti-pitt people will play up, to highlight the danger of this breed, but it's simply not true. Any dog who is willing to bite your throat out will have shown you multiple times before that he is not comfortable around humans or in certain situations. But incidents happen because some humans just don't want to read the signs!