by Steve Reinbrecht
When I read in early April about dog wardens armed with $300 fines coming to Berks County to check if pet dogs have licenses dangling
from their collars, I did the right thing.
As I was supposed to do at the beginning of the year, I went online and laid out $13 to properly license my two mutts for 2016.
The state requires that dogs have licenses and rabies vaccines. A license is one of the best ways to be reunited with your dog if you
were to become separated, the department says.
It appears that lots of people responded to the Reading
Eagle’s timely warning about the state’s canine crack down.
The number of dog licenses sold in Berks in the first half
of 2016 jumped 15 percent over the number sold in the first half of 2015,
according to the Berks treasurer’s office.
Should we have worried about a dog warden's knock?
I estimate 90,000 pet dogs live in Berks, using a calculator from the American Veterinary Medical Association.
In 2015, the Berks treasurer sold only about 27,000
licenses, so I figure the county was ripe for wide-scale enforcement among the
63,000 unlicensed dogs here.
When the dog wardens visited the week of May 9, they checked
753 houses in Berks County, according to Neil Logan, a state agriculture
department spokesman.
They issued two citations in Berks County for not having a
current rabies vaccination, he said.
Hall said the wardens typically give warnings so scofflaw dog
owners have a chance to get their pooches legal. The idea is to educate owners,
not penalize them.
In 2015, individual dog license sales generated about $6.3
million in revenue for Pennsylvania.
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