The County had been relying on its Joint Powers Agreement with the City of Truth or Consequences Animal Control department to address dangerous dogs and dogs running loose.
Two recent incidents and public requests for stronger dog laws precipitated a reevaluation of that arrangement. The new ordinance allows the City’s Animal Control Officer to deputize sheriff’s deputies, which will devote more officers to the dog problem, shorten the response time and give the county more authority when it gets there.
Margaret Speer’s was the first incident, whose dog eventually died of its wounds from a dog attack. She and the attacking-dog’s owner were also bitten. The second incident involved a different attacking-dog. This time Joe Ellis’s dog was attacked. She is healing, but was near death’s door for months and Ellis was also bitten.
Both Speer and Ellis asked the County Commission to pass a dog ordinance, along with a crowd of supporters.
Both incidents happened at the Fish Hatchery, a park that is on Bureau of Reclamation land that is operated by Lago Rico, which has a vendor agreement with the BOR to operate the park, three marinas and the Dam Site Recreation Area.
During the public hearing, Sheriff Glenn Hamilton said it is still unclear if the County’s dog ordinance can be enforced on BOR land. However, Neal Brown of Lago Rico is working with an attorney to address dog rules for the Fish Hatchery, Hamilton said.
The County redrafted the ordinance from the time it published it in the County agenda packet, so the public had no correct draft of the ordinance. And then the County Commission changed it again during the meeting, which made for a confused public hearing.
Various requests for additions to the ordinance by the public were strongly rejected by County Commissioner Frances Luna and less strongly by Vice Chairman Travis Day and Chairman Jim Paxon.
“We give an inch and someone wants to take a mile,” Luna said.
Paxon said the County could not afford to add rabies shots because it would require a staff person to monitor vaccines. That and other requests would require creating an animal control department he said. Such a department would cost $80,000 to $160,000 a year and that much again to set it up, Sheriff Hamilton said.
Therefore the ordinance only addresses dogs running at large and dangerous dogs, Day confirmed.
Any officer deputized by Animal Control can pick up a stray dog or dog that has bitten livestock or a person.
Speer and Ellis wanted language added that ensured dogs would be on leash if on public property, not just under control. Speers also noted the precipitating events, a dog attacking a dog, was not addressed in the ordinance, except indirectly in the definition for vicious dogs. Those requests were rejected.