Friday, September 22, 2006

Advice on starting a dog park in your town

Note to my readers: if anyone that comes across this blog wants to petition the City of Bloomington to start a dog park, there's a good source on that topic at usa.dog-parks.org.

I've pasted the post here for reference . . .you never know when a post might be removed:


You can read a bit about our process here and that may help. The best piece of advice I can give you is to get a group of interested citizens together to plan and lobby for a dog park. While your local Parks and Rec Dept and your local government can easily dismiss one or two people with a bright idea, it is much more difficult to dismiss a group, preferably large, of determined and well-informed people, especially if they get a lot of publicity in their local papers (write letters, get interviews, photos, etc.), hold fundraisers, pass out info, and so on. If you are really lucky, there might be an enlightened person at your Parks and Rec so that the initial persuasion would be reduced. By the way, it is better to pitch the idea as a place for people who have dogs than a place that dogs need.

I got a group started by writing letters to my local papers and inviting interested people to contact me. I also put together a small brochure and some business-size cards with a brief mission statement and contact info, which everyone in the group posted anywhere they could think of and dropped into neighbors' mailboxes, etc. You need to be inventive. Keep a record of everyone's contact info and begin an email list as soon as possible to save hours on the phone. Get other people to take over tasks like that. Meet regularly so you can plan strategy.

The other important piece of advice would be to try to get someone on the inside at Town Hall on your side. This can be invaluable - all sorts of hints, contacts, and info can come your way. We had the assistant director of Parks and Rec supporting us and helping us to find a suitable spot within the existing park land. He also helped us know what hoops we had to jump through - we had to make presentations to various town commissions that had to give permission for the dog park project.


Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Bloomington needs a dog park

I know, there are probably bigger issues in the world today to be concerned with. It's just that, if I'm going to be forced to "donate" to a cause I don't believe in, I had better get my chance to effect change!

Here's a letter I wrote to my City Alderman:

Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2006 10:00 AM
To: ward 7 alderman [redacted]
Subject: City of Bloomington Dog Park?

Steven,

I read the recent [redacted] article regarding the [redacted] intent to create a second dog park with great interest.

Living in the heart of Bloomington just a mile from [redacted] Park, it would be extremely convenient to have a place to bring my dog where she could run off leash. I've made a few trips over to the park, hearing that it was sort of an unofficial dog park, where responsible owners with well-behaved dogs could go to enjoy some green space. On about my 3rd or 4th trip over, I was cited with a $50 ticket for an ordinance violation of the leash law. The ticket was given to me on a Wednesday morning at approximately 8:30 am. The whole of [redacted] Park was occupied with just 2 bird watchers, another owner and their dog, and a Park Policeman. Not even a slight rain was enough to deter this policeman from doing his duty. How frustrating!

The policeman tried to help me understand why he was issuing a ticket . . .apparently, some local residents had complained that dogs were running off their leashes. Possibly that an off-leash dog approached a baby stroller and scared the parent. This is an understandable concern. But why not attempt to issue tickets during the hours of 4 pm to 6 pm, when the problem likely occurred -- and when the park is crowded with kids practicing football with their families watching? This is the time that would seem to present the greatest danger!

If a citizen can't go to a city park on off hours in the rain with his 5-month old puppy, what other options are there? I suppose I could drive up to [redacted] Park in [redacted], but I don't pay [redacted] taxes, I'm not a resident of [redacted], and on a weekday work day, another 10 minutes of driving each way truly makes a difference.

Is there anything you can to do convince the Council to revisit this issue? Or how about even setting aside morning hours permitting dogs off-leash access to city parks? Surely, if the [redacted] can make plans to create a second park, obstacles like public support and liability insurance costs must be small ones to overcome.

Please let me know if there's anything I can do to assist you in this effort.

Regards,

[salutation redacted]

Enc:

Sources showing benefits of dog parks:
http://gazette.cyberrails.net/Archives.asp?A=109
http://www.watsondogpark.org/whatsADogPark
http://www.trumbulldogpark.com
http://www.tredyffrin.org/pdf/community/complete-prosp.pdf
http://www.seacoastonline.com/2004news/yorkstar/ys5_13b.htm


Sunday, September 10, 2006

It's pool time!

Today's the big day! Pacey is almost 6 months old and we're off to the Dog Days celebration at the local pool. For the past few years, they've held a fund raiser for the local Humane Society. After the last week of pool season and before they empty and clean the pool, they invite local residents to bring their dogs in for a swim.