NC House panel advances anti-tethering animal bill

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1–2 minutes

Summary

A North Carolina House committee advanced a bill to limit tethering of dogs and cats, but opposition and timing could complicate its path.

Why this matters

The bill would set statewide standards for how owners care for dogs and cats, including limits on tethering in extreme weather. Its progress also reflects the challenges animal welfare legislation has faced in the General Assembly.

A North Carolina House committee on Tuesday unanimously advanced a bill that would set minimum care standards for domestic dogs and cats, though its prospects remain uncertain late in the legislative session.

The bill, known as Duke’s Rescue Act, was named for a dog rescued after being found chained outside next to another dog that had starved to death. It would bar owners from tethering animals outdoors in extreme weather, including temperatures below 32 degrees and above 85 degrees Fahrenheit.

A first violation would be a Class 3 misdemeanor, and a second would be a Class 2 misdemeanor. Committee members questioned whether those penalties are too light because state animal cruelty law treats depriving animals of “necessary sustenance” as a more serious Class 1 misdemeanor.

Similar animal welfare measures have faced difficulty at the General Assembly. A 2013 effort to ban puppy mills failed in the state Senate despite support from the governor and his wife.

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