Dog bill defeated by one vote
Published 11:04 am Wednesday, February 8, 2017
Members of the Virginia House of Delegates killed a bill Monday which specifically targeted dog hunters.
The legislation, House Bill (HB) 1900, proposed by House Speaker William J. “Bill” Howell, R-Stafford, would have made it illegal for gaming dogs to trespass on properties where permission has been denied to the animals’ owners.
The House defeated the bill, with 48 delegates voting “no” and the remaining 47 voting members voting “yes.”
The initial draft of the bill was written to include not only game dogs, but all dogs, including pets.
The bill defeated by the house was a substitute, approved by the House Committee on Rules on Jan. 31.
The substitute specifically stated the legislation applied to hunting or dogs chasing game.
It listed a fine up to $100 for the first occurrence and a fine up to $250 for consecutive occurrences.
“We’ve got laws on the books already that they’re not enforcing,” Jon Berkley, a member of the United Eastern Virginia Dog Association, who lives in Charlotte, said in a previous interview.
In some instances, Berkley said there’s only one conservation officer overseeing two or three counties, noting he didn’t see how the legislation could be enforced.
Berkley said people were upset with the bill because there are other things they wanted to see the General Assembly focus on.
“I think it would be detrimental to Southside Virginia,” President of the United Eastern Virginia Dog Association Derrick Toombs said in a previous interview.
He said the bill wouldn’t have ended hound hunting, but it would have so many stipulations on it that hunters wouldn’t be able to use hounds.