Description
Another dead dog dumped in the same place as the last dead dog a few months ago. The bucket that the last dog was sitting on top of is still there. Please clean up both. If you don't handle dead animals please forward this to the correct department so this gets handled. It is a health hazard. Bloating has already set in and soon it will begin to rot and stink.
12 Comments
Acknowledged City of Oakland (Verified Official)
Eileen (Registered User)
Reported online to animal services. For future reference, you can use this form:
https://spreadsheets.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?hl=en&formkey=ckkyWXpqWnd3UFJUZGRyMlRKTFoxdEE6MA..&ifq
bennett (Registered User)
Eileen (Registered User)
BB (Registered User)
Eileen (Registered User)
Eileen (Registered User)
Oh, sorry, Ben. I just noticed you are "Admin" for seeclickfix. (Not enough coffee.) I'll be happy to contact Animal Services to see if they want to participate directly. I do feel contacting them myself via their online form is better and faster because they can call me if they have questions or need clarification. While I love seeclickfix, the platform does have some limitations. I like reporting directly to Code Enforcement, as well, because I then have a case # from them and follow up. The seeclickfix report # isn't the same thing.
I would like messaging ability on seeclickfix, so users can communicate, organize and work together to create change.
bennett (Registered User)
Eileen (Registered User)
bennett (Registered User)
Eileen (Registered User)
Hmmm…
In some states, certain owners are exempt from limit laws. Exemption cases include special groups, such as licensed breeders and boarding facilities, and owners who licensed their pets before the limit law took effect. For example, in Oakland, California, the limit for dogs per household is three, but one home can have more than three dogs if they were licensed before Jan. 1, 2006.
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/OAKLAND-3-dog-limit-gets-final-City-Council-2576482.php
If they ared unlicensed backyard breeders, then perhaps Oakland Animal Services should be notified.
City of Oakland (Verified Official)
City of Oakland Public Works Agency referred this issue to OPD ANIMAL SERVICES, service request # 504976.Please contact that agency to follow-up, see “Other Helpful Links” at:
http://www2.oaklandnet.com/Government/o/PWA/Connect/ReportaProblem/index.htm#Links.
Here are some important City of Oakland contact points:
Abandoned Autos: (510) 777-8622 (abandoned vehicles on the public street after 3 days)
Animal Control (510) 535-5602 (live animals); (510) 535-4888 (dead animals)
Code Enforcement: (510) 238-3381 (blighted private properties, deteriorated buildings, inoperable vehicles on private property)
Drug Hotline: (510) 238-3784 (tips); (510) 777-3211 (in progress)
Parking Citations (800) 500-6484 (parking citation assistance center, pay or appeal a citation); (510) 238-3099 (enforcement)
Prostitution Hotline: (510) 238-2373 (tips); (510) 777-3211 (in progress)
Thank you.