Keep phoning police and council they will eventually take action
2006-12-31 10:29:21
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Why are you asking a question that the answer to is common sense, and surely is known by every adult ? The way to deal with it is ,you contact the council, they send you a form to keep a log of when the nuisance, ie barking occurs.The council dog warden pays the people with the annoying dog a visit. Then either they put a stop to it or are fined and can have the dog taken off them. I have carried out this procedure twice and the dog warden has been very helpful on both occasions.By the way the RSPCA is useless and is simply a killing organisation. They put down thousands of dogs a week ,and do not help in the welfare of animals at all. Only on TV !
2006-12-31 10:47:07
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answer #2
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answered by Tracker 5
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How about the council or the dog warden at the council, R.S.P.C.A, police...there is quite a few people u could go to about this problem-personally i would report it then the next night i would wait till it was dark, get some meat for the dogs and go in the neighbours garden and bribe the dogs out...just to annoy the owners-mayb then they will realise that the in fact have the dogs & take a bit of notice of them..perhaps go as far as to walk them eh and it would entertain you while you wait for the dog controlller to take the dogs away from them!
2006-12-31 16:48:14
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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despite you do, do not call 911. it somewhat is an emergency selection and you'd be able to finally end up in a sprint bit difficulty for calling approximately something that i via no potential an emergency. in case you will desire to call the police, do so by their community selection. there isn't any rationalization so which you would be able to would desire to submit with a friends canines barking all day or all night. verify including your different friends and in line with risk you may contemporary a united front to help remedy the difficulty. I additionally do not think of your neighbor would desire to be offended in case you call at a sensible hour and ask them to take the canines in as a results of fact your daughter can now not sleep with them barking. If that would not artwork, then i could call the police and notice what may well be achieved. i think of they may well be charged with demanding the peace.
2016-10-19 07:14:30
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answer #4
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answered by Erika 4
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You can report it to the Environmental Health department of your local council as a Noise Nuisance.
If they are outside without shelter etc and you think its a cruelty case then report it to the local RSPCA.
You will find the numbers in the phone book usually near the front!
Hope that helps!
Dont phone the police if you are complaining about noise as they will just refer you to the council!
2006-12-31 10:39:57
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answer #5
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answered by willowGSD 6
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well, i'm not sure about the UK but here in the US we could report those people to the police and/or animal control for violating noise ordinances. i used to be in the same situation as you and we filed a complaint, the owners got a letter of warning from animal control, and then they finally made the dog be quiet. if they had let the dog continue to bark they would have recieved fines.
2006-12-31 10:30:54
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answer #6
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answered by sgdrkfae 2
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Contact your local council........Public Health dept.......................
Noise Nuisance
What noise problems do we investigate?
We will investigate noise nuisance complaints relating to both domestic and commercial premises. Last year we responded to almost 3,000 domestic noise nuisance complaints. We can investigate the following types of noise:
The playing of loud amplified music or loud television
***Continuous dog barking****
DIY activities for prolonged periods or at unreasonable hours
Continuous sounding car, house or commercial alarms
How do we investigate noise nuisance complaints?
We discuss the problem with the complainant and may ask them to complete Noise Record Forms, in the form of a diary, for a period of time. These help us to identify how long the noise goes on for and what effect it has on the complainant's enjoyment of their home life. The Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs website provides useful information on noise including a downloadable booklet 'Bothered by Noise', which offers important advice on dealing with noise problems.
We try to resolve noise problems informally where possible and initially we may contact the person causing the noise to make them aware that complaints have been made to us.
If the noise persists after an individual has been advised/warned, we will attempt to gather evidence to prove that the noise complained about is what is termed a 'statutory noise nuisance'. During normal office hours, we may for example attempt to visit and personally witness the noise. Out-of-office hours we may install sensitive noise-monitoring equipment eg. tamper-proof tape recorders that make recordings which are identical to what the human ear would hear. Another option we have is to put the complainant on our Rapid Response Register, where the complainant can call-out an Environmental Health Officer to witness the noise nuisance.
In some cases we can also use evidence given to us by independent third parties who may have witnessed the noise nuisance whilst at your property, for example from Police Officers, other City Council officials or health service workers.
If the noise is a statutory noise nuisance – what happens next?
If we can prove the noise is a statutory nuisance we are required to take action under Part III of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 and this would normally mean serving a Noise Abatement Notice on the person(s) causing the noise nuisance. This can be the actual person causing the noise or any person who is allowing the noise nuisance to occur, for example the landlord of a property with noisy tenants. The abatement notice would require the statutory nuisance to be stopped and/or prevented from occurring again. If someone is found guilty of failing to comply with an abatement notice they can be fined up to a maximum of £5,000 for domestic noise and up to £20,000 for commercial noise. If we serve an abatement notice because of excessively loud music, but the problem continues, we will normally also seize all the sound equipment that is causing the problem. Depending on the circumstances we may charge the perpetrator £100 for return of the equipment or alternatively we may prosecute the person and ask the Courts permission to have it destroyed.
2006-12-31 10:45:31
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Ring the RSPCA and tell them you are worried for it's safety. No animal should be locked outside without shelter, water or food. If all this is present then your local council will be the ones to deal with it. But please ring the RSPCA first. Lets put a stop to animal cruelty.
2006-12-31 11:57:17
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answer #8
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answered by oldshoespoetry 2
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You need to ring your Council and ask to speak to someone in the Enviroment department about it. Or, you could complain to the dogs owner and ask if he can muzzle the dog to stop the barking.
2006-12-31 10:45:46
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Well i don`t think you should report these neghbours until you find out the condision this dog is in if it has no shelter food or water then you shuld call animal cops they do reserch cases like this but find some facts then take action! hope the dog is ok
2006-12-31 11:01:48
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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