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Mother and daughter have 7-8 dogs in the residential building. Should property management be held responsible?

Property has no law enforcement power, so it is difficult to interfere with the freedom of others to keep dogs. However, the property can choose to call the police, because raising 7 or 8 dogs has seriously affected the environment and safety of the community, so the property should bear certain responsibilities.

I can understand how people who like dogs feel, because I have a dog myself. There are many empty nesters without children. It is understandable to have one or two puppies to relieve your loneliness, but having seven or eight dogs does affect others. Anyone who has ever owned a dog knows that animals like dogs will bark together once they hear the same kind of barking. Imagine if I were this neighbor and suddenly seven or eight dogs barked from the building at night, would I be crazy?

We pay a lot of property fees every month, just to make the community clean and hygienic, so that children can play safely in the community. The property has the responsibility and obligation to protect our legitimate rights and interests, so if the dog barks in the middle of the night, or the dog is aggressive when the family walks the dog, or the family goes out to walk the dog without cleaning up the dog's feces, then the property should bear the responsibility, although the property cannot interfere. However, the property should also negotiate with family members to let them take care of their dogs. If negotiation fails, the property should choose to call the police to protect the legitimate rights and interests of most residents in the community, and let the police check the dog license to see if the dog raised by this family is a small dog that can be raised in the city.

Actually, there is one near my home. They have five dogs. They never leash their dogs when they go out for a walk, and they don't have a dog license. Every day, the elevator smells of dog urine, and you can often see shit in the elevator. Our residents negotiated with this family many times and found the property. When the property came, they called the police without saying anything. The police found out that there was no dog license. Later, the family paid a fine and sent the dog away ~

Back to the topic, it is the responsibility of the property to protect the legitimate rights and interests of residents in the community. If the property does not act, set up a community Committee to put pressure on the property!