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Council warning on dog foul dangers 25.03.15

Dog poop is a problem we deal with on a daily basis. The main reason for dog fouling laws is because dog poop is unhygienic and a health hazard. Dog fouling is unsightly, unpleasant and can lead to toxocariasis in humans.

Here are some facts you need to know:

1. Dog poop is not good fertilizer. It's toxic to your lawn! The high nutrient concentration in dog poop will burn and discolour the grass, creating ‘hot spots’.

2. For many years pet waste has been classified as a dangerous pollutant in the same category as toxic chemicals and oil.

3. You may not live near water, but unscooped poop from your area is carried by overland water flow or is washed into storm drains, ending up in far away streams, rivers and ground water.

4. Dog poop can spread parasites including hookworms, ringworms, tapeworms and Salmonella. When infected it comes into contact with your lawn, the poop will eventually "disappear", but the parasite eggs can linger for years! When a human or animal comes into contact with that soil through everyday activities like walking barefoot, gardening or playing, they risk infection from those eggs ... even years after the poop is gone.

5. Pet waste is teaming with E. Coli and other harmful bacteria including fecal coliform bacteria, which causes serious kidney disorders, intestinal illness, cramps and diarrhoea in humans. (There are 23 million fecal coliform bacteria in a single gram of pet waste!)

6. Dog poop often contains roundworm larvae, which cause blindness. If a human ingests a roundworm larva, it can migrate through the body causing disease to the brain, lungs, kidneys, liver, heart or eyes. So when people (especially children) touch soil, dog toys or anything that has been in contact with dog poop and then touch their mouths, they can become infected.

7. Dog poop doesn't just ‘wash away’ or disappear. So if you're not disposing of your dog's waste, you're putting yourself, your family, your dog and your water supply at risk.

Dog Fouling - the law
Section 22 of the Litter Pollution Act 1997 makes it an offence for the person in charge of a dog not to clean up when their dog fouls in a public place. Please act responsibly - clean up after your dog and dispose of the dirt in a suitable sanitary manner. Dog dirt is a health hazard and some day your child might be affected by someone else’s failure to ‘do the right thing’. Failure to clean up your dog’s waste can lead to a €150 ‘on-the-spot’ fine or on summary conviction to a fine of up to €3,000.
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