Animal Control: Dog Licensing Deadline Is June 30

New Canaan Police are reminding dog owners to have their pets licensed with the town by June 30. 

Owners face a late fee for registering dogs after the deadline, according to Officer Allyson Halm, head of the Police Department Animal Control section. In addition to a nominal monthly fee, an additional failure to license citation could be assessed, which carries a fee of $75 per dog. State law calls for all dogs at least six months old to be licensed, and proof of rabies vaccination is required. A dog’s license helps authorities locate owners in cases where the animals are lost, Halm said. “It’s the law and it’s also a safety factor,” Halm said.

Cat That Wandered into Local Home To Be Put Up for Adoption

A cat that wandered into a New Canaan home last week is expected to go up for adoption soon, officials said. The black cat on Friday entered a Richards Lane home wearing no ID tags and local police transported the animal to the town’s shelter at the dump, according to Officer Allyson Halm, head of the New Canaan Police Department Animal Control section. Animal Control held the animal over the long weekend “hoping someone would realize they lost their cat,” Halm said. It wasn’t clear whether the cat was a stray, or had been dumped or lost. According to Halm, the cat is a male, appears to be a purebred and “has features similar to those of a Bombay cat.” His age is currently unknown.

Unwanted Dog: Residents Mislead Police About Ownership of Pit Bull

Police last month took custody temporarily of an out-of-state dog about whose ownership a Smith Ridge Road family misled authorities. 

An individual at 119 Smith Ridge Road initially led Animal Control to believe that a pit bull in her garage had been found, officials said. The dog was said by the reporting party to be aggressive, according to an incident report obtained by NewCanaanite.com through a Freedom of Information Act request. 

Yet when police arrived at the home on the morning of April 11 to pick up the dog, they were told that the animal belonged to a man living there, Gilberto Constanza-Retana. He told police that his own brother—Francisco Retana, who lived in Brewster, N.Y.—had advised that the dog could no longer stay at the Smith Ridge Road home because the animal was a threat to children in the house, the incident report said. Further, Constanza-Retana told police that he was sick and could not care for the dog. 

That brother, Retana, arrived and repeated what Constanza-Retana had said, according to the report. At the request of police officers, Retana then transported the dog to the New Canaan Veterinary Hospital, the report said.