Duke's Rescue Act.
Establishes statewide minimum care standards for dogs and cats, covering housing, feeding, water, exercise, veterinary care, shelter in extreme weather, and tethering rules.
Establishes statewide minimum care standards for dogs and cats, covering housing, feeding, water, exercise, veterinary care, shelter in extreme weather, and tethering rules.
Status & Procedural History
- Introduced April 1–2, 2025; passed First Reading April 2, 2025.
- Referred to: Wildlife Resources (primary); if favorable → Judiciary 2; then Rules.
- Would add a new § 14‑360.5 to Article 47 of Chapter 14 of the North Carolina General Statutes.
- Primary sponsors: Representatives Ross, Carney, Cotham, and Ward.
Purpose / Intent
- Establish statewide minimum standards of care for companion animals (defined as domestic dogs and domestic cats) to reduce suffering and clarify owner responsibilities.
Key Provisions
- Duty of owners: Any person who owns a companion animal must provide the following minimum standards:
- Adequate care (good animal husbandry, humane handling, transport, euthanasia when necessary).
- Adequate exercise (opportunity to move sufficiently for normal muscle tone appropriate to age/size/condition).
- Adequate feed (sufficient quantity and nutrition; accessible; prepared for ease of consumption; provided cleanly and at appropriate intervals — at least once daily unless a veterinarian prescribes otherwise).
- Adequate shelter (suitable for species/age/condition; protects from injury and weather; properly lighted, cleaned and allows animals to remain clean and dry; shading and thermal protections; bedding when ambient temperature < 32°F; for dogs and cats, a solid resting surface that is sanitary).
- Adequate space (room to stand, sit, lie, turn, and make normal body movements; safe interaction with other animals).
- Adequate water (clean, fresh, potable water in appropriate receptacles and volumes given weather/conditions).
- Appropriate veterinary treatment, including emergency veterinary treatment (stabilize life‑threatening conditions, alleviate suffering, prevent disease progression/transmission).
Tethering: Specific rules when animals are tethered:
Shelter & extreme weather: Shelter must prevent exposure to heat/cold and other hazards. “Extreme weather” is defined to include hurricane/tropical storm warnings, heat advisories, severe weather warnings, and outdoor temps ≥85°F or ≤32°F; tethering outdoors during extreme weather is not considered adequate shelter.
Definitions and Scope
- “Companion animal” = domestic dog or domestic cat; expressly excludes animals raised for human consumption (meat, milk, eggs).
- The bill provides detailed statutory definitions for terms such as “adequate shelter,” “adequate feed,” “adequate water,” “adequate exercise,” “emergency veterinary treatment,” and “extreme weather.”
Exceptions
- Requirements regarding adequate shelter and space do not apply when a dog is:
- Used in a lawful hunt;
- Restrained while engaged in shepherding/herding or cultivating agricultural activities;
- Restrained in accordance with camping or recreational area rules.
Enforcement & Penalties
- The text provided creates care standards but (in the excerpt) does not specify enforcement mechanisms or penalties. Implementation/enforcement would likely rely on existing animal cruelty/neglect statutes and local animal control authorities unless the bill elsewhere provides new enforcement provisions.
Who Is Affected
- Primary: owners/caretakers of dogs and cats in North Carolina.
- Secondary: animal control agencies, local law enforcement, veterinarians, rescue organizations, shelters, and courts (if enforcement actions arise).
Potential Impacts
- Clarifies minimum caretaker duties and provides specific, measurable standards (e.g., tether length/weight, temperature thresholds) that can guide enforcement and prosecutions for neglect/abuse under existing law.
- May increase calls for animal welfare investigations and create clearer grounds for intervention. The bill excludes farm animals raised for consumption and certain working/hunting contexts.
For further review
- Read the full bill text of § 14‑360.5 for any additional procedural sections, penalties, or enforcement instructions that may be included beyond the excerpt summarized here.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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