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2008年职称英语综合类教材新增部分内容(九)c

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第四十四篇

Who (Doesn't) Let the Dogs Bark?


For the past year, Cornelia Czarnecki said, the barking of her neighbor's German shepherd1 has awakened her repeatedly at 4 a.m. The dog often barks for hours at a time, said Mrs. Czarnecki, a Clifton2 resident.

"That dog is out there barking day and night, and we don't know what to do anymore," she said.

Mrs. Czarnecki became so upset about the dog that she filed a municipal complaint3 against him under the town's general noise ordinance. The case is set to be heard in municipal court on August 6. Complaints like the ones Mrs. Czarnecki lodged with the police4 and city officials led the Clifton City Council to draft an ordinance that could result in fines for residents whose dogs are "barking, howling, crying" or making any other loud noises for more than 30 minutes in an

hour.

"I can't wait," Mrs. Czarnecki said. The council took up the ordinance for a first reading on Tuesday; a final vote is scheduled on August 8.

"It's a quality of life issue," said Councilman Frank C. Fusco, who introduced the measure. Clifton is far from alone in seeking to silence noisy dogs. At-least 144 of New Jersey's municipalities have laws that address whining and barking5, according to a municipal ordinance database online at www.generalcode.com.

In New York, at least 30 towns in Nassau and Suffolk Counties have similar laws, as do about 25 towns in Westchester County. Connecticut has a statewide law barring dogs that are a "nuisance" because of "excessive barking or other disturbance."

Many of the ordinances in the region are general prohibitions against excessive whining or barking. In Westchester, the City of New Rochelle ran into trouble with its law in 1997 after a resident challenged a citation. A city judge ruled that the ordinance was unconstitutionally vague6 because it did not include details about time of day and duration of barking, and the city changed the law in 1998.

"Many of these ordinances go back to the 1800s," said the New Rochelle corporation counsel, Bernis Shapiro. "They're just carried forward and they don't get changed until an issue comes up."

In May 2006, Hillsborough Township in Somerset County passed an ordinance to

specifically address barking, but no complaints have been filed since then, said Lt. Bill Geary of the Hillsborough Police Department. Other New Jersey towns, including Bloomsbury in Hunterdon County and Manville in Somerset, considered such ordinances but withdrew them after residents complained that they would be unenforceable.

As for those who contend that a barking dog should be a low priority, Councilman Fusco said, "If the dog was next to your house, you'd sing a different song."

Mr. Fusco said he was confident that the ordinance proposed in Clifton would be supported by his fellow council members. At the same time, he knows that some residents may object.

But David Axelrod, a groomer at Furrs N Purrs on Valley Road, said he did not think the measure was tough enough.

"Thirty minutes is extremely generous," he said. "There is no reason why a dog should be barking that long."

The ordinance says barking must be sustained to be illegal, and it bans excessive barking only from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m.

Under the ordinance, a, resident complains to the City Health Department, which sends a warning note. If the barking continues, the resident takes the complaint to municipal court, where fines can start at $250. Before a court date, the city would most likely try to resolve the matter through mediation, said the city attorney, Matthew T. Priore.

Last year about a dozen warning letters were sent to residents about their barking dogs, Clifton officials said.

Currently, residents can complain about barking under the city's general noise ordinance, but they have to essentially prosecute the case in municipal court themselves, Mr. Fusco said. Under the proposed ordinance, residents would appear as a witness in a case presented by the municipal prosecutor.

"The new ordinance has some bite to it," Mr. Fusco said. Eric M. Zwerling, director of the Rutgers University Noise Technical Assistance Center, trains police officers on noise complaints and writes municipal noise codes.

"One of the things I say to the officers I train is that if people were fundamentally civil to each other, we'd all be out of work," he said.

Mr. Zwerling, the owner of a chocolate Labrador named Bosco, said he had his own appreciation of the barking problem.

"A dog is barking for one of two reasons -- either it needs attention or it is trying to alert you to something," he said. "In either case, you should be attending to7 it."

词汇:

municipal adj. 市政的

ordinance n. 法令,训令,条例

howl vi. 嚎叫,怒吼

municipality  n. 市政当局,自治市

nuisance n. 讨厌的人或东西

excessive adj. 过多的

prohibition n.禁止,阻止

counsel n.辩护律师

prosecute vt.起诉

civil adj. 有礼貌的

1. German shepherd: 德国牧羊犬

2. Clifton: 克利夫顿:美国新泽西州东北部一城市,位于帕特森附近

3. file a complaint:写信控诉

4. lodge a complaint against sb. with the police: 向警方对某人提出控诉

5  laws that address whining and barking: 针对动物嘶鸣和吠声的法律

6. unconstitutionally vague:因含糊不清而违背宪法精神

7. attend to: 注意,留心

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