Toronto dog owners bite back after city posts ‘no barking’ sign at pooch park

City called off its dogs and said it would review its sign approval process after canine owners called the prohibition ‘lunacy’

Officials in Canada’s most populous city have their tails between their legs after they were forced to call off an effort to stop dogs barking in local parks.

Inhabitants of Toronto are grudgingly accustomed to a daily soundtrack of city life: gridlocked traffic, rumbling trucks, heavy machinery and noisy neighbours.

But in recent weeks, visitors to a city dog park were taken aback by a sign asking for quiet.

“Due to the closeness of the area residents, do not allow your dogs to bark and disturb the neighbourhood. Excessive barking will not be tolerated,” the sign said.

Owners described the warning as “lunacy”, and questioned what would qualify as “excessive” barking.

“We’re at a dog park, so I think there being some form of barking or a little bit of commotion is highly likely,” Lee-Tal Hatuka told Global News. “I don’t know why anyone would think this is a reasonable sign.”

On Wednesday afternoon, the city appeared to agree, dispatching two municipal workers to the park to remove the sign.

“Although the sign was placed at this location with the intention of helping users of the off-leash area and neighbouring residents coexist harmoniously, we recognize that the information did not meet the mark,” the city of Toronto said in a statement. “The city will be reviewing its sign approval process to ensure clear communication in future signs.”

At another dog park in a downtown neighbourhood, a differently worded sign has remained in place.

“Please be respectful of the neighbours and deter your dog’s barking,” read three of the signs. Residents say they were placed around the dog park in the fall.

On Thursday morning one dog owner was philosophical about the injunction.

“I get it. When there’s enough dogs here they can get excited and get a bit loud and we’re near some apartment buildings,” she said. “And this sign seems a bit more polite.”

But as more dogs and their humans arrived at the park, her companion – a German shorthaired pointer – started barking enthusiastically.

“Hey,” she told the dog. “Read the sign.”

Contributor

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
An Indigenous woolly dog went extinct in Canada. Could it be revived?
Coast Salish peoples bred a dog with thick fur to spin into yarn, which was lost to colonisers. Now, the possibility of its genetic remains persisting presents new hope for its return

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

27, Jan, 2024 @10:15 AM

Article image
'A total fairytale': how Meghan Markle's dog went from kill shelter to royal life
Guy the beagle’s unlikely journey started from a US kill shelter to a Canadian adoption group – and now he’s part of the royal family

Ashifa Kassam in Toronto

18, May, 2018 @7:00 AM

Article image
Michelin hands out stars to 13 Toronto restaurants as city gets first guide
Twelve restaurants received one star and one restaurant received two as Toronto becomes the first Canadian city to be featured

Leyland Cecco

14, Sep, 2022 @7:08 PM

Article image
Girl’s body found in dumpster in affluent Toronto neighbourhood
Homicide investigators are trying to identify the child, whose cause of death is not yet known

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

06, May, 2022 @4:46 PM

Article image
Deadly rampage in Canada follows ‘ambush’ of Toronto police officer
Suspect killed by police after standoff in Hamilton cemetery after constable among two killed and three seriously wounded

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

13, Sep, 2022 @2:50 PM

Article image
Toronto’s mystery predator really is a coy-wolf – but not as we know it
Part urban legend, part DNA-tested reality, the coyote-wolf hybrid has adapted to dense human-built environments

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

08, Apr, 2022 @9:10 AM

Article image
Eight teenage girls charged with murder in Toronto stabbing death
The suspects – ages 13 to 16 – were said to have met via social media before gathering downtown and allegedly ‘swarming’ victim

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

20, Dec, 2022 @9:31 PM

Article image
‘I came here to escape’: Toronto tackles caste-based discrimination in schools
Activists hopeful as Canada’s largest school district takes first step towards banning caste discrimination

Olivia Bowden in Toronto

17, Mar, 2023 @9:30 AM

Article image
Toronto police identify man allegedly killed by teen girls in ‘swarming’ attack
Eight teenage girls are believed to have stabbed Ken Lee at a plaza near the main rail station in the early hours of 18 December

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

10, Jan, 2023 @4:25 PM

Article image
Legal dispute rages over unsolved C$24m gold heist at Toronto airport
Airline and armoured car company locked in bitter lawsuit over who is to blame for one of Canada’s largest ever heists

Leyland Cecco in Toronto

20, Nov, 2023 @9:32 PM