JJ and others concerned about this bill,
I did some time (so to speak) as a staff member in the NYS Legislature for a number of years, so I speak from some experience in this matter...
I can assure you that this bill is DOA.
First, it has no co-sponsor in the NYS Senate. This is a death nell for any bill as it usually requires sponsorship in both houses to move (there are very rare exceptions-usually budget related).
Second, there is no upstate support for the bill and it is sponsored by only a few NYC legislators. (Only 10/150 Members of Assembly signed onto this bill.) Upstaters have at least enough power that this bill will never become law and the low # of co-sponsors clues one in to it's lack of real support.
Thirdly, it has not nor will it likely ever receive consideration in the Ag Committee and thus will not even proceed to the Assembly Floor for a vote before the full body.
I can assure you that it will NEVER pass either house of the NY Leg. It sounds like a bill drafted in response to an unfortunate tragedy. Legislators typically introduce a bill like this to say: "Look, I'm doing something about this problem" without having to explain to someone that such quixotic legislation is not worth drafting and introducing before the legislative body in the first place. They draft it, it dies in Committee and then the legislator goes home and tells his/her constituency that the rest of the politicians in Albany don't care about any given issue, but that "I tried to fight for you." Now I've started going negative so I'll leave it there!
BTW, Betty Little is a terrific legislator and your letter will likely receive a response from her. I can't imagine her supporting such a bill (but I can't speak for her in this matter) but you can demonstrate your attention to legislative matters by writing her anyway.
I wouldn't sweat this one.
[None of my comments should be construed to suggest that I'm insensitive to the problem of vicious dogs. It IS a problem, but not on a scale that requires LEGISLATIVE attention. Give the local animal control officers enough power to deal with such threats directly and we wouldn't have state legislators wasting their time on this kind of tripe. Then maybe they could focus on our REAL problems...acid rain, budget disasters, corporate fraud and the like. PS: this also appears to be a revenue generator...another tax!]
Lastly, for those really worried about liability re: their pets...check with your insurance agent. Many renters and homeowners policies today cover such liability. If not, you can add a cheap rider to protect you, your pet and any potential victim. This bill is another example of legislating away the rights of law-abiding citizens because law-breakers and immoral breeders don't follow the law anyway. Passing a bill won't change the behavior of such morons, it just restricts more of our rights and incurs greater taxes and fees on we who are already taxed to death.
I now step down off the soap box...