Thank you for signing!

Keep Dogs Safe, Not Chained Outside In Dangerous Weather

155 signatures toward our 30,000 goal

0.5166666666666667% Complete

Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site

Dogs chained outside can suffer from heat, cold, dehydration, strangulation, and neglect. Lawmakers must set clear limits before animals are harmed.

Dark-coated dog sitting alone on muddy ground beside a heavy chain attached to a stake.

A dog tied outside cannot always reach shade, water, shelter, or safety. A tether can tangle, tighten, trap a dog in direct sun, expose them to freezing cold, or leave them unable to escape danger.

Nassau County, New York, recently adopted one of the strictest anti-tethering laws in the country. The New York Post reported that the law bans tying a dog outside for more than 60 minutes in any 12-hour period, prohibits tethering when temperatures fall below 32 degrees or rise above 90 degrees, and bans outdoor tethering overnight between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m.1

News 12 Long Island reported that the law gives officials stronger penalties for animal neglect and outdoor tethering violations, including possible jail time, fines, or forfeiture of the animal.2

That kind of clarity should not depend on a dog’s ZIP code.

Weak Laws Leave Dogs In Danger

PETA’s summary of Nassau County’s ordinance shows how detailed strong tethering rules can be. The law prohibits outdoor tethering in unsafe temperatures, during National Weather Service heat or wind chill advisories, without appropriate shelter, with choke or pinch collars, with weights, with tethers too short for safe movement, or in ways that risk strangulation or injury.3

Humane World for Animals says dogs kept outdoors should have safe, escape-proof enclosures and proper shelter, and warns that chained dogs can face isolation, frustration, and increased risk of injury.4

The Animal Legal & Historical Center’s table of state tethering laws shows how uneven protections remain across the country. Some jurisdictions ban certain forms of tethering, while others allow it under broad conditions or leave critical details to local ordinances.5

Lawmakers Must Set A Strong Baseline

Texas’ Safe Outdoor Dogs Act offers another model. The SPCA of Texas says the law removed a 24-hour waiting period that had delayed enforcement and banned the use of chains as restraints, while still allowing safe cable tie-outs when properly attached.6

Recent heat-safety reporting in Michigan also shows why clear rules matter. Midland Daily News reported that Michigan does not have a statewide temperature cutoff for when dogs cannot be left outside, even after a case in which direct sunlight made a 73-degree day feel like 115 degrees for a dog left without shade, food, or water.7

Every state should adopt clear, enforceable anti-tethering standards that protect dogs from heat, cold, severe weather, unsafe restraints, prolonged isolation, and delayed enforcement.

Sign now to urge lawmakers nationwide to strengthen anti-tethering laws and protect dogs before they suffer outside.

More on this issue:

  1. Brandon Cruz, New York Post (27 April 2026), "Blakeman signs law to limit dog tethering — and bad NY pet owners could face jail."
  2. News 12 Long Island Staff, News 12 Long Island (27 April 2026), "Nassau Enacts New Law Targeting Animal Neglect And Outdoor Tethering."
  3. PETA, PETA (Accessed 16 June 2026), "Tethering Law in Nassau County, New York."
  4. Humane World for Animals, Humane World for Animals (Accessed 16 June 2026), "Is it okay to chain or tether dogs?."
  5. Animal Legal & Historical Center, Michigan State University College of Law (Accessed 16 June 2026), "Table of State Dog Tether Laws."
  6. SPCA of Texas, SPCA of Texas (18 January 2022), "Safe Outdoor Dogs Act Goes into Effect Today."
  7. Crystal Huggins, Midland Daily News (8 June 2026), "How hot is too hot for dogs outside in Michigan? What the law says."

The Petition

Dear State Lawmakers, Governors, County Leaders, City Officials, and Animal Control Agencies,

I urge you to strengthen anti-tethering laws for dogs and create clear, enforceable protections against dangerous outdoor restraint.

Dogs tied outside for long periods can be trapped in heat, cold, rain, snow, direct sun, or severe weather. They may be unable to reach shade, clean water, food, or safe shelter. Tethers can tangle, tighten, injure a dog’s neck, restrict movement, or leave an animal exposed to strangulation and attack.

No dog should suffer because the law is too vague or too weak for animal control officers to act.

Nassau County, New York, has shown that stronger rules are possible. Its 2026 law limits outdoor tethering to 60 minutes in any 12-hour period, bans tethering during dangerous temperatures, prohibits overnight tethering, and creates meaningful penalties for violations. Other jurisdictions should build on that model and adapt it into statewide and local standards.

Please pass laws that limit how long dogs may be tethered outdoors; ban tethering during extreme heat, freezing cold, severe weather alerts, and overnight hours; prohibit chains, choke collars, pinch collars, heavy restraints, and tethers that can tangle or cause strangulation; require constant access to clean water, shade, and safe shelter; and protect puppies, senior dogs, sick dogs, injured dogs, and pregnant dogs from outdoor tethering.

Please also give animal control officers and law enforcement the authority to intervene quickly when a dog is in danger. Waiting periods and vague standards can leave animals suffering until harm becomes irreversible.

These laws should not criminalize responsible temporary restraint, supervised outdoor time, or humane care. They should target prolonged, unsafe, and neglectful tethering that puts dogs at risk.

Every dog deserves safety, movement, shelter, and care. Their protection should not depend on where they live.

Please strengthen anti-tethering laws and help keep dogs from being chained outside to suffer.

Sincerely,