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Protect Dogs From Extreme Heat And Death
Final signature count: 1,356
1,356 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Dogs should not have to suffer in dangerous heat before animal control can act. Lawmakers must set clear statewide rules.
After a dog was left outside for hours in direct sunlight, with the air temperature at 73 degrees but conditions reaching 115 degrees in the sun, police were called in to investigate. The dog reportedly had no access to shade, water, or food, and the owner was cited for animal neglect and improper tethering.1
The case exposed a dangerous gap in Michigan law. The state requires pet owners to provide “adequate care,” including food, water, shelter, sanitary conditions, exercise, and veterinary care.2 But Michigan does not have a statewide law that prohibits dogs from being left outside when temperatures reach a specific threshold.1
That leaves animal control officers, police, courts, and dog owners working with a broad standard when the danger can be immediate.
Heat Can Become Dangerous Fast
Dogs cool themselves mostly by panting. The American Animal Hospital Association says heatstroke usually occurs when a pet’s body temperature rises above 104 degrees Fahrenheit, and it can lead to severe health complications or death without quick treatment.3
Warning signs can include excessive panting, drooling, weakness, vomiting, confusion, collapse, and seizures.1 Puppies, senior dogs, overweight dogs, flat-faced breeds, dogs with thick coats, and animals with underlying health issues can be especially vulnerable.
The problem is not limited to summer. Michigan’s weather can also create dangerous cold. The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development warns that animals who are young, elderly, short-coated, or medically vulnerable may be more susceptible to freezing temperatures and that wind chill can intensify risk.4
Animal Control Needs A Stronger Law
Michigan Humane says its cruelty investigators handle more than 5,000 animal cruelty complaints each year in Detroit, Hamtramck, and Highland Park.5 Midland Daily News reported that animal cruelty cases reported to Michigan State Police more than doubled from 480 in 2020 to 982 in 2024.1
Lawmakers have already considered bills to strengthen animal care standards and clarify shelter and tethering rules, including legislation addressing food, water, shelter, clean conditions, exercise, veterinary care, and dog tethering requirements.6
Michigan should build on that work now. A statewide law should set clear temperature and heat-index limits, require shade and potable water, prohibit unsafe tethering during extreme weather, require temperature-safe shelter, and allow faster seizure or emergency care when dogs are in danger.
No dog should have to collapse before the law becomes clear.
Sign now to urge Michigan leaders to pass a statewide extreme-weather dog protection law and give animal control officers the tools to save dogs from dangerous heat and cold.
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