Doggy Dining
Pictured: Restaurant in Nîmes, FranceIn France dining with your dog is a part of every day life. Dogs go in restaurants, grocery stores, and even on trains with their owners. The other night at dinner at a table next to us, a couple sat with their ‘tween son and a tiny doggy that they passed from person to person until the food came. Then he was expected to sit calmly under the chair. He started yelping quickly afterwards when a very big dog came wondering around the restaurant’s terrace looking for handouts (see above photo).
We are the owners of two dogs and two cats who live with us in Kansas. Our lives would be more convenient if we could live like the French and both walk our dogs and sit in restaurants with them on the patio. We used to be able to do this at one of our favorite restaurants in Manhattan, but the management there recently changed and they told us we would have to attach the dogs on the outside of the railing rather than have them at the table with us. They even brought us cups of water for the pooches so they wouldn’t get too hot. Sadie, who was a puppy at the time, dug up their herb garden, and we decided we’d better leave.
Around the same time that rule changed last fall, a reporter called Doug and asked what he thought about the doggy dining laws in Florida. My reaction was that I would frequent a restaurant that allowed me to bring my dog, but if I were a restaurant owner, I would not allow dogs on the patio. Beyond the liability issues of “What if a customer’s dog bit one of my staff or other clients?” I see people do all sorts of strange things with their pets. I confess, I too am guilty of letting my dog lick my plate, but some people even share their food while they’re eating it. As a restaurant owner, knowing I am liable if someone gets sick in my restaurant, and knowing that dogs do often eat poop and live to …err.. tell about it, I wouldn’t trust that a customer wouldn’t sue me for their E. coli poisoning if they got sick from their dog’s germs. The U.S. has strict liability laws when it comes to food safety. If I served the food with poop, I’d be hard pressed to prove where it came from.
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Just a tid-bit from closer to home: St. Louis is apparently in the process of pushing through a bill to allow dog-dining according to this St. Louis Post-Dispatch Article from May 14, 2007: http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/44B33736F7C2AB5B862572DB0010BF3A?OpenDocument
Another update from St. Louis:
***City aldermen back doggy dining proposal***
14.jun.07
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Jake Wagman
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/14CCA411A8520B8A862572FA006BE880?OpenDocument
The Board of Aldermen's Public Safety committee this afternoon backed a revised version of a proposal to allow dogs to join their human companions in outdoor dining areas.
Currently, health regulations prohibit most live animals from being on the premises of an eating establishment, including patios and sidewalk cafés.
A bill brought to the committee last week would have lifted the ban citywide, but the plan was met with opposition from some aldermen reluctant to welcome dogs to tables in their wards.
Today, Krewson bought back an amended bill to the committee that excludes several wards - the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 12th, 18th and 27th - as well as includes some provisions to protect against messes and rowdy canines.
The new bill requires restaurants to immediately clean-up "any unsanitary condition resulting from a dog" and provide "waterless hand sanitizer in a convenient location." Krewson's proposal also requires dogs to remain leashed, and gives the proprietor of the restaurant the authority to seek the removal of any dog whose behavior is deemed "undesirable or disruptive."
Though the existing prohibition against dogs on restaurant patios is rarely enforced, it became an issue when the city's Health Department threatened to take action against the Boathouse restaurant in Forest Park, a popular spot for pet owners.
But as an example of how popular the practice is, Krewson at today's hearing held up a picture of the recent Pooches at the Ballpark day, showing a dog and its owners at Busch Stadium - where food is served.
"Under current law,"said Krewson, holding up the photo, "it looks pretty illegal."
Krewson's bill now heads to the full board, which could give final approval later this month.