SACO — A proposal to limit dogs on the city’s public beaches has dog owners worried they will lose one of the last places they can take their dogs to swim in the ocean on warm summer days.

Prompted by complaints from residents at a waterfront condominium complex near Bayview Beach, the City Council this month asked Police Chief Brad Paul to draft an ordinance that would limit when dogs are allowed on public beaches.

Currently, dogs must be on leash or under voice control, and owners must clean up after their dogs.

City councilors will consider the issue Aug. 6, but Mayor Mark Johnston said he doesn’t think anything will change.

“I do not believe the council will do any restrictions other than what is already there,” Johnston said. “Dog lovers, don’t fear. Your family members can continue to use the beach.”

Dog access to public beaches has been a controversial issue in several southern Maine coastal towns.

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After years of debate about dogs on Willard Beach, South Portland voters in 2008 rejected a proposal to ban dogs during the summer. But dogs are not allowed on beaches during the day in Old Orchard Beach, Scarborough and Biddeford during the summer months. Dogs are banned April through September from the beach at Ferry Beach State Park, which is between the two stretches of public beach in Saco.

As more bans have been put in place at other beaches, more dogs are showing up in Saco, according to residents at the Baywood condominium complex, located near the Bay View Beach public parking lot and beach access point at Seaside Avenue and Bayview Road.

“The Saco oceanfront beaches have become the ‘dog mecca’ of southern Maine,” Joseph Pacella, president of the Baywood Condominium Owner’s Association, wrote in a letter to city officials this summer.

Sally Sea, a condo board member, said residents are mostly concerned about sanitation.

“There are a lot of people who do not clean up after their animals. We don’t have a whole lot of beach,” Sea said. “A lot of owners do everything right, but the people out there who don’t are the ones we’re concerned about.”

Saco police have not received any complaints other than from the condo association, according to Paul. After the first letter, he sent Animal Control Officer Bruce Reynolds to survey the beach from various vantage points and at different times.

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“(Reynolds) found that roughly two out of three people with dogs had physical leashes on their dogs.

The vast majority of the rest had their dogs in close proximity,” Paul said.

Joseph Hirsch, director of Saco Parks and Recreation Department, said that during his 20 years with the city, his lifeguards have not reported any problems with dog owners who won’t comply with the rules when asked.

Shannan Hall-Nutting, a dog trainer and owner of Finish Forward Dogs in Saco, brings her own dogs to the beach frequently but also holds training sessions on Bayview to help bridge the gap between classes and real-world situations.

“I’ve never had any reason for concern about the dogs on the beach. It would really be unfortunate to lose that access,” she said Wednesday as she watched friends’ dogs play in the surf. “This is one of the gems we have in the area.”

Other dog owners said they were surprised the City Council was considering limits to dog access.

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“I thought it was a non-issue,” said Chloe Stearns, who lives near the beach and walks her dog there regularly. “We’ve never seen dog droppings on the beach.”

A small poster about the upcoming City Council discussion was posted Wednesday on a fence at the entrance of Bayview Beach.

Nita Olsen of Saco said she plans to support a change. Olsen said she visits the beach five times a week and has seen problems ranging from children being knocked over by dogs to owners leaving their dogs tied up without water. She asks people to clean up after their dogs when she sees that they haven’t done so.

“They don’t like to pick up half the time,” she said. “Other beaches have stopped allowing dogs. Why should one beach allow them all?”

Other beachgoers were less concerned. Saco resident Mike McCormack said dogs contribute to the family setting at the beach and can be a catalyst for new friendships. Pierre Gauthier of Montreal said he chose to vacation near Saco specifically so he could bring his dog, Nino, to the beach.

“You want to sit down on the beach beside your dog. You don’t want to leave your dog in the car,” he said. “I came here because I could bring my dog on the beach.”

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The City Council will consider the proposal during its meeting at 7 p.m. Aug. 6 at Saco City Hall.

Copies of the draft ordinance will be available to the public on Aug. 3.

Staff Writer Gillian Graham can be contacted at 791-6315 or at:

ggraham@mainetoday.com

Twitter: grahamgillian


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