Responsible Owners

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Council's Dog Management Policy, works together with the Dog Control Act 2000 to ensure dog owners are responsible for their animals.

Responsible dog ownership requires a dog owner to accept full responsibility for meeting all the care and attention needs of their dog and for ensuring their dog does not become a threat or nuisance to the safety or welfare of any other person or animal.  

For more information refer to our Dog Management Policy(PDF, 475KB)

  • The care and management of your dog
  • Registering your dog
  • When a kennel licence is required
  • When your dog needs to wear his collar
  • When your dog needs to be micro-chipped
  • Restricted breeds
  • Burnie's Dog friendly areas vs prohibited areas (see below)
  • Cleaning up after your dog
  • Nuisance and dangerous dogs
  • Information about keeping your dog under effective control

Barking Dogs

As a dog owner, it's your responsibility to ensure your dog isn't causing a nuisance and is always kept under effective control.

A dog is considered a nuisance if it persistently barks or makes noise that disrupts the peace, comfort, or convenience of others at home or in public places.

Understanding why your dog is barking and addressing the cause can help prevent complaints and maintain harmony in the neighbourhood.

If you believe your neighbour’s dog is a nuisance due to constant barking, first try talking to the dog’s owner or sending them a polite note or letter.  The owner may not be aware of the issue, especially if it occurs when they are not at home.

If the problem persists and you want the Council to investigate it under the Dog Control Act 2000, please call the council to discuss how to lodge a formal Dog complaint form and diary(PDF, 119KB) along with the applicable fee.

Following an investigation, the Council may issue infringement or abatement notices if the owner fails to stop their dog from being a nuisance.

To discuss an issue with a barking dog please contact Council Offices on 03 6430 5700.



Dog Zones

Dog Zones

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Please refer to the State Government's Dog Control Act 2000 for your obligations as a dog owner under state legislation.