I think that's ridiculous, too!  Dogs are pack animals and create strong bonds 
with their families.  It's got to be very, very stressful for these poor dogs 
to be up-rooted from one family to the other.  It seems like these people are 
treating them like rental furniture or something.  It should not be legal, IMO.
 
Stefanie

--- On Tue, 8/5/08, Raquel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Raquel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Chihuahuas] In the news...
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, August 5, 2008, 2:29 PM







This was on my start up page of yahoo, not sure if anyone else read it. But I 
think it's ridiculous! Talk about having a stressful and confused dog! I for 
one, think this is wrong. 
 
Monica Had 2 Families, 
2 Names, Much Love; 
Boston Bans Short Pooch Leases
By ANJALI ATHAVALEY
August 5, 2008; Page A1

Penny De Los Santos wanted a dog but traveled too much to care for one full 
time. So, she opted for the next best thing: a time-share pet.







For two years, Ms. Santos shared a mellow female Husky mix with her neighbors, 
who took the dog for about one week a month. They split veterinary bills and 
the cost of vaccinations and heartworm pills. The neighbors called the dog 
Nika. Ms. Santos preferred the name Monica.
"It's kind of like Monica had two lives with two families," says the 
39-year-old photographer in Austin, Texas.
About a year ago, Ms. Santos and her neighbors agreed that Ms. Santos was 
finally in a position to take full responsibility for Monica. The neighbors 
retain visiting rights.
For years, lots of dog lovers have gone without the companionship of man's best 
friend because, for one reason or another, they felt they couldn't keep a pet. 
Now, some are getting around obstacles by sharing ownership. And to meet that 
growing demand, pet-lending services are proliferating. For travelers, some 
locations of Fairmont Hotels & Resorts, a subsidiary of Fairmont Raffles Hotels 
International Inc., and Ritz-Carlton Hotel Co., a subsidiary of Marriott 
International Inc., are offering guests the chance to take out resident dogs 
for hours at a time. Some animal shelters let dog lovers swing by and take a 
pooch out for a day.
Short-term pet leasing, specifically, has drawn criticism that the practice 
frays the traditional bond between man and dog. "From a social standpoint, it's 
very hard on the animal," says Bonnie Beaver, professor at Texas A&M University 
College of Veterinary Medicine, in College Station, and a past president of the 
American Veterinary Medical Association. Dogs could develop abnormal behaviors 
such as obsessive licking and whining. Also, the practice "can make them more 
leery of people," Dr. Beaver says.
Asensia Inc. in Big Sky, Mont., tried to capitalize on demand for shared 
ownership of pets with its Flexpetz service, which was launched last year, with 
locations in New York, London, San Diego and Los Angeles. Flexpetz members have 
taken dogs out for short periods of time for a $100 monthly membership fee, 
plus $45 a day.
 
Lawmakers and animal-rights groups were quick to pounce, complaining that 
Flexpetz was promoting dogs as accessories. To prevent the company from opening 
up shop in Boston, the City Council there early last month unanimously passed 
an ordinance that prohibits the renting of dogs. The Massachusetts legislature 
passed a similar bill last month, which has yet to be signed by the governor. 
State Rep. Paul Frost, a Republican who introduced the bill, has two dogs -- 
Snickers and Reeses.
"They are members of the family, and you do have a special bond with them," he 
says. Dogs, he says, "react better to an environment where they have stability."
Asensia two weeks ago said it is shelving the Flexpetz service in the U.S. and 
London, "until we can get a better understanding on how this legislation may 
affect future growth," Chief Executive Marlena Cervantes said in an email. 
Flexpetz dogs, which live in day care when they aren't being taken out by their 
temporary owners, will be adopted by members, she added.
Informal Arrangements
Critics are more tolerant of informal pet-sharing arrangements among friends 
and neighbors. "It's not a profit-making enterprise," says Wayne Pacelle, 
president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States, "and there are 
smaller numbers of people involved in the animal's life."
People who have participated in dog shares say it's important to set rules from 
the beginning. Betsy Bunn, 69, and her husband, Franklin, share ownership of 
Jimmi, a 2-year-old puggle, with their neighbors two houses down in Auburndale, 
Mass. They agreed from the start to split all dog-related costs. Jimmi's two 
families try to give him a regular schedule. Each morning, he takes a walk with 
Ms. Bunn and spends his days with either of the two families, depending on who 
is free to take care of him. He sleeps at the neighbors' house every night and 
eats the same chow in both homes.
The families have agreed to not give him table scraps, in order to discourage 
begging at the table. And both of the owners' phone numbers are on Jimmi's tag, 
in case of emergency. "Jimmi has two houses," says Ms. Bunn, a retired hospice 
social worker. "He's more fortunate than most of us."
The perks of dog-sharing for humans are also clear. People who may want to 
share or borrow a dog are mostly motivated by the short-term companionship it 
provides, says Herb Nieburg, a psychologist in Stonington, Conn., who has 
written a book on pet loss. Some people may even think they are doing something 
altruistic by devoting their time to an animal -- even if it's temporary. "It 
makes you feel good about the world around you," he says. "It may be a short 
bond, but it's a real bond."






Christina Gomez-Mira 

The Keydel family -- Suvi Aika, her son Hansi Keydel and husband, Stefan Keydel 
-- shared ownership of Monica, a Husky mix, with their neighbor Penny De Los 
Santos (right).
Spending time with a dog can be a stress reliever. D. Scott Farmer, a 
55-year-old tax adviser from Denver, often stays at the Fairmont Hotel 
Vancouver on business trips. He often takes out the hotel's K-9 Ambassadors, 
yellow Labs Mavis and Beau, for hourlong walks at a nearby park and along the 
sea wall. Occasionally, he lets them off the leash so they can play. "It's 
sanity time," he says. "It's very relaxing. It energizes you."
Staying in Touch
For those who just can't bear to part with their part-time pet, some 
dog-lending services have come up with creative solutions. At Fairmont hotels 
in Quebec City, Boston and Vancouver, resident dogs have their own email 
addresses so that they are available for correspondence afterward. Rita Fortin 
stayed at the Fairmont in Quebec City in May with her husband while on vacation 
and was so taken with Santol, Fairmont's ambassador dog, that she contacted him 
afterward. "We've shared emails, and he's gorgeous," says Ms. Fortin, 65, a 
part-time nurse in Bay City, Mich.
"It's wonderful that you can live there," she wrote to Santol. She received a 
response through email: "I'm glad I got to meet you." (A Fairmont spokesman 
says the concierge or another hotel staffer usually answers emails addressed to 
the K-9 Ambassadors -- and tries to write them from the dogs' perspective. )
Popular pooches in existing dog-lending programs are often booked solid. At the 
Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch, in Beaver Creek, Colo., resident yellow Lab 
Bachelor is booked for dates with guests up to a month in advance. The Aspen 
Animal Shelter in Colorado, which allows tourists to take out dogs for a day, 
says it has to turn people away in the summer.
A short-term spark between man and dog can lead to a long-term friendship. In 
early July, while on a bus in Aspen, vacationers David Skibell, 67, and his 
wife, Rochelle, 66, noticed a woman with a border collie mix. The woman told 
them she had taken out the dog -- Sophia -- for a day from the Aspen Animal 
Shelter.
The couple took Sophia out the next day and expected to return her before the 
shelter closed. Instead, they fell in love and decided to adopt her. Sophia was 
shipped to Houston immediately and was renamed Aspen Belle, since the couple 
met her on a bus going to the Maroon Bells, a mountain in Colorado. "I never 
thought we'd have another dog," says Mr. Skibell, an orthodontist. "We really 
just thought it would be a nice thing to do to give the dog an outing." 














      

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