Expensive walkies for woman who let dogs off lead - The Rugby Observer

Expensive walkies for woman who let dogs off lead

A RUGBY woman who let her dogs run off the lead in a cemetery faces an £800 legal bill – almost double the fine she had to pay a year ago for a similar offence.

Georgina Clarke, of Cambridge Street, was found guilty in her absence at Nuneaton’s Warwickshire Justice Centre of breaching the Public Space Protection Order (PSPO) which enforces dog control in the borough.

Clarke was prosecuted by Rugby Borough Council after she was spotted with her Chihuahuas in Clifton Road cemetery by council community wardens on a routine patrol on March 13.

One of the wardens recognised Clarke and explained to her the council had received complaints about dogs defecating in the cemetery, and she had been frequently reminded dogs had to be kept on a lead.




Clarke claimed she always picked up her Chihuahuas’ mess but, when challenged, admitted only when she could find her dogs’ deposits.

Four days later, one of the wardens spotted Clarke and a child in Caldecott Park with both dogs off the lead.


The warden told Clarke she was again breaching the PSPO – and after claiming she thought the PSPO only applied to cemeteries, she put the dogs on a lead.

Clarke was prosecuted for both breaches – which she committed despite being fined £80 and ordered to pay £361 costs in April 2017 after failing to pay a Fixed Penalty Notice for walking her dogs off a lead in Clifton Road cemetery.

Magistrates found Clarke guilty of both breaches at a hearing on Tuesday June 26, fining her £220 and ordering her to pay £556 costs and a £30 victim surcharge.

Speaking after the hearing, Rugby Borough Council’s environment and public realm spokeswoman Coun Lisa Parker said: “The PSPO which enforces dog control in Rugby forms part of the council’s wider work to encourage responsible dog ownership.

“Allowing a dog to defecate in a cemetery goes way beyond the boundaries of common decency, and as a council we have a duty to make sure our cemeteries, parks and green spaces remain a safe environment for residents to visit.

“A magistrate commented it was a ‘very expensive dog walk’ when this lady was first fined for ignoring the rules on dog control.

“Hopefully, this latest legal bill sends a clear message to all dog owners of the need to think of others while taking a pet out in public.”

Visit www.rugby.gov.uk/dogcontrol for more information on the PSPO enforcing dog control in Rugby.

Buy Photos

Buy photos online from the Rugby Observer newspaper.

Reader Travel

Check out all of the latest reader travel offers to get your hands on some free gifts.

Printing

We can provide all of your printing needs at competitive rates.

Advertising

Advertise with the Rugby Observer to reach your audience