Community Corner

Here Are The Number Of Dog Attacks Throughout Connecticut

Dog attacks were down across the country, but the number is still shockingly high.

U.S. Postal Service workers went home with fewer dog bites last year, but the overall number remains staggeringly high, according to a new report from the agency. The USPS, which released its findings on Thursday, said there were 6,244 workers attacked by canines across the country, including 77 in Connecticut.

While the overall number may astonish some readers, there were actually 500 fewer attacks than the year before.

This past year there were 11 attacks in Hartford, five in Bridgeport, four in Danbury and three in West Haven. (See below for a full list of 2017 Connecticut attacks.)

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Connecticut had 95 attacks in 2016.

But at least we aren’t Houston.

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Seventy-one Postal Service workers in Houston were attacked last year, and the city managed to leapfrog Los Angeles — which had 67 attacks — to earn the dubious title of worst city in America for dog attacks.

St. Louis, Cleveland and San Diego rounded out the top five with 52, 49 and 46 workers attacked, respectively.

California had the most cities make the list with six, followed by Ohio and Texas, which each had four.

But the Postal Service is taking an optimistic view of the data. While still very high, the number fell by a not-insignificant amount.

“We’re encouraged by the decrease in dog attacks,” Postal Service Safety Director Linda DeCarlo said in a release. “The totals are still too high, but we’re confident that with continuing education and dog bite prevention training, along with advancing technology, we can keep more people safe and keep attacks trending downward.”

DeCarlo said the agency utilizes a safety feature that alerts mail carriers to dogs on their delivery routes. The application asks customers to indicate if they have dogs at their homes when they schedule package pickups. That information is then relayed to carriers on their delivery scanners, which blast alerts if an unleashed dog is reported.

“The scanners that our carriers use to confirm a customer’s delivery include a feature for them to indicate the presence of a dog at an individual address,” said DeCarlo. “This information is particularly helpful for substitute carriers who fill in for regular carriers on their days off.”

DeCarlo also offered some tips to residents with dogs.

  • If a carrier delivers mail or packages to your front door, place your dog in a separate room and close that door before opening the front door. Some dogs burst through screen doors or plate-glass windows to attack visitors. Dog owners should keep the family pet secured.
  • Parents should remind their children and other family members not to take mail directly from carriers in the presence of the family pet, as the dog may view the person handing mail to a family member as a threatening gesture.
  • If a carrier feels threatened by a dog, or if a dog is loose or unleashed, the owner may be asked to pick up mail at a post office until the carrier is assured the pet has been restrained. If a dog is roaming the neighborhood, the pet owner’s neighbors also may be asked to pick up their mail at the area’s post office.
TownNumber Of Attacks
BRIDGEPORT5
BRISTOL3
BROOKFIELD1
BROOKLYN1
CANTERBURY1
CHESTER1
COLCHESTER1
DANBURY4
DANIELSON1
EAST HARTFORD3
EAST LYME1
ENFIELD1
FAIRFIELD1
FARMINGTON1
GLASTONBURY2
GREENWICH1
HAMDEN2
HARTFORD11
MANCHESTER1
MERIDEN3
MILFORD2
NEW BRITAIN2
NEW HAVEN3
NEWTOWN1
NORTH HAVEN1
NORWALK1
NORWICH1
OLD SAYBROOK2
ROCKY HILL1
SIMSBURY2
STAMFORD2
VERNON ROCKVILLE1
WALLINGFORD1
WATERBURY1
WEST HARTFORD1
WEST HAVEN3
WEST SIMSBURY1
WESTPORT2
WILLIMANTIC2
WILTON1
Windsor1

Patch reporter Dan Hampton contributed to this report.
Photo credit: Jose Gil/Shutterstock.com


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