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Go beyond the law and harness the dog inside your car. It’s safer for them — and you

Pets Restraints
Experts advise pets be restrained with a harness or carrier when riding in moving vehicles. (Robin Loznak/Great Falls Tribune)

Question: Why is it that adults and kids all have to wear seat belts, but dogs can roam around in a car? Shouldn’t there be a seat-belt law for dogs?

Answer: The only law I’m aware of that specifically requires a dog to be restrained pertains to animals being transported on the “outside part of any vehicle.” It states that animals must be harnessed or in an enclosure.

The law, which dates to at least 1927, was originally in a group of laws about driving livestock to market (cattle had the right of way), pasturing and camping with livestock along the highway (you had to have enough herders to keep the road available for cars) and how to pass a person riding, leading, or driving an animal in the opposite direction (stop to let them pass, and shut off your engine if it scares the animal.) The law was primarily intended for transporting livestock, but we’ve also applied it to dogs in pickup beds.

Inside the car, there is no seat-belt or harness requirement for dogs. That doesn’t mean that drivers can let dogs do whatever they want while the car is in motion. Also, even though you’re not required to harness a dog in the car, it’s still a good idea.

Just for fun, let’s look at a law called “Embracing while driving.” Like it sounds, it’s unlawful to embrace another person while driving if it prevents “free and unhampered operation” of the vehicle. I really want this to include dogs, too. The law only applies to embracing another person, but there’s a neuroscientist who in 2020 stated that based on his research, “Dogs are people, too.” Plenty of dog-lovers have rallied to share their support of that viewpoint in online forums. For any officers out there that want to test the legal system, you could try writing a ticket for embracing while driving when you see a dog creating chaos on a driver’s lap, and then support it with evidence from the internet.

No officer is actually going to do that because we have a more appropriate law. Based on the gradual decreases in phone use while driving, it appears that most of us in Washington know about our distracted driving law and the dangers of distracted driving. But that law isn’t just about phones. Or more correctly, we have a pair of distracted driving laws; one specific to electronic devices and one for other types of distractions. The “Dangerously distracted driving” law makes it an infraction to engage in any activity not related to driving that interferes with safe driving. That could be a lot of things, including dealing with a dog that takes your focus away from your primary task as a driver.

Let’s get beyond the law and consider why you might want to harness even the most well-behaved dog while you drive. The “Mythbusters” fans reading this might remember an episode where the show tested what happens when various loose objects in a car go flying in a crash. The tissue box and the bobble-head doll didn’t cause much harm, but the fire extinguisher, hatchet (who drives around with a hatchet loose in their car?) and the bowling ball sure did. All of those items weigh less than a Cairn Terrier (like Toto from the Wizard of Oz.)

Going without a harness is obviously bad for the dog in a crash, but it’s dangerous for everyone else in the car, too. Harnessing a dog keeps the dog safer, keeps you safer, and it reduces distractions while driving.

Ask Road Rules a question using our form. Target Zero is Washington’s vision to reduce traffic fatalities and serious injuries to zero by 2030. For more traffic safety information visit TheWiseDrive.com.

This story was originally published May 30, 2022 at 5:00 AM with the headline "Go beyond the law and harness the dog inside your car. It’s safer for them — and you."

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Doug Dahl
The Bellingham Herald
Doug Dahl is the director of communications for the Washington Traffic Safety Commission.
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