Bengaluru Designates 90 Official Feeding Zones for Stray Dogs to Ensure Public Safety

The Bengaluru Central Municipal Corporation has officially designated 90 specific locations as feeding zones for stray dogs within its jurisdiction. This initiative aims to balance animal welfare with public health by reducing conflicts through systematic feeding. The spots are located away from crowded areas like main roads and hospitals, following national guidelines. The public is urged to use only these designated areas and maintain cleanliness, with interference at these spots being a punishable offence.

Key Points: Bengaluru Sets 90 Official Stray Dog Feeding Spots

  • 90 official feeding spots identified
  • Aims to reduce human-animal conflict
  • Follows Supreme Court guidelines
  • Feeders must keep areas clean
  • Part of broader neutering and vaccination programs
3 min read

Bengaluru Central Municipal Corporation identifies 90 official spots for feeding stray dogs

Bengaluru Central Municipal Corporation identifies 90 official feeding zones for stray dogs to balance animal welfare with public health and urban cleanliness.

"Providing food to community dogs... in a systematic manner can reduce their aggressive nature and biting tendency. - Daljit Kumar"

Bengaluru, February 28

The Animal Husbandry Department of the Bengaluru Central Municipal Corporation on Saturday designated 90 specific locations as official feeding zones for stray dogs within its jurisdiction. This initiative aims to balance animal welfare with public health and urban cleanliness across the central parts of the city.

Daljit Kumar, Additional Commissioner of Development, Central Municipal Corporation, said, "With a view to the welfare and management of stray dogs, public health protection and environmental cleanliness within the jurisdiction of the Central Municipal Corporation, the Animal Husbandry Department of the Bengaluru Central Municipal Corporation has identified 90 places as official feeding spots (feeding spots) for feeding stray dogs."

"Signboards called feeding points have been installed at the identified places, and the public can feed them at the said places, Daljit Kumar, Additional Commissioner of Development, Central Municipal Corporation, said.

Feeding street/community dogs is important to promote coexistence between humans and community animals and reduce conflict.

The Additional Commissioner for Development said that "providing food to community dogs/stray dogs in a systematic manner can reduce their aggressive nature and biting tendency by satisfying their hunger, which will be helpful in neutering stray dogs and conducting mass vaccination programs."

He said that "as per the guidelines of the Supreme Court of India and the Animal Welfare Board of India, feeding spots have been identified in priority places such as main roads, schools-colleges, hospitals, bus stands, metro stands and other public places where there is no inconvenience to the citizens walking and away from crowded areas, where local feeders and animal lovers want to feed stray dogs, with the cooperation of veterinary officers and staff of the Animal Husbandry Department. "

According to the Bengaluru Central Municipal Corporation, 90 places have been identified in all 43 wards of all 6 assembly constituencies of the Bengaluru Central Municipal Corporation, including Jeevan Bhimanagar, Chamarajpet, Chikkapet, Gandhinagar, Halsur, Indiranagar, Yamahal, Cottonpet, Binnipet, Agaram, Agrahara, Domlur, HAL, etc.

Public information boards have also been installed at those places as places for feeding, and the public/animal lovers have been requested to feed at the said places.

According to an appeal to the public, the administration stated that food should be provided to stray dogs only at officially identified feeding spots and must not be distributed on main roads or near hospitals, schools, or crowded areas. It is the responsibility of the feeders to keep these areas clean after use, and while all citizens have the right to feed stray dogs at these designated places, preventing them from doing so is a punishable offence. Additionally, removing, defacing, or destroying signs at official feeding spots is a punishable crime, and harming or harassing stray dogs remains a punishable offence. The public is urged to utilise these designated places through disciplined feeding and other controlled, systematic measures to ensure overall public safety.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good initiative in theory, but implementation is key. Who will ensure feeders clean the area? In my area, even with bins, people litter. The corporation must have a monitoring mechanism, otherwise these spots will become new garbage dumps. Hope they think this through.
S
Sarah B
As someone who walks to work, the aggression from hungry strays near bus stands has been a real concern. If systematic feeding at designated spots can reduce biting incidents, that's a huge win for public safety. Hope this is publicized well so everyone follows the rules.
A
Arjun K
Finally! A balanced approach. Feeding is an act of compassion, but doing it randomly causes problems. Now animal lovers can do their seva without inconvenience to others. The mention of it being a punishable offence to stop feeders is important—people often harass those who feed dogs.
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Nikhil C
Respectfully, while the intent is good, 90 spots for all of central Bengaluru seems insufficient. Areas like HAL and Domlur are huge. They should start with this but be ready to add more based on need. Also, what about water points during summer? The welfare plan should be holistic.
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Meera T
This is a progressive move following Supreme Court guidelines. It acknowledges that street dogs are part of our urban ecosystem. The focus on neutering and vaccination at these spots is the real long-term solution. Hope other cities take note. Well done, BBMP! 🙏

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