Your neighbor's German Shepherd starts up at 11 PM. Again. By midnight, you've counted three separate barking episodes, each lasting at least fifteen minutes. You've got work in the morning, but instead of sleeping, you're lying there wondering if this is finally enough to justify calling someone.
Here's the thing most people don't realize: you probably had grounds to file a complaint two weeks ago. Maybe longer.
Most dog owners handle their pets responsibly. But when someone either can't or won't stop their dog from barking constantly, you're not stuck just tolerating it. Laws exist specifically for this situation, and they're more detailed than you'd think. The real problem? Figuring out which agency to call, what evidence you actually need, and whether your three-minute iPhone video will hold up.
Let's break down exactly how this works—from the first time you grab your phone to record the noise through what happens if animal control basically ignores you.
There's no federal barking dog statute. The government in Washington isn't weighing in on your neighbor's Beagle. This is entirely a local issue, which creates a weird patchwork situation across the country.
Your city council or county board writes these rules. In Portland, they've decided that ten straight minutes of barking counts as a violation. Drive two hours south to Eugene, and they've drawn the line differently. Cross a county line, and the enforcement agency might change fr...