Around 1935, "
Curb Your Dog" signs started appearing in NYC, initiating discussions and correspondence with the
Department of Sanitation. The Village of
Great Neck Estates was one of the earliest communities to enact a local ordinance, in 1975, requiring residents to remove pollution on private and public property caused by dogs.
Murray Seeman, Jay S. Goodman and Howard Zelikow, advocated in the face of heated opposition. In 1978, New York State passed the Pooper-Scooper Law. It was so controversial that
Mayor Koch needed the
New York State Legislature to pass it, after being unable to convince the
New York City Council.
The New York Times called actress and
consumer advocate Fran Lee "New York's foremost fighter against dog dirt". October 20, 1978,
KQED San Francisco news footage featured scenes from a
Harvey Milk press conference in
Duboce Park in which he discussed the city's new "pooper scooper law" with a how-to demonstration. Marking the 25th anniversary of the Pooper-scooper law, NYC Mayor Ed Koch was quoted saying, "If you’ve ever stepped in dog doo, you know how important it is to enforce the canine waste law. New Yorkers overwhelmingly do their duty and self-enforce. Those who don’t are not fit to call friend." In 2018, the
City of San Francisco allocated budget funds in the amount of $830,977 to address this issue. A number of jurisdictions, including
New York City, San Francisco and
Chicago have laws requiring pet owners to clean up after their pets: a) A person who owns, possesses or controls a dog, cat or other animal shall not permit the animal to commit a nuisance on a sidewalk of any public place, on a floor, wall, stairway or roof of any public or private premises used in common by the public, or on a fence, wall or stairway of a building abutting on a public . Authorized employees of New York City Departments of Health (including Animal Care & Control), of Sanitation, or of Parks and Recreation can issue tickets. Such laws are often nicknamed "pooper-scooper laws", though the laws only stipulate that dog owners remove their dogs' feces, not the method or device used (thus using a hand-held plastic bag to remove feces complies with these laws). Some apartment complexes, condos, and neighborhoods require residents to pick up dog poop and use DNA testing on poop to fine people who did not pick up after their pet. ==Health concerns==