In Wisconsin, a landlord generally cannot impose additional requirements such as declawing pets unless it is explicitly stated in the lease agreement. If declawing is not mentioned in the lease, the tenant is not obligated to comply with such a request. However, landlords may establish rules regarding pet behavior and maintenance, so it's essential to review the lease terms and communicate with the landlord. Tenants should also be aware of local laws and regulations regarding pet ownership.
A landlord may request that you declaw your cat, but cannot require that you do so, nor can he enter that as part of your lease. However, your landlord does have the right to decide whether you get to keep your cat. He can even charge a pet fee.
Dogs need their claws and I highly doubt you would ever find a vet to declaw them. This is only done in cats.
sometimes cats smell like the vet's office or like the medicine there. it makes other cats nervous because they remember that smell and how unpleasant it is there for them. they will get over it
Yes. Any time any animal goes under for any type of surgery, there is a risk - Not to mention the bone and tendon damage done to the cat because of declawing.
I don't think you can declaw cats anymore. Cats have to be before heat, and can be done at 8 weeks minimum.
declaw them like cats. or just file down their nails...be careful when doing so. you dont want to pinch a nerve. that goes for any dog.
call your department of agriculture or city hall
America's Court with Judge Ross - 2010 Fighting Like Cats and Dogs The Landlord Cometh 1-238 was released on: USA: 26 May 2011
Yes, it is possible to get evicted if you signed a lease that does not allow cats. You will be given the option to rehome your cat, find a new apartment, or get evicted. If you signed a lease that says it allows cats (and you've paid the deposit / pet rent if applicable), then you can't be evicted.
Usually it depends on the type of unit. You can keep any cat in an Animal Approved unit, or even ask the LandLord if you can have pets.
Yes! Unless the management company is discriminating (race, color, national origin, religion, sex, family status, or disability is illegal by federal law). This is perfectly legal to do. Is it good business or property management practice? Probably not. However, the landlord has probably got a vacancy problem and it trying to creatively rent the premises to tenants who are best qualified and many of these kinds of tenants have pets.
Usually it is declawed cats who won't cover their waste because they don't like to dig much after they are declawed. It is also painful to a cat to declaw it. If your cat is not declawed, then maybe it was separated from it's mom at too young of an age to have learned to cover it's waste from her, or maybe the cat had a declawed mom.