
BY KEVIN DUGGAN
Brooklyn dog owners are
calling on Mayor Bill de Blasio
to reopen dog runs as COVID-
19-related restrictions loosen
during Phase Two of reopening,
saying that if offi cials can
unlock playgrounds for kids,
they should do the same for the
city’s pups.
“Dog runs are open areas,
they have plenty of space for
people to social distance. To
go ahead and open up playgrounds
where kids are going
to be interacting with kids
from different households — it
doesn’t make sense,” said Amy
Willard, who heads up the Maria
Hernandez Dog Run Pack,
a volunteer group which maintains
the Bushwick park’s dog
run. “I can go to my dog run
and stay six feet away from
other dog owners, and my dog
can get exercise that he needs.”
The borough’s pet parents
have not been able to let their
puppers play with their fellow
four-legged friends in dog runs
since the beginning of April,
when Parks Commissioner
Mitchell Silver closed them
down due to overcrowding at
the height of the pandemic,
Curbed reported.
When asked about reopening
them at his June 22 daily
press briefi ng, the mayor said
that his offi ce and Parks gurus
are still evaluating dog runs together
COURIER L 14 IFE, JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2020
with other facilities like
basketball courts, soccer fi elds,
tennis courts, and handball
courts.
“There’s additional considerations
for that,” de Blasio
said at his Monday press
conference. “We want to get it
right. We’re trying to fi gure
out what’s going to be necessary
to make it right, make it
workable, and that’s what we’re
working on right now and we’ll
have more to say on that in the
coming days.”
While Willard agreed that
it made sense to initially close
them down, she has been urging
local electeds and offi cials
to unlock the gates again, saying
that there are few spaces
to let the hounds roam without
disturbing others.
“We don’t have yards, parks
that have a dog runs don’t have
off-leash hours,” said Willard,
who owns a Beagle-Collie mix
rescue named Binkley.
Some city-owned lawns allow
dogs to be off-leash from
the park’s opening until 9 am
and again after 9 pm until closing,
but dog owners say it isn’t
nearly enough
Meanwhile state-run greenspaces
never closed their dog
runs during the viral outbreak,
according to a spokesperson
for the agency, which explains
why the dog run at East River
State Park in Williamsburg is
open while the one in nearby
McGolrick Park in Greenpoint,
for example, isn’t — the two are
managed by different government
agencies.
What’s more, the city-owned
Hillside Dog Park in well-todo
Brooklyn Heights has been
open since last week, according
to a nearby resident and
dog owner who helps maintain
that space, who claimed that it
was Parks offi cials themselves
who unlocked the gates there.
Tony Soll and his Border Collie Izzy at Hillside Dog Park in Brooklyn
Heights, which has now opened. Photo by Kevin Duggan
“I was told by someone who
was there that the Parks Department
opened it saying they
expect the park to reopen next
week anyway — we lucked
out,” said Tony Soll who regularly
visits the space with his
13-year-old Border Collie Izzy.
Soll also questioned the reasoning
behind reopening playgrounds
but not dog runs, saying
he felt more secure at the
latter.
“It seems illogical and
crazy,” he said. “The playgrounds
are complicated it
seems to me, whereas at dog
runs, dogs play and people are
standing around. The owners
tend to socialize — but very
carefully. I’m 73 so I’m sensitive
to those things.”
When asked about a more
detailed timeline for reopening
the dog runs, spokeswoman for
the city’s Parks Department
Anessa Hodgson referred to
the mayor’s statements.
The spokeswoman did not
provide comment by press time
why the Hillside Dog Park was
already open.
Barking for parks!
Owners demand mayor reopen city’s dog runs