Archive for January, 2011

Dearborn Updates Vicious Dog Ordinance

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

Dearborn is strengthening its vicious dog ordinance, following several recent incidents in which dogs seriously injured people in southeast Michigan.

The city is tackling the issue by focusing on owners’ responsibility for their dogs’ behavior rather than issuing breed-specific restrictions.

The Dearborn City Council earlier discussed updating the vicious dog ordinance to specify a ban on pit bulls (similar to what other cities have done) but backed off of that approach, agreeing with Friends for the Dearborn Animal Shelter that dogs causing problems could be any breed. However, under the ordinance it is possible for a court to order vicious dogs be euthanized.

In addition to emphasizing that Dearborn requires all dogs be kept on a leash whenever they are not on their owners’ property, the Dearborn City Council approved revisions at its Jan. 4 meeting to the Animals Chapter of the City Code.

City officials have developed a two-tier ordinance that is not breed-specific and implements measures that can help decrease instances of dog attacks or threats.

The tiers in the ordinance differentiate between two types of threatening animals — “dangerous dogs” and “vicious dogs” — and specify owner responsibilities in each case. Violations require specific steps to take place and there are penalties for non-compliance.

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La Shish Restaurant Name Reappears in Dearborn

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

What’s in a name? The owners reopening a restaurant on Dearborn’s east side will soon find out.

In the same building that started the La Shish restaurant chain in 1989 and helped popularize Middle Eastern cuisine in metro Detroit will soon reopen under the same name, or so a sign hanging outside the restaurant suggests.

The restaurant chain – all 11 stores – went out of business following bad publicity involving its fugitive owner, Talal Chahine, who federal prosecutors linked to terrorism, along with other charges, including evading $6.9 million in federal income taxes.

We do not yet know who is reopening the restaurant — “The New La Shish” — (at the corner of Michigan and Oakman) but the name selection could be a double-edged sword.

While the La Shish name has baggage because of its fugitive creator, it also has brand awareness. Say the name to nearly anyone and it is instantly associated with good Middle Eastern cuisine.

Building a brand, no matter the business, takes time and money . . . and then a lot more of both before you can breakthrough the clutter in a city like Dearborn that is crowded with plenty of good Middle Eastern restaurants.

The La Shish name for a restaurant certainly has recognition. The question is what do potential customers associate the name with these days.

Time will tell . . .