Trending Topics

Video: Firefighters remove dog from hot car

Firefighters took about 15 seconds to open the car; the dog got out of the car and was taken to the shelter

The Sacramento Bee

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — It was a comparatively cool morning, but Sacramento firefighters and animal control officers decided to remove a dog locked in a car because temperatures were warming inside the vehicle.

Sacramento Fire Department spokesman Chris Harvey said a citizen reported the dog in the car at 27th and L streets across the street from Sutter’s Fort at 8:41 a.m. Wednesday. Firefighters were on the scene within five minutes.

Fire Department protocol is that if the temperature inside the vehicle is 90 degrees or below, firefighters are not to remove the animal. If the temperature is above 90 as registered on a thermal imaging camera, they open the vehicle with animal control on the scene.

The fire department’s imaging gun registered 91 degrees when the animal control officer quickly arrived. The animal control officer’s imaging gun registered 95 degrees.

Firefighters took about 15 seconds to open the car with a slim device. The dog got out of the car and was taken to the shelter.

A note was left on the car so that the owner could retrieve his or her dog. The car was not damaged.

“The whole call took less than 10 minutes,” said Harvey. “This morning was breezy and cool. Perhaps some folks have been lulled into a false sense of security. It very quickly gets hot inside a car regardless of how warm it is outside.”

The first citation for leaving the dog in a hot car is $100. Fines can increase to $500.

Copyright 2015 The Sacramento Bee
All Rights Reserved