Leaving Pets in Hot Cars in Colorado: What the Law Actually Says
Colorado’s summer heat is no joke.
Pages
Connect Social
About the publication
Tag archive
266 stories
Colorado’s summer heat is no joke.
Kansas sits in an interesting middle ground when it comes to exotic pet ownership.
Relocating to Texas with a pet is exciting — but if you skip the paperwork, you could face serious problems the moment you cross the state line.
Losing a pet in a divorce can feel just as painful as any other loss — and yet Minnesota law offers far fewer protections for companion animals than most pet owners expect.
Moving to Colorado with a pet takes more than packing a travel crate and hitting the road.
Leaving a pet in a parked car on a warm Massachusetts day is not just dangerous — it is against the law.
Virginia is home to a remarkable range of wildlife — from red-tailed hawks soaring over the Shenandoah Valley to diverse snake species threading through the piedmont.
Florida is one of the more permissive states in the country when it comes to exotic pet ownership — but permissive does not mean unregulated.
Few things in a divorce feel more personal than the question of who gets to keep the pet.
Massachusetts has a reputation for strict rules, and its exotic pet regulations are no exception.
Pet skunks draw curiosity from animal lovers across the country, and New Jersey residents are no exception.
Leaving a pet in a parked car on a warm North Carolina day can turn dangerous within minutes — and it can also land you in legal trouble.
When a marriage ends, the question of who keeps the family pet can feel just as urgent as any other issue on the table.
A parked car can turn into a life-threatening environment for a pet within minutes — even on a mild Connecticut afternoon.
South Carolina gives exotic pet enthusiasts more freedom than most states — but that does not mean anything goes.
Maine summers can be deceptively warm.
When someone else’s carelessness injures your pet, the emotional toll hits immediately — and the financial burden follows close behind.
When someone injures your pet in New Mexico, the emotional toll can be immediate and overwhelming.
When someone hurts your pet in New York, the emotional toll can feel overwhelming — and so can the uncertainty about whether the law is on your side.
Every summer, the inside of a parked car can reach deadly temperatures within minutes — and for a pet left inside, those minutes can be fatal.