What’s Hounding San Francisco

Never mind police scandals, run-down schools, and a huge budget deficit. The issue that has the whole city yapping is whether or not Rex can run off-leash.

Leslie Crawford

nullTrim, bespectacled, and white-bearded, 62-year-old David Looman is smiling. But then, Looman—an erudite man whose easygoing manner belies an intractable nature—is always smiling. His bemused grin suggests that no matter how mad he is, and Looman is mad, he's confident he'll win.

It's a hazy Saturday afternoon, and he's out for a walk with his dogs, Rimbaud and Tuche. He keeps a firm grip on their leashes. "They tend to get into trouble," he explains. "Rimbaud was a wild dog." Again, the grin.

Looman is leading me up a pathway that winds through the grassy slopes of Bernal Heights' Holly Park. Finally, we arrive at the spot where his crusade began. "See," he says sardonically. "They locked up my park."

Actually, we're looking at an empty athletic field that's surrounded by a chain-link fence. Looman says he's been coming here to toss balls to his dogs for 25 years; for that matter, San Franciscans have been letting their dogs run free in city parks for generations. He was incensed when the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department began treating dog owners citywide like criminals. Three years ago, it closed his field to everything but organized ball games. At which point, Looman became downright rabid.

So he fought back. A career political consultant and self-described old leftie, Looman has become leader of the pack—which is not just a metaphor. He is chairman of the political action committee DogPAC, which raises money for dog-friendly candidates and lobbies for San Francisco's numerous canine organizations, determined to overturn the city's leash laws and make it legal for dogs to run free in most parks. These firebrand groups include Dolores Park Dogs, Fort Funston Dog Walkers Association, and the San Francisco Dog Owners Group (SFDOG), whose tagline reads, "Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Leash."

"I was always actively involved in politics," Looman says with a teeth-baring smile. "But I never thought I'd be actively involved in an issue about dogs." Looman stretches out the word as if we're both in on a great joke. A joke that goes like this: "A dog walks into a park; no, make that tens of thousands of dogs, and they're running, digging, and taking care of business in San Francisco's 230 parks." The punch line, no knee-slapper, has left the city's citizens seething, practically at one another's throats, over whether their charges should be on a leash or off.

As the movement's Ralph Nader, Looman harbors a sense of righteous indignation. "What we're really talking about here is people's rights," he tells me. "We're taxpayers, we're citizens. Who has a right to say that I must be attached to a rope? That's evil."

Isn't he being a bit dramatic? We're not talking about throwing a lasso around people, only putting dogs on a leash.

"It may be dramatic," Looman says, "but let's get clear on the point." He

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