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Grayson Lakes October 2018

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KATY KATY<br />

PET<br />

Pet Pet Sitting in in Your Home<br />

Pet Sitting in Your Home<br />

Kim & Dave 281-395-0182<br />

www.katypetnannies.com<br />

pets@katypetnannies.com<br />

TEENAGE JOB SEEKERS LIST<br />

If you are between 12 and 18 and would like to be added to the teenage<br />

job seeker’s list, please fill out the form on our website (www.krenekprinting.com,<br />

click submissions and choose Jobseekers) with your<br />

name, birthdate (mo. & yr.), phone number, year you will graduate and<br />

the name of your newsletter/subdivision. Check the list of jobs you want<br />

on your form. Please make sure your email is correct, we send emails<br />

in the summer to make sure all the info is still good and that you want<br />

to stay on the list. If we do not hear back from you after 3 tries, we will<br />

remove you from the list until we do. Must have parent(s) permission.<br />

Your Pets Deserve the Luxury<br />

of a Nanny<br />

DISCLAIMER<br />

Neither the subdivision, nor Krenek Printing is responsible for those<br />

listed on the Teenage Job Seeker List. Please ask for and check out<br />

references if you do not personally know those listed. This is just a<br />

list of teenagers from the subdivision who wish to find part time jobs.<br />

Responsibility for any work done by these teenagers is between those<br />

seeking helpers and the teens and their parents.<br />

CODE KEY:<br />

B - BABYSITTING, CPR - CPR CERT., FAC - FIRST AID CERT., RCC - RED CROSS CERT.,<br />

SS - SAFE SITTER, SL - SWIM LESSONS, PP - PET/PLANT SITTER, P - PET CARE ONLY,<br />

H - HOUSE CARE, L - LAWN CARE, C- CAR CARE/DETAILING, T - TUTORING<br />

TEENAGE JOB SEEKER’S LIST MAY NOT BE VIEWED ONLINE<br />

AVAILABLE IN PRINTED NEWSLETTERS ONLY<br />

ATTENTION! PET POOPS / YOU SCOOP<br />

Please be respectful of community grounds and neighbors’ yards. If<br />

your pet poops during your walk, be prepared to scoop and trash.<br />

Come with a scooper and a recycled grocery bag or anything else. It<br />

may not be the most fabulous way to walk your pet, but it does show<br />

your respect for every homeowner and our beautiful community.<br />

PLEASE NOTE - PETS ON LEASHES<br />

It is the law in Fort Bend County that all pets must be vaccinated for rabies,<br />

registered and restrained. All animals, when outside of an owner’s means of<br />

restraint (i.e., in a fenced back yard), must be on a leash. For the safety of all<br />

residents, please use all precautions with your pets and keep them on<br />

leashes when walking pets in the community EVEN IF YOU FEEL YOUR PET<br />

IS HARMLESS. If you see ANY animal roaming freely in the neighborhood, immediately<br />

call Animal Control at 281-342-1512. Even if you recognize the animal, be<br />

very careful approaching it, as you do not know how it will react; if you can safely<br />

retrieve the animal, then call the owner. Otherwise, Animal Control is your best<br />

and safest option.<br />

FORT BEND COUNTY “LEASH LAW”<br />

Animal control authorities are permitted to enter your Property to patrol and<br />

remove pets. Pets must be registered, licensed and inoculated as required by law.<br />

As a dog owner, you are responsible for the control of your dog. If your dog is<br />

one that ‘makes objectionable noise,’ you must make every effort to respect<br />

your Neighbor’s right to their ‘peace and quiet.’<br />

When your dog is not in your yard, it is imperative that you keep your dog on a<br />

leash at all times. While your dog is friendly to you and your family, imagine the<br />

consequences if it were to harm someone while it was ‘roaming free.’<br />

Please respect other resident’s right to walk the common area ground without<br />

fear of attack from an unleashed dog.<br />

Laws are written to ensure that owned animals are confined to their property<br />

or kept on a leash to free a community of unrestrained and free-roaming<br />

animals. Although most dog bites occur on the property where the dog<br />

lives, unrestrained or free-roaming dogs do pose a substantial threat to<br />

the public. In addition, unrestrained animals are at increased risk of being<br />

bitten by rabies infected wildlife. Enforcement of restraint laws is essential<br />

in enhancing the animal control program’s efforts to reduce the risk of rabies<br />

in our community.<br />

6 <strong>October</strong> <strong>2018</strong> | <strong>Grayson</strong> <strong>Lakes</strong> Community Newsletter

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