Last week, a Dunn St woman said she had lodged a complaint with the council after being chased by up to four dogs on three consecutive days (Pitbull problems, June 25).
On the most recent occasion, she suffered a bite wound and hurt her finger when she fell.
The council had no record of a complaint from her and had not responded to inquiries about Tuesday's complaint at edition time yesterday.
Quite separate from the attacks, the council said yesterday it would be launching a campaign targeting unregistered dogs, with animal control officers going house-to-house, initially in urban areas and then rural.
About 9500 dogs were registered in the Far North each year but the council suspected as many again were not registered.
Field compliance manager Barry Webb said the council followed up on the owners of registered dogs to ensure they renewed their registration each July but now animal control officers would be looking for dogs that had never been registered.
Owners would face a $300 fine for each unregistered dog on their property, and would have to pay the full registration fee if their dog was unregistered after September 1.
Any that were still unregistered at the end of October could be impounded.
Mr Webb said registering dogs made it easier to hold owners responsible if they strayed, or attacked animals or people.
"The prime intention is to improve public safety by reducing incidents of attacks and problems which evolve from unregistered and straying dogs," he said.
Collecting registration fees from more dog owners also meant the cost of providing animal control services would be spread more fairly, instead of falling on the shoulders of responsible dog owners.
The campaign, which begins on Monday, would initially increase overheads but was expected to prove cost-effective.
All dog owners would be reminded of their obligations by letter and warned of the possible outcomes if they fail to comply.