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For the first time in about 60 years, municipal shelters in Connecticut now have to follow a list of new regulations that will make puppies like Leica here a lot more comfortable. Do you hear that one? James Bias with the Connecticut Humane Society had a front row seat when lawmakers drafted these bills. Most municipal and regional shelters are complying with the same standards as the private, nonprofit shelters are, but there are still some holding out because. Legislatively, theyre not required to until now. In 2017, municipal shelters were left out of regulatory changes created for nonprofits like the Humane Society. Now municipal shelters have their own set of rules, specifically temperature. We now have to have municipal shelters that have a temperature range between 55 and 80. I know come here before they could keep the temps up to 90 degrees. The new law also requires incompatible and sick animals to be separated from each other. It may seem like common sense, but in some cases