Please contact the city council members listed below and tell them that this ordinance is too vague and obviously anti-pet in tone. It should not be adopted as it is currently written.
You can read the proposed new ordinance here. The section on urban chickens has already been shot down by the city council.
In case you're wondering, the old ordinance is now essentially invalid because of a lawsuit with a pet store that was raided by McKamey Animal Control. The old ordinance had no provision for an appeals process. The city had to re-write it before someone else sued them for more millions of dollars.
AKC Chattanooga, TN The ordinance would outlaw all breeding of pets in your house in the city. Read more
The Chattanooga City Council may hold a second vote on Tuesday, July 23,
2013 on a proposed animal ordinance that would redefine “kennel” under
city code, require $300 annual permits and unlimited inspections of
kennels, and establish problematic provisions for any person who sells
or gives away a cat or dog. The vague definitions contained in this
ordinance have the potential to outlaw all breeding of companion animals
on residential properties in the city. The ordinance has already passed
first reading.
Provisions of concern include, but are not limited to:
●
“Kennel” would be defined as any building, structure or property
wherein any person engages in the business of boarding, breeding,
grooming, training for a fee, or hunting with a companion animal,
maintaining an animal daycare, or providing any similar service for or
with a companion animal. (The definition excludes those who rescue a
limited number of animals per year.) Companion animals include dogs,
cats, small domesticated mammals, pet rabbits, miniature and potbellied
pigs, aquatic animals, amphibians, reptiles and birds. It is unclear if a
person who breeds and sells a single companion animal or who accepts a
fee for a stud service would be consider to be engaged in the business
of breeding.
● A “dealer” would be defined as any person who
engages in the business of selling, buying, brokering the sale of, or
bartering animals in any manner, including through the Internet. It is
unclear if a person who sell a single animal would be considered to be
engaged in the business of selling animals or how this would impact a
person who purchased, and later sold, an animal.
● Both
“kennels” and “dealers” would be required to apply for and obtain a
permit at a fee of $300 per year, comply with relevant regulations, and
agree to submit to random inspections of all premises where animal are
kept. Permits would be granted at discretion of the Animal Control
Board.
● Under existing city code, a kennel may only be approved
in certain commercially zoned areas, therefore, no residential property
could be issued a kennel permit. Consequently, only commercial kennels
would be able to comply with the provisions of the ordinance.
●
Any dog sold, exchanged, or given away would be required to have
documentation of having received vaccinations and anthelmintics against a
list of specified diseases and internal parasites. No exceptions are
provided for dog owners who, on the advice of a veterinarian, have been
advised to decline such treatments. With the exception of state-mandate
rabies vaccinations, the American Kennel Club believes that animal
health care decisions should be made by an animal owner in consultation
with a veterinarian and not dictated by city code.
● All dogs
and cats sold in the city would be required to be microchipped and
registered with The Animal Center prior to sale, and the seller would be
required to provide the new owner’s personal information to the city
within 48 hours of the sale.
What You Can Do:
Immediately contact city council members to express your opposition to this ordinance.
Contact
your city council member and ask to be allowed to state your opposition
to the ordinance at the council meeting prior to any vote.
Chattanooga City Council Meeting
Tuesday, July 23, 2013, 6:00 p.m., 1000 Lindsay Street, Chattanooga, TN 37402 (map)
Contact Information for City Council Members
Chip Henderson, Phone: (423) 425-7858, Fax: (423) 757-4857, E-mail: henderson_chip@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between henderson and chip.
Jerry Mitchell, Phone: (423) 757-5334, Fax: (423) 757-4857, E-Mail: mitchell_jerry@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between mitchell and jerry.
Ken Mitchell, Phone: (423) 757-5344, Fax: (423) 757-4857, E-Mail: smith_ken@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between smith and ken.
Larry Grohn, Phone: (423) 757-5346, Fax: (423) 757-4857, Email: grohn_larry@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between grohn and larry.
Russell Gilbert, Phone: (423) 757-5332, Fax : (423) 757-4857, Email: gilbert_r@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between gilbert and r.
Carol B. Berz, Phone: (423) 425-7852, Fax: (423) 757-4857, E-Mail: berz_c@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between berz and c.
Chris Anderson, Phone: (423) 425-7856, Fax:(423) 757-4857, E-Mail: anderson_c@chattanooga.gov, - note: there is an underscore between anderson and c.
Moses Freeman, Phone: (423) 757-5364, Fax: (423) 757-4857, E-Mail: freeman_m@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between freeman and m.
Yusef Hakeem, Phone: (423) 757-5367, Fax:(423) 757-4857, E-Mail: hakeem_y@chattanooga.gov - note: there is an underscore between hakeem and y.
For talking points: The Value of Responsible Dog Breeders
For questions or more information, please contact AKC Government Relations at (919) 816-3720 or doglaw@akc.org.
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