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IL-Rockford Considering Changes To Animal Control Laws

Vicki

Administrator
Rockford seeks better dog, cat control

Posted Jul 28, 2009 @ 04:13 PM
Last update Jul 29, 2009 @ 07:01 AM


ROCKFORD — City officials are taking a hard look at animal control services and related laws for the first time in a decade. The results could change the landscape of such services citywide.

Officials are considering changes to strengthen laws requiring pet owners to properly care for their animals, better protect residents from aggressive dogs and work to reduce populations of stray or feral cats.

How Rockford will work with officials from Winnebago County Animal Services to accomplish these goals remains a work in progress and involves discussions with residents and grass-roots animal groups, said Jennifer Cacciapaglia, assistant city attorney.

“Some of the people in this city are not responsible pet owners,†she said. “There are problems with people breeding animals and trying to sell them at flea markets and out of cars ... and I am certain there is dogfighting going on.â€

Because of the underground nature of dogfighting, the problem is known only anecdotally, Cacciapaglia said, making it difficult to gauge how widespread it is.

And it is just one of a multitude of animal control issues the city wants to tackle with a critical review after a decadelong contract with Winnebago County for animal services expired in September.

Among the laws the city wants to strengthen are requirements for properly sheltering pets, instituting stronger prohibitions on tethering dogs outdoors, limiting the number of domestic pets to four per household, and limiting pet noise.

For this year, the city agreed to a one-year extension with the county while a review of animal services continues with a second town hall meeting since February scheduled for tonight. Residents and animal advocacy groups are being asked to attend the meeting to discuss how city ordinances should be changed and what animal services need improvement at 6 p.m. at Rockford City Hall, 425 E. State St.

Gary Longanecker, executive director of animal services, said Rockford is by far the agency’s largest customer in the county. The city alone accounted for 63.3 percent of calls for service in fiscal year 2008.

Longanecker estimated it takes about $2.1 million a year to run the animal services agency. What registration fees, fines and other fees do not cover — about $913,000 last fiscal year — is split among the municipalities that use the services, based on what percentage of services each municipality consumes.

Rockford paid $578,098, the most of a dozen communities in Winnebago County.

Longanecker said he plans to attend the town hall meeting and is working with the city to strengthen city animal control laws and better enforce them.

Rockford seeks better dog, cat control - Rockford, IL - Rockford Register Star
 

Vicki

Administrator
Public sounds off on proposed animal ordinance changes

Posted: Jul 30, 2009 12:03 AM EDT Thursday, July 30, 2009 12:03 AM EST Updated: Jul 30, 2009 8:46 AM EDT

By Marissa Alter

ROCKFORD (WREX) - Possible animal ordinance changes rile up some Rockford pet owners while other residents accuse Winnebago County Animal Services of not doing enough to enforce the rules. A couple dozen people attended a town hall meeting to weigh in on the potential laws and air any other animal issues.

Aggressive dogs could be impounded, their owners heavily fined or forced to train their pets, under an ordinance change. That's if a "reasonable person" would fear for his or her safety.

"Who decides what's reasonable? I guess that's my big concern. Who decides what's reasonable?" asked one pet owner at the meeting.
Another change--animals can't be tethered outside unattended for longer than one hour per day.

"I think that would solve a lot of problems especially with barking dogs," responded another resident.

Dogs running without a leash would immediately be an offense. Right now, the ordinance says prosecutors have to prove the owner intentionally allowed the animal to roam.

The proposal also limits four pets per home.

"I have eight cats, I'm fostering two more, and I know that's over the so-called limit, but I keep a clean house. Somebody could keep one cat and have a filthy house," stated community member Ellena Linsky. She asked that the maximum pet number be raised or eliminated altogether.

Other ordinance possibilities include mandatory spay/neuter regulations for all cats and dogs except those owned by breeders and a trap-neuter-release program for feral cats.

"They are not used Kleenex. They should not be disposed of readily," said Linsky who urged leaders to adopt the program.

"They trap the cat, take it to a vet or animal control that will hopefully spay or neuter the cat at a lower cost and then re-release it into the community," explained Rockford City Attorney Jennifer Cacciapaglia. "Opponents of that say 'wait a minute, I've got 12 cats circulating my property,they're defecating in my garden, they're killing the birds.' They're are very vocal proponents and opponents of it."

At tonight's meeting, some people also pointed fingers at Winnebago County Animals Services for not doing its part.

"I'm asking you what you do, your missions, your goals because it's not clear to me."

Animal Service Director Gary Longanecker says his crew does the best they can, but ultimately it's up to people to report violators and be willing to go to court.

"That's how I personally feel about all conditions I've seen over the past few years. It's reprehensible. It's disgusting. I don't know how we can write laws to meet all those particular issues," states Longanecker.

LIST OF POSSIBLE ORDINANCE CHANGES

HOUSING, FOOD, WATER: Proposed changes would require stricter, more humane conditions for animals housed outdoors.

UNATTENDED TETHERING: Prohibited as a means of outdoor confinement for longer than one hour in a 24-hour period. Possible alternatives may be to prohibit unattended tethering as a means of outdoor confinement during certain hours of the day, i.e. 8 am-5 pm.

DOGS RUNNING AT LARGE: Proposed change eliminates the requirement for a prosecutor to prove the owner intentionally allowed the animal to roam. This would become a strict liability offense.

TRANSPORTING: Prohibit persons from leaving animals unattended in a vehicle under certain extreme weather conditions or periods of time.

ANIMAL NOISE: Proposal would prohibit persons from allowing or failing to prevent noise longer than 20 consecutive minutes. A problem raised with imposing a time limit is what if the dog barks every hour for 18 minutes? Additionally, the proposed changes do not speak to changing the behavior of the dog.

MAXIMUM NUMBER: Four domestic animals per household. There is strong feedback requesting an allowance for additional animals under certain conditions.

AGGRESSIVE DOG: Any dog exhibiting combative, disturbing, threatening, aggressive, or destructive behavior towards any person while said dog is in an enclosed fence or other structure on any private property. Dog is subject to impound and large fine. This would apply equally to miniature and large breeds. A possible alternative is adding "a reasonable person" standard where this only applies to situations where a reasonable person would fear for safety. Additionally, perhaps owners of dogs found liable for this should be required to train the dog and fix the problem as opposed to a large fine.

OTHER IDEAS: require all cats and dogs in the city to be spayed or neutered unless the owner has an animal dealer license for a specific location, prohibit print advertisements for sale of animals without the animal dealer license being included in the ad, trap-neuter-release ordinance supporting the activity.

Public sounds off on proposed animal ordinance changes - WREX.com – Rockford’s News Leader