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The owner of a dog shall provide it with humane shelter from heat, cold, rain, wind, and snow, and shall give it food and water adequate to keep the animal in good health and comfort. Doghouses and kennels must be soundly constructed, dry, and provided in cold weather with clean bedding. All dogs must be given opportunity for vigorous daily exercise and must be provided by their owners with veterinary care when needed to prevent suffering. No owner shall permit a dog habitually to bark, howl, or in other ways be a public nuisance. A violation of this section is punishable as a misdemeanor.
(Ord. 19-27, passed 8-5-19; Am. Ord. 22-01, passed 1-3-22) Penalty, see § 10.99
The owner shall confine any female dog in heat within a building, in such manner that the dog will not be accessible to other dogs except for planned breeding and will not attract male dogs. A violation of this section is punishable as a misdemeanor.
(Ord. 19-27, passed 8-5-19; Am. Ord. 22-01, passed 1-3-22) Penalty, see § 10.99
(A) Every rabid dog or dog exposed to rabies shall be immediately confined by the owner, who shall promptly notify a police officer or a humane officer. The owner shall, upon demand by the Stanly County Health Department surrender any such dog for quarantine in the county pound, a humane society animal shelter, or a licensed veterinary hospital; provided that, if the owner elects to place the dog in a hospital, he shall be responsible for all costs. The dog may be quarantined a maximum of two weeks but shall be released earlier if certified by a licensed veterinarian to be free of rabies. No fee shall be charged for quarantine by the public pound.
(B) No person shall kill a rabid animal exposed to rabies, nor remove such an animal from the city without permission from the Stanly County Health Department, except when it is necessary to kill the animal to prevent it from escaping or from biting any other animal or person.
(C) The body of any animal dead of rabies or having been exposed to rabies prior to death shall be surrendered by the owner upon demand of the Stanly County Health Department.
(D) A violation of this section is punishable as a misdemeanor.
(Ord. 19-27, passed 8-5-19; Am. Ord. 22-01, passed 1-3-22) Penalty, see § 10.99
Any police officer of the city is authorized to enter any premises where a dog is kept or harbored, to inspect conditions under which the dog is kept, and to require the owner to exhibit a license for the dog. No person shall hinder, molest, or interfere with any police officer in the performance of his duties. A violation of this section is punishable as a misdemeanor.
(Ord. 19-27, passed 8-5-19; Am. Ord. 22-01, passed 1-3-22) Penalty, see § 10.99
(A) Circumstances requiring special preventive measures. Any officer of the Police Department shall have the authority to require the owner or custodian of a dog to comply with specific preventive measures, as described below in division (B), after taking into consideration the following three circumstances. This provision shall not limit the authority of the Police Department to declare any animal vicious and order its removal from the city limits as provided in § 81.26
of the City Code.
(1) Nature of the particular dog. The behavior, size, temperament, breed, capacity for inflicting serious injury, the number of dogs or other such similar factors which would be relevant to a determination of whether or not additional preventive measures need to be imposed for a particular situation; and
(2) Adequacy of confinement. The adequacy of the enclosure or confinement, if any; and
(3) Immediate surrounding area. The likelihood that the conditions pertaining to the particular dog and the dog's confinement are detrimental to the safety or welfare of citizens or the peace and tranquillity of citizens in the immediate surrounding area. In considering whether to order a special preventive measure, an officer of the Police Department is authorized to consider additional factors as aggravating circumstances that might warrant the ordering of special preventive measures:
(a) Child under the age of seven. There is a child under the age of seven who lives in such close proximity, or children walk by or are otherwise in close proximity, to the property occupied by the dog;
(b) Bite. The dog has bitten a human being or domestic animals without provocation or without a trespass, and the person bitten does not ordinarily reside on the premises;
(c) Dog trained for fighting or aggressive attack. The dog is kept primarily or in part for the purpose of dogfighting or the dog has been trained for aggressive attacks;
(d) Attitude of attack incident. A dog, without provocation or a trespass, has approached a person in an apparent attitude of attack;
(e) Reputation of a dog. The individual dog has a known propensity, reputation or tendency or disposition to attack unprovoked, to cause injury or to otherwise endanger the safety of human beings or domestic animals; or
(f) Dangerous animals. Any animal whose behavior constitutes a reasonable risk of injuring a human or animal or damaging personal property. That behavior includes, but is not limited to, an animal's biting or attacking or attempting to attack a human or another animal. However, this definition shall not apply to any animal that has been subject to provocation or if the victim has been trespassing, as defined herein, upon the animal owner's premises.
(B) Preventive measures.
(1) If the Chief of Police determines that the circumstances require special preventive measures, then the Police Department shall have the authority to require appropriate, specific preventive measures which might include, but are not limited to, the following: necessary repairs for any fence or enclosure, measures to ensure that a gate will remain closed, a “fence” or “secure dog fence” as described below or any other similar devise such as electronic electric fence that would provide greater assurance for the confinement of the dog, all of which are subject to being specifically approved for their adequacy by the Police Department.
(2) A fence shall be at least a minimum of four feet high and constitute a secure enough enclosure sufficient to contain the dog at all times. The minimum size of the enclosure may be at least 120 square feet. If the dog is over 15 inches at the shoulder or deemed capable of climbing a standard four-foot fence, then the Police Chief may require a six-foot fence or may require up to 160 square feet enclosure. The location of the enclosure shall be at the approval of the Chief of Police. It shall be in compliance with § 92.017 of the City Zoning Code.
(3) A secure dog fence means a fence, as immediately described above, that may also be enclosed on all six sides including the top. The bottom may be concrete unless the sides of the fence are buried one foot deep in a hard packed soil.
(4) Any reference to “fence” or “secure dog fence” shall be defined as stated immediately above.
(5) The Police Department shall also have the authority to require the owner to tattoo the dog at the owner's expense if that is necessary for identification, investigative or enforcement purposes.
(6) The Police Department shall have the authority to require the owner to procure liability insurance in the amount of at least $100,000 at the owner's expense, or to have the dog tattooed or to display a sign on the premises warning of the dog on the premises. The department shall have the authority to require the owner to show signed written statements about maintaining the liability insurance, the designated enclosure for the dogs and the duty to notify the Police Department if the dog escapes, and to require the owner to give the Police Department the authority to seize and impound the dog if the owner fails to comply with the provisions.
(7) The Chief of Police shall have the authority to waive any or all of these requirements if the Chief determines that a bite is inconsequential or that there is no necessity for action.
(C) Written order. If the Chief of Police determines that specific preventive measures must be complied with by the owner of a dog, the Police Department shall make reasonable efforts to notify the owner of the written order, state the reasons that preventive measures are required, identify the specific preventive measures that must be implemented and state the designated time period within which to comply with the written order. The Police Department shall have the authority to exercise discretion for extensions of time if that is reasonable in view of the good-faith progress of the owner in implementing the preventive measures.
(D) Failure to comply with written order. It shall be unlawful for an owner to fail to comply with a written order within the designated time for compliance stated in the written order or any extension thereof. In addition to the remedies set forth in § 33.99 of the City Code the penalty for failure to comply with the written order shall be $100. The Police Department shall have the authority to issue additional $100 citations for a continuing failure to comply with a written order.
(E) Owner's challenge to the written order.
(1) The owner may submit in writing a challenge to the Police Department's determination that division (A) is applicable to the owner's premises or submit in writing a challenge to the specific preventive measures required by the division. The owner's written challenge must be received at the office of the City Manager at 144 North Second Street, during normal working hours, five days from the date of the written order, not counting the day of issuance of the written order. The City Manager or a designee shall review the written challenge. The review of the challenge may be done on the basis of the written material and information received from the Police Department regarding the order.
(2) The person reviewing the challenge shall have the authority to make findings of fact and conclusions in respect to the written order. The decision, the written order and any findings of act and conclusions shall be final with the only other appeal made to the general courts of North Carolina.
(F) Seizure and disposition of animal. The Police Department is authorized to request Stanly Animal Control to seize any animal in violation as provided.
(Ord. 19-27, passed 8-5-19)
Hospitals, clinics, and other facilities operated by licensed veterinarians for the care and treatment of animals are exempt from all provisions of this chapter except §§ 81.35 and 81.36. The licensing provisions of this chapter shall not apply to nonresidents of the city unless they keep a dog within the city for more than 30 days.
(Ord. 19-27, passed 8-5-19)
KEEPING OF WILD OR VICIOUS ANIMALS
For the purpose of this subchapter the following definitions shall apply unless the context clearly indicates or requires a different meaning.
“ANIMAL.” Any living vertebrate, domestic or wild, excluding humans.
“OWN.” The status of holding a license for or legal title to an animal, or feeding, having charge of, harboring, sheltering, or taking care of any animal for three or more consecutive days.
“VICIOUS ANIMAL.” Any animal whose owner or keeper knows, or reasonably should know, has a propensity to attack a person by biting or in any manner causing injury or the reasonable likelihood of injury; or, one which has a propensity to habitually or repeatedly attack livestock or other domestic animals. This definition shall not apply to any animal which bites, attacks, or attempts to attack any person or animal unlawfully present upon the premises, or which is provoked to attack.
“WILD ANIMAL.” Any animal which can normally be found in a wild state; those feral, exotic, dangerous, or non- domestic animals which generally do not live in or about the habitation of humans, including, but not limited to, lions, tigers, leopards, wildcats, bears, deer, and the like.
(Ord. 19-27, passed 8-5-19)
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