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(a) A stable for horses shall meet the requirements in 24 RCNY Health Code Article 131 governing walls, floors, ventilation, lighting and plumbing and shall have rodent proofing when required by the Department because of evidence of rat infestation. The Department, under such appropriate conditions as it may require, may allow a stable for racing horses to have in the stalls an impacted earth floor with straw, hay or similar material used for bedding.
(b) All exposed surfaces in a stable for horses shall be kept clean, and the walls, ceilings and exposed woodwork shall be whitewashed when necessary.
(c) Straw, hay or other material used as bedding shall not be placed upon a street, sidewalk or roof of a building.
(d) A horse-watering trough shall be maintained in a clean and sanitary condition and supplied with clean water.
(e) Except in unimproved areas, a stable shall not have or use a manure vault, pit or bin.
(f) All manure and other refuse shall be kept and treated within the stable in a manner satisfactory to the Department so as to minimize odors and prevent the breeding of flies or other annoying or unsanitary conditions. Manure shall either be removed daily or pressed into bales or barrels, adequately protected against flies and otherwise treated in a manner satisfactory to the Department. Manure or other stable refuse shall not be permitted to remain in a stable for more than four days.
(g) Unless special facilities satisfactory to the Department are provided for outside loading, the vehicle in which manure is to be removed shall be completely inside the stable and the stable doors shall be closed when manure is loaded. When barrels are unloaded they shall be cleaned and deodorized inside the stable in a manner satisfactory to the Department so as to prevent the creation of a nuisance.
(h) A stable yard or other area used by animals shall be kept clean, and the surface shall be graded so as to prevent the accumulation of liquids.
(i) All horses owned, boarded, used or brought into the City of New York for any purpose shall have an annual rabies vaccination. Every person who owns a horse and every person who owns or maintains a stable for horses in the City of New York shall maintain a record of such horse's rabies vaccinations and make such records available to officers, agents and employees of the Department for examination upon request. Requirements for rabies vaccination for horses shall apply to all horses housed or brought into any stable in the City of New York regardless of whether the stable is required to hold a permit issued pursuant to this Article.
(a) Sterilization required. No animal shall be released from an animal shelter for adoption by or return to a resident of the city of New York without first being spayed or neutered, except if the animal is exempt from sterilization pursuant to § 17-804 of the Administrative Code.
(b) Release to animal rescue groups. Whenever practicable, animals shall not be released by a shelter to an animal rescue group without first being spayed or neutered when such animal is being taken by the animal rescue group to assist in its adoption by others, except if, in the judgment of the shelter veterinarian, the health of the animal would be compromised by sterilization surgery at the time of release to the rescue group. No dog may be released by an animal rescue group to a person who resides in the City of New York unless the dog is sterilized and licensed pursuant to 24 RCNY Health Code § 161.04.
(c) Objections to sterilization. Any resident of the City of New York seeking to redeem an animal from a shelter and objecting to its sterilization may bring a cause of action in a court of competent jurisdiction seeking a declaration that such animal need not be sterilized.
(1) Upon delivery to the shelter operator of a bond in the amount of $20,000, the animal shall be returned to its owner.
(2) The bond amount shall be returned to the owner at the conclusion of the litigation, if the owner prevails in such litigation.
(3) The bond shall be forfeited if
(A) No cause of action is commenced within three months of the release of the animal to its owner, or
(B) The owner does not prevail in such litigation, and the animal either is (i) not returned to the shelter for sterilization or (ii) verifiable proof of sterilization is not submitted to the shelter.
(4) Spay neuter fund established. Sums collected from forfeited bonds shall be transmitted by the shelter operator to the Fund for Public Health in New York, Inc., or other not for profit agency approved by the Department, and placed in an animal spay neuter fund to be established by such fund or other agency. Expenditures of such collected sums shall be authorized by the Department to pay for free or low-cost animal sterilization services.
When the strict application of any provision of this article presents practical difficulties or unusual hardship, the Commissioner in a specific instance may modify the application of such provision consistent with the general purpose of this article and upon such conditions as, in his or her opinion are necessary to protect public health.
When used in this article: Barber shop means a store, establishment, place or premises in which one or more persons engage in the practice of barbering as defined pursuant to § 431(4) of the General Business Law but does not include the practice of medicine, dentistry, optometry, nursing, physiotherapy or osteopathy by a person licensed and registered pursuant to the Education Law.
A barber shop shall provide the following facilities and equipment:
(1) Washing facilities with hot and cold running water, a sanitary soap dispenser and freshly laundered individual or single-service towels for patrons and attendants.
(2) Receptacles, equipped with covers, which can be readily emptied and cleansed, for the deposit of soiled towels, linen and uniforms; and
(3) Receptacles, equipped with covers, for the deposit of hair droppings, paper, waste material and used single-service equipment.
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