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Dateline: April 18,
2002
Aldermen
vote to ban livestock in city limits
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Any
Clarendon residents keeping livestock in the city have just 60 days to
“head ‘em up and move ‘em out” or risk violating a new municipal
ordinance.
Ordinance
340, passed at last Tuesday’s Board of Aldermen meeting, requires
citizens and firms in the city limits to have licenses for their property
and permits for their livestock. Violators could face a $500 per day fine,
and the livestock could be impounded and sold to the highest bidder at
public auction.
Mayor
Pro-tem Mac Stavenhagen said the aldermen began considering a new
ordinance last year after the city engaged in a second court battle to
enforce existing regulations. In recent years, one court case has been
left in legal limbo; and another, which the city won, is on appeal.
“This
will start us off with a clean slate,” Stavenhagen said. “It
eliminates all previous [animal] ordinances. The city and the city
attorney feel it should be easier to enforce.”
Stavenhagen
said the city took action out of concerns for public health hazards
related to flies and waste runoff that accompany livestock kept in pens.
According
to the new law, cattle, horses, mules, sheep, goats, buffaloes, and other
domestic farm animals are banned from the city unless certain criteria are
met. Individuals wishing to keep livestock in the city must obtain a
land-use license, which costs $20 per year, and a permit for each animal
at a cost of $10 per year per head.
In
seeking a permit, a person must provide such information as a legal
description of the property and an itemized listing of all residences,
businesses, or other buildings located within 300 feet of any part of the
property for which the license is desired.
No
livestock shall be kept in a pen or other enclosure of less than 1,000
square feet for each head of livestock, the ordinance says. And every pen
or enclosure must be kept clean and sanitary and cannot be a source of
flies or odors offensive to city residents.
No
swine, hogs, or pigs can be kept in the city.
Licenses
and permits can be revoked any time if the property or livestock
constitute a nuisance or are out of compliance with the ordinance or state
health regulations.
Veterinary
hospitals and clinics are exempted from the ordinance.
For
more information or to file for a license and permit, contact City Hall at
874-3438.
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