10/24/2017 Ordinances 9656ORDINANCE NO. 9656
An ordinance to amend Chapter 5 of Grand Island City Code; to amend Sections
5-1, 5-12, 5-34 and Section 5-38; to add Sections 5-58 through 5-67; to clarify and/or make
general corrections to various code sections, to repeal any ordinance or parts of ordinances in
conflict herewith; and to provide for publication and the effective date of this ordinance.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE MAYOR AND COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF GRAND
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SECTION 1. Sections 5-1, 5-12, 5-34 and Section 5-38 of the Grand Island City Code
are hereby amended to read as follows:
CHAPTER 5 ANIMALS
Article I. General
§5-l. Definitions
As used in this chapter, the following terms mean:
Abandon. To leave any animal in one's care, whether as owner or custodian, for any
unreasonable length of time without making effective provision for its food, water, or other care
as is reasonably necessary for the animal's health.
Animal. Any live, member of the Animal Kingdom with the following exceptions:
Human beings;
Animals that are sold commercially as food for human consumption;
Animals that are slaughtered as food for human or animal consumption;
Animals that are slaughtered or processed for human use;
Animals that are used for scientific research conducted at commercial or academic
facilities;
Animals that are used as commonly acceptable bait for lawful fishing activities; or
Vermin.
Animal Abuse. To knowingly, willfully, intentionally or inhumanely kill, maim, injure,
torture, or beat an animal with the following exceptions:
Euthanization or treatment by a Veterinarian or at a Veterinary Hospital or Clinic;
Euthanization or treatment at an Animal Control Facility;
Killing or injuring by members of law enforcement or Animal Control Officers in the
course of their duties;
Killing or injuring by persons protecting themselves or others from potential death or
serious injury; or
Training or disciplining an animal using commonly accepted methods.
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
Animal Control Autho�itv. The entity contracted to enforce the City of Grand Island's animal
control laws. This also includes any law enforcement agencies authorized to enforce local, State,
or Federal animal control laws.
Animal Control O�'ficer. Any person employed or designated by any Animal Control
Authority or law enforcement agency to enforce local, State, or Federal animal control laws.
Animal Shelter. Any facility operated by the City or by the duly authorized Animal Control
Authority for the purpose of impounding or caring for animals held under the authority of this
chapter.
Anti-Escape Barrier. Any housing, fencing, or device humanely designed to prevent a dog
from leaving an area.
�iarv. A place where bee colonies are kept.
Auctions Facilitv. Any commercial establishment place or facility where animals are
regularly bought, sold, or traded, except for those facilities otherwise defined in this ordinance.
This section does not apply to individual sales of animals by owners.
Beddin�. Dry material such as straw, cedar or wood chips, or any other absorbent material
that provides insulation.
Bee. Any stage of the common domestic honey bee, Apis Mellifera Species.
Bird�. Any feathered vertebrate, including pigeons, but excluding poultry.
Bite. Any seizure with the teeth or mouth_by an animal which causes injury or harm.
Boarding Kennel. Any commercial facility used to house animals owned by persons other
than the owner or operator.
Breeder. Any person or entity engaged in breeding and/or selling more than ten (10) animals
in any twelve (12) month period.
Circus. A commercial variety show featuring animal acts for public entertainment.
Colonv. A hive and its equipment and appurtenances, including bees, comb, honey, pollen
and brood.
Commercial Animal Establishment. Any pet shop, grooming shop, auction facility, riding
school or stable, performing animal exhibition, or kennel with the following exceptions:
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
An animal shelter;
A veterinary hospital or clinic;
A commercial facility that sells, slaughters, or processes animals; or
A commercial or academic animal research facility.
Cruellv mistreat. To knowingly and intentionally kill, maim, disfigure, torture, beat, mutilate,
burn, scald, or otherwise inflict harm upon any animal.
Cruellv ne l�ect. To fail to provide any animal in one's care, whether as owner or custodian,
with food, water, or other care as is reasonably necessary for the animal's health.
Dan�erous Animal. An animal that has killed a human being; has inflicted injury on a human
being that requires medical treatment, or has killed a domestic animal without provocation with
the following exceptions:
An animal that is provoked;
An animal that is serving as a guard for persons or property; or
An animal that kills or injures a person who is trespassing.
Domestic animal. Shall mean a cat, a dog, or livestock.
Enclosure. Any tract of land intended to restrain or contain an animal by means of a building,
fence, or any other means.
Fowl. Any poultry, other than pigeons.
Grooming Sho�. A commercial establishment where animals are bathed, clipped, plucked, or
otherwise groomed.
Health Department. The agency or organization the City contracts with or designates to
enforce the provisions of Chapter 5- Animals of the Grand Island City Code related to public
health and welfare.
Hive. A structure intended for the housing of a bee colony.
Hvbrid animal. Any animal which is the product of the breeding of a domestic dog with a
nondomestic canine species.
Humane killin�. The destruction of an animal by a method which causes the animal a
minimum of pain and suffering.
Kennel. Any premises wherein any person engages in the business of boarding, breeding,
buying, letting for hire, training for a fee, or selling dogs or cats.
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
Livestock. Any hoofed animal commonly associated with domestic agricultural purposes,
including but not limited to: horses, mules, donkeys, cows, sheep, goats, llamas, hogs, bovine,
equine, swine, sheep, goats, domesticated cervine animals, ratite birds, or poultry.
Medical treatment. Treatment administered by a physician or other licensed health care
professional.
Mini pi�. A pure-bred animal of the species Sus Scrofa Domesticus, commonly known as
Vietnamese Potbellied, Juliana, African Pygmy (Guinea Hog), Yucatan or Ossabow Island pigs.
Mutilation. Intentionally causing permanent injury, disfigurement, degradation of function,
incapacitation, or imperfection to an animal. Mutilation does not include conduct performed by a
veterinarian licensed to practice veterinary medicine and surgery in this state or conduct that
conforms to accepted veterinary practices.
Owner. Any person(s), or legal entity having permanent control of an animal or housing,
feeding, or controlling an animal for more than three (3) days with the following exceptions:
A boarding kennel; or
A veterinarian, veterinary hospital, or veterinary clinic.
Performing Animal Exhibition. Any spectacle, display, act, circus, fair, or event in which
animals perform.
Pet. Any animal kept for pleasure or companionship rather than solely for utility.
Pet Shop. Any person, partnership, or corporation, whether operated separately or in
connection with another business except for a licensed kennel, that buys, sells, or boards any
species of animal.
Potentiallv DanQerous Animal. (a) Any animal that when unprovoked:
inflicts an injury on a human being that does not require medical treatment; or
injures a domestic animal; or
chases or approaches a person upon streets, sidewalks, or any public grounds in a
menacing fashion or apparent attitude of attack; or
(b) Any specific animal with a known propensity, tendency, or disposition to attack
when unprovoked, to cause injury, or to threaten the safety of humans or domestic
animals.
Restraint. Securing an animal by a leash or lead which results in it being under the control of
owner or custodian or being confined within the real property limits of its owner or custodian.
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
Riding School or Stable. Any place which has available for hire, boarding and/or riding
instruction, any horse, pony, donkey, mule, or burro.
Running at Large. Any dog or other animal e�€ outside the premises of its owner or custodian
and not controlled by a leash, cord, chain, rope, cage or other suitable means of physical
restraint.
Shelter. Any structure with a roof and at least three (3) walls designed and capable of
protecting and/or housing one or more animals while providing protection from the elements
and affording any animal housed or protected in it, the space to sit, stand, lie down, and turn
around.
Torture. Intentionally subjecting an animal to pain, suffering, or agony with the following
exceptions:
1. The slaughter of animals as food for human or animal consumption;
2. The slaughter or processing of animals for human use;
3. The use of animals for scientific research conducted at commercial or academic
facilities;
4. The use of animals as commonly acceptable bait for lawful fishing activities;
5. The extermination of vermin;
6. The euthanization or treatment of an animal by a Veterinarian or at a Veterinary
Hospital or Clinic;
7. The euthanization or treatment of an animal at an animal control facility;
8. The killing or injuring of animals by members of law enforcement or Animal Control
Officers in the course of their duties;
9. The killing or injuring of animals by persons protecting themselves or others from
potential death or serious injury; or
10. The training or disciplining of animals using commonly accepted methods.
Vermin. Animals that infest places where humans live, work, or control and which are
commonly considered objectionable, excluding animals used solely as feeder animals. Examples
include but are not limited to rodents and insects.
Wild Animal. Any animal that is native to a foreign country, of foreign origin or character,
not native to the United States, not native to the State of Nebraska, and/or is any wild, poisonous,
or potentially dangerous animal not normally considered domesticated, including but not limited
to monkeys, raccoons, skunks, snakes and lions but excluding birds and those animals listed on
the Approved Animal List.
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
Article IIL Animal Licenses
§5-12. Registration Fee; Amounts; Delinquent
(A) The owner of any dog, cat or mini-pig over the age of three months in the City of
Grand Island shall pay an annual pet license fee for said animal. Such fee shall be adopted by the
governing body and identified in the City of Grand Island Fee Schedule.
The annual pet license as provided in this section shall be for the period of January 1
through December 31 of the licensing year. The pet license provided for by this section shall be
secured by each new owner or new resident within thirty days of establishing residency in the
City or after acquiring said animal, notwithstanding the fact that the dog, cat or mini-pig may
have been registered within the annual period by a previous owner or that the dog, cat or mini-
pig had been registered with another authority other than the City of Grand Island.
(B) The fee required in (A) above shall become due on January 1 of the licensing year
and shall become delinquent on February 1 of each year. The owner of any dog, cat or mini-pig
in the City of Grand Island registering the same after said fee has become delinquent shall pay a
surcharge in accordance with the fees adopted by the governing body identified in the City of
Grand Island Fee Schedule.
(C) No dog, cat or mini-pig shall be registered and licensed unless and until the owner
shall display a certificate of a licensed veterinarian showing that such dog or cat has been
vaccinated for rabies. No mini-pig shall be registered and licensed unless and until the owner
shall show proof of vaccination as found in Section 5-64 as found below.
(D) The owner of any dog, cat or mini-pig that has been declared "potentially
dangerous" or "dangerous" shall pay, in addition to the pet license above, an annual kennel
inspection fee. Such fee shall become due at the time of the declaration, and then shall be paid
annually thereafter with the annual fee becoming due on January 1 of the year following the
declaration, and shall become delinquent on February 1 of said year. The kennel inspection fee
shall be adopted by the governing body and identified in the City of Grand Island Fee Schedule.
Article VI. Animal Control
§5-34. Running at Large; Restraint Required
It shall be unlawful for any owner to suffer or permit any dog or other animal to run at
large within the corporate limits of the City of Grand Island. "Running at Large" shall mean any
dog or other animal off the premises of the owner and not under the immediate control of a
person physically capable of restraining the animal by holding a leash, cord, chain, rope, cage or
other suitable means of physical restraint or if the animal is out of doors on the premises of the
owner, the animal shall be in an adequate fenced in area or securely fastened to a leash, chain, or
trolley system that is of a size and weight appropriate to the size, weight and temperament of the
animal to prevent the animal from leaving the owner's premises. It shall be the duty of the
Animal Control Authority or other appropriate city law enforcement officer to impound any
animal found running at large within the City of Grand Island. Every animal found running at
large in violation of this or any other section of the Grand Island City Code is declared to be a
public nuisance and may be impounded at the discretion of the Animal Control Authority or
other appropriate city law enforcement officer.
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
§5-38. Animal Noise
(A) No owner shall allow conditions to exist on said owner's property whereby the
owner's animal or animals annoy or disturb any neighborhood or any person by loud, continuous,
or frequent barking, howling, yelping, crowing, oinking, squealing or grunting.
(B) Owners will be subj ect to fine pursuant to § 1-7 of this code, or Nuisance Owner
declaration pursuant to §5-46 at the discretion of the Animal Control Authority or other law
enforcement personnel.
SECTION 2. CHAPTER 5 OF THE Grand Island City Code is hereby amended
by adding the following:
Article X. Mini-Pigs
§5-58. Number and Size Restrictions.
It shall be unlawful for any person to own, keep, or harbor at any time more than one
mini-pig, as defined in Section 5-1 above, per residential or dwelling unit within the city limits.
Further, it shall be unlawful for any person to own, keep or harbor any mini-pig reaching a size
greater than 100 pounds in weight and/or 22 inches in height measured at the shoulder within the
city limits.
§5-59. Spaying/Neutering.
It shall be unlawful to own, keep or harbor a mini-pig within the city limits that is not
spayed or neutered if four (4) months of age or older.
§5-60. Restraint.
It shall be unlawful for the owner of any mini-pig within the city to fail to keep their
mini-pig securely restrained by a leash, cord, chain, rope, trolley system, or fence sufficient to
confine the mini-pig in or upon their premises.
§5-61. Damaging Property of Others.
It shall be unlawful for the owner of a mini-pig to allow or permit their mini-pig to
damage property of others or cause bodily injury. If the owner is adjudged guilty of a violation
of this section, the court may, in addition to the penalty provided for the violation of this Code,
order such disposition or destruction of the offending mini-pig as may seem reasonable and
proper.
§5-62. License Application.
Written application for a pet license as required by provisions of this Chapter shall be
made to the Animal Control Authority, or other authorized agency. The contents of the
application shall contain:
(a) The name and address of the owner of the mini-pig;
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
(b) The color, age and sex of the mini-pig;
(c) Documentation signed by a licensed veterinarian indicating that, upon reaching the
age of four (4) months, the mini-pig has been neutered or spayed;
(d) Documentation of the breed of the mini-pig conforming to the definition of mini-pig
as found in Section 5-1 above; and
(e) Other such information as may identify the mini-pig.
The applicant shall certify to the information contained in such application under penalty of law
for the willful making of any untrue statement.
§5-63. Date for Obtaining License.
Licenses required by Section 5-12 shall be procured in conformance with the
requirements of Section 5-12.
§5-64. Vaccination Required.
Every mini-pig required to be licensed by this Article shall be vaccinated by a
veterinarian licensed to practice in the State of Nebraska for the following diseases:
Four (4) to Six (6) Weeks of Age: Erysipelas bacterin
Leptospira ( 5 or 6 serotypes) bacterin
Atrophic rhinitis vaccine
Eight (8) to Ten (10) Weeks of Age: Repeat above schedule (unless second vaccine
already administered)
Biannually: Booster leptospira bacterin
Annually: Booster erysipelas bacterin
Tetanus toxoid (if recommended by
veterinarian)
Booster atrophic rhinitis vaccine
Young mini-pigs shall be vaccinated within thirty (30) days after they have reached two
(2) months of age. Unvaccinated mini-pigs acquired or moved into the State must be vaccinated
within thirty (30) days after purchase or arrival, unless under two (2) months of age as specified
above. Subject to the above, every such mini-pig shall be revaccinated following a period of not
more than twelve (12) months since its last vaccination.
§5-65. Blood Tests Required.
Every mini-pig required to be licensed by this article shall, no later than the age of eight
(8) weeks, be blood tested to ensure that the animal is not carrying pseudorabies or brucellosis.
Such testing shall be repeated annually thereafter. In the event the animal tests positive for either
disease, the animal shall be held by the Animal Control Authority and treated until cured, or if
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
the disease is incurable, the animal shall be destroyed. The cost of holding and, if necessary,
destroying the animal shall be borne by the owner of the animal.
§5-66. Certificate of Vaccination and Blood Testing.
It shall be the duty of each veterinarian, at the time of vaccinating or blood testing any
mini-pig, to complete a certificate of vaccination and blood testing, which shall include but not
be limited to the following information:
(a) The owner's name and address;
(b) An adequate description of the animal, including but not limited to such items as the
animal's sex, age, name, and distinctive markings;
(c) The date of vaccination;
(d) The vaccination tag number;
(e) The type of vaccine administered;
(� The manufacturer's serial number of the vaccine used. Such veterinarian shall issue a
tag with the certificate of vaccination;
(g) The date of blood testing; and
(h) The results of the blood tests.
The veterinarian shall make and provide a copy of each certificate issued to the Animal
Control Authority at the time of its issuance. In the event blood tests reveal the presence of
pseudorabies, brucellosis, or other disease, the veterinarian shall notify the Animal Control
Authority immediately.
§5-67. Penalty for Violations.
Any person upon whom a duty is placed by the provisions of this Article who shall fail,
neglect, or refuse to perform such duty, or who shall violate any of the provisions of this Article,
shall be fined pursuant to §1-7 of this Code and the owner shall be subject to the provisions of
§5-46 Nuisance Owner of this Code. Each day that a violation of any section of this chapter
continues shall constitute a separate and distinct offense and shall be punishable as such. The
penalties herein provided shall be cumulative with and in addition to any penalty or forfeiture
elsewhere in this chapter provided.
SECTION 3. Any ordinance or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith be, and
hereby are, repealed.
SECTION 4. This ordinance shall be in force and take effect from and after its
passage and publication, within fifteen days in one issue of the Grand Island Independent as
provided by law.
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ORDINANCE NO. 9656 (Cont.)
Enacted: October 24, 2017.
Jeremy L. Jensen, Mayor
Attest:
RaNae Edwards, City Clerk
Ordinance No. 9656 failed to pass at the October 24, 2017 City Council meeting.
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