[Adopted 11-1-2004 by Ord. No. 04-12]
As used in this article, unless the context
otherwise clearly indicates, the following terms shall have the meanings
indicated below:
ANIMAL
Includes every nonhuman species.
ANIMAL ABANDONMENT
Includes completely forsaking or deserting an animal originally
under one's custody without making reasonable arrangements for
custody of that animal to be assumed by another person. This does
not include trapping and releasing cats as part of a TNR program.
[Amended 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER
A person employed by the City of Harrington as an enforcement
officer, including sworn police officers.
ANIMAL SHELTER or VETERINARY FACILITY
Any premises so designated by the City of Harrington for
the purpose of impounding and caring for strays, animals found running
at large, or animals in violation of this article.
AT LARGE
An animal off the premises of the owner and not under the
control of a human being either by leash, cord, chain or otherwise.
Cats participating in the TNR program do not have owners and are not
considered at large.
[Amended 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
CAREGIVER
Anyone who cares for cats participating in the TNR program.
[Added 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
CAT COLONY
A group of feral or stray cats that congregate, more or less,
together as a unit and share a common food source.
[Added 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
CRUEL
Includes every act or omission to act whereby unnecessary
or unjustifiable physical pain or suffering is caused or permitted.
CUSTODY
Includes the responsibility for the welfare of an animal
subject to one's care and control whether such person owns it or not.
DOMESTICATED ANIMAL
Any animal that is accustomed to living in or about the habitation
of man, including, but not limited to, cats, dogs, cows, horses, swine
and fowl.
FERAL CAT
An untamed domestic cat living in the wild; cats released
by owners who no longer care for them; offspring of such an abandoned
cat.
[Added 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
FOOD AND DRINK
Includes providing each animal with daily food and water
of sufficient quality and quantity to prevent unnecessary or unjustifiable
physical pain or suffering by the animal.
OWNER
Any person, partnership, association, or corporation owning,
keeping or harboring an animal. Any animal shall be deemed to be harbored
if it is fed or sheltered for three consecutive days or more. A caregiver
is not considered an owner.
[Amended 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
PUBLIC NUISANCE ANIMAL
Any domestic animal or group of domestic animals which:
A.
Is repeatedly found at large; or
B.
Damages the property of anyone other than its
owner; or
C.
Molests passersby or chases passing vehicles
or bicycles; or
D.
Barks, whines or howls in an excessive, continuous
or untimely fashion; or
E.
Creates an odor which is noxious or offensive,
and/or which constitutes a substantial annoyance, convenience or injury
to the public; or
F.
Interferes with the health, comfort, safety
or enjoyment of property; offends the sense of decency of the public
as a result of unsanitary conditions in the area where such animals
are kept; and/or which creates a danger to the public health as determined
by the Division of Public Health.
RESTRAINT
An animal is under "restraint" within the meaning of this
article if it is controlled by a leash, cord, chain, or under the
control of an owner or other responsible persons and obedient to that
person's commands, or within a vehicle being driven or parked on the
street, or within the property limits of its owner or keeper.
SHELTER
Includes providing each animal with adequate shelter from
the weather elements as required to prevent unnecessary or unjustifiable
physical pain or suffering by the animal.
STRAY
A domesticated animal for which ownership is not established
or for which owner disclaims future responsibility.
TRAP, NEUTER, RETURN (TNR) PROGRAM
A humane and nonlethal approach to community cat population
control; a comprehensive management plan where healthy feral cats
are sterilized and vaccinated, ear-tipped, then returned to their
habitat and provided with long-term care.
[Added 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
VICIOUS ANIMAL
Any animal which constitutes a physical threat to a human
being or other animal by virtue of attacks of such number and/or severity
as to be likely to cause property damage or physical injury. Evidence
of a prior instance of an animal biting a human being, without provocation,
shall be prima facie evidence that the animal is vicious.
WILD ANIMAL
Any live monkey (nonhuman primate), raccoon, skunk, fox,
poisonous snake, boa, python, leopard, panther, tiger, lion, lynx
or any other warm-blooded animal which can normally be found in the
wild state.
The driver of any motor vehicle which strikes
an animal shall immediately notify the Harrington Police Department.
[Amended 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
A. The owner or lawful possessor of any dog shall obtain a license for his/her dog pursuant to 9 Del. C. § 902(a), and any owner or possessor who shall fail to comply with the provision of the laws of Delaware shall be punishable as provided in §
82-14 of this article.
B. The owner or lawful possessor of any cat shall procure an identification
tag or microchip for said animal. The identification tag shall contain
the name, address, and telephone number of the owner of the animal.
Such tag shall be attached to a collar and secured around the neck
of the cat. Feral cats that have been trapped, spayed or neutered
and rereleased are exempt from this section. Each cat would be ear-tipped,
clearly identifying it as a member of the Harrington Feral Cat TNR
Program.
C. The provisions of this section may be enforced by any police officer
or by any person designated to act as an animal control officer.
[Amended 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
No person shall abandon any domesticated animal
or any wild animal in any public place, including the right-of-way
of any public highway, road or street, or on the property of another.
Feral cats that have been trapped, spayed or neutered and rereleased
are exempt from this section. Each cat would be ear-tipped, clearly
identifying it as a member of the Harrington Feral Cat TNR Program.
Animals at large and public nuisance animals
may be taken by an animal control officer or police officer and impounded
in an animal shelter or veterinary facility at the owner's expense.
At the discretion of the animal control officer or police officer,
such animal may be left in the custody of its owner and said owner
issued a summons for violation of this article. The owner of any impounded
animal shall be entitled to regain possession of the animal within
five days after the impoundment upon payment to the City of such fees
as Council may set from time to time. If the owner does not regain
possession of the animal, the City is authorized to dispose of the
animal.
No person shall keep, grow, raise or maintain
swine, cattle, sheep, goats, horses, chickens, turkeys, guineas, geese,
ducks, pigeons, any wild animal, or any other animal not normally
housed in a human residence within the corporate limits of the City.
[Amended 8-6-2012 by Ord. No. 12-16]
Any person found to be in violation of any section of this article which does not contain a specification of the fine shall pay a mandatory and nonsuspendable fine as established in Chapter
180, Municipal Fees. For the fourth offense, the animal must be removed from the City of Harrington within 24 hours. If the animal is not so removed, the owner or custodian shall be fined as established in Chapter
180, Municipal Fees, per day that the animal remains within the City of Harrington.
[Added 4-16-2007 by Ord. No. 07-03]
The provisions of this article shall not apply
to the ownership or use of service dogs by persons with disabilities
or dogs used in police activities of the City used by or with the
permission of the City of Harrington Police Department. As used in
this section, “service dogs” shall mean those animals
that are individually trained to perform tasks for people with disabilities,
including, but not limited to, animals guiding people who are blind,
animals alerting people who are deaf, animals pulling wheelchairs,
animals alerting and protect a person who is having a seizure or animals
performing other special tasks for persons with disabilities.