[Added 7-30-2013 by L.L. No. 12-2013]
A. It shall be unlawful and a violation of this chapter for any person
to tether, leash, fasten, secure, restrain, chain or tie a dog to
any stationary object outdoors or cause such dog to be restrained
in a manner that:
(1) Endangers such dog's health, safety or well-being:
(2) Restricts such dog's access to suitable and sufficient food
and water;
(3) Does not provide such dog with shelter appropriate to its breed,
physical condition, and the climate as defined by § 353-b
of the New York State Agriculture and Markets Law; or
(4) Unreasonably limits the movement of such dog because it is too short
for the dog to move around or for the dog to urinate or defecate in
a separate area from the area where it must eat, drink. or lie down.
B. Notwithstanding the provisions of Subsection
A of this section, no person shall tether, leash, fasten, secure, restrain, chain or tie a dog for any amount of time with a device that:
(1) Is a choke collar or pinch collar, or otherwise causes such dog to
choke:
(2) Has weights attached or contains links that are more than one-quarter-inch
thick;
(3) Because of its design or placement, is likely to become entangled;
(4) Is long enough to allow such dog to move outside of its owner's
property; or
(5) Would allow the restrained dog to move over an object or edge that
could result in the strangulation of or injury to such dog.
C. The provisions of this section shall not be construed to prohibit
the Village of Islandia, any accredited Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals or any law enforcement agency from enforcing
any other law, rule or regulation regarding the humane treatment of
animals.
[Amended 11-6-1997 by L.L. No. 5-1997]
A. No person owning, harboring, keeping or in charge
of any dog shall cause, suffer or allow such dog to soil, defile,
defecate on or commit any nuisance on any common thoroughfare, sidewalk,
passageway, bypath, play area, park or any place where people congregate
or walk or on any public property whatsoever or on any private property
without the permission of the owner of said property. The restriction
in this section shall not apply to that portion of a street lying
between the curblines.
B. Any person owning, harboring, keeping or in charge
of any dog which soils, defiles, defecates on or commits any nuisance
on any common thoroughfare, including that portion of a street lying
between the curblines, sidewalk, passageway, bypath, play area, park
or any place where people congregate or walk or upon any public property
whatsoever or upon any private property without the permission of
the owner of such property shall immediately remove all feces deposited
by such dog. The feces removed shall be disposed of by the person
owning or in charge of any such dog in a sealed, nonabsorbent, leakproof
container.
C. Exception for guide dogs. The restriction in this
section shall not apply to individuals who may use guide dogs.
D. Penalties for offenses of this section shall be punishable by a fine not less than $25 for a first offense up to the maximum $250 as provided in §
67-23 of this chapter for subsequent offenses.
The Dog Warden of the Town of Islip, in addition
to the powers granted to him by law, may, upon the application of
a resident of the Village and surrender of the animal at the animal
shelter, accept any dog or cat owned by such resident for immediate
destruction or any dog for immediate adoption. A dog may be surrendered
for adoption or destruction; and if, in the opinion of the Dog Warden,
said dog is not suitable for adoption, the dog may be humanely destroyed.
The Dog Warden, Deputy Dog Wardens and peace
officers duly authorized to act as such within the Village are hereby
authorized to issue summonses and to present information for the appearance
of violators of this article before courts of competent jurisdiction.