For the purposes of this chapter, when not inconsistent with the context, words used in the present tense include the future tense, words in the plural include the singular, and words in the singular include the plural, and the use of any gender shall be applicable to all genders whenever the sense requires. Words not defined in this section shall be given their common and ordinary meaning.
Abandoned animal.Any animal that has not been provided one or more of the necessities of life, which includes air, food, water or protection from the sun and other elements of nature or has been left in the custody of another person without their consent. For the purpose of this chapter, an animal not reclaimed from the city's authorized animal shelter agent(s), within five days of the date the city's authorized animal shelter agent came into possession of the animal, shall also be considered abandoned.
Animal.Any live, vertebrate creature, domestic or wild, including but not limited to, dogs, cats, pigs, horses, birds, fish, mammals, reptiles, fowl, livestock and invertebrate creatures housed, sold or adopted as pets, but specifically excluding human beings.
Animal services.The animal services division of the police department, supervised by the chief of police, or his/her designee, of the city, or its designee, as determined by the city manager.
Animal services officer.Any person designated by the chief of police through written agreement or otherwise, to enforce the provisions of this chapter and who is authorized to receive reports of animal bites, investigate bite reports, administer euthanasia, ensure quarantine of suspected rabid animals, and otherwise carry out local, state and/or federal laws relating to animals, including, without limitation, rabies control and eradication.
Animal nuisance.Any animal which physically molests passersby or passing vehicles; attacks other animals or persons, trespasses on school grounds; roams at large; damages public or private property; or creates a noise disturbance in an excessive, continuous or untimely fashion.
Animal shelter.A facility operated by the City of Frisco or its agents or designees for the purpose of impounding or caring for animals held under the authority of this chapter or state or federal laws.
Animal welfare organization.A duly incorporated nonprofit organization that has tax-exempt status under section 501(c)(3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code whose mission is in whole or significant part devoted to the welfare, care and adoption of stray, abandoned or surrendered animals and which does not breed animals. A person shall not be considered an animal welfare organization if the person obtains animals from a breeder or broker in exchange for payment or compensation or resells animals obtained from a breeder or broker and provides payment or compensation to such breeder or broker. A person shall not be considered an animal welfare organization if the person auctions, barters, displays for sale, offers for sale, gives away or sells animals; however, an animal welfare organization may accept an adoption fee that does not exceed the cost of boarding, feeding and care of the animal being adopted.
Assistance animal or therapy animal.An animal that is specially trained or equipped to help a human being that is diagnosed by a licensed physician with a physical challenge or emotional disorder. The licensed physician shall provide in writing to animal services that removal of the animal would be detrimental to the person who requires the animal for assistance.
At large.An animal, including fowl or livestock, not in a secure enclosure or not completely confined by a building, wall, pen or fence of sufficient strength of construction, to physically restrain the animal on the premises behind the front building line of the owner or custodian, or an animal that is not under the physical restraint of the owner or custodian or any other person authorized by the owner to care for the animal by leash, cord, chain, or rope.
Breeder.A person who sells, exchanges or otherwise transfers only animals that were bred or raised, or both, by the person, or sells or otherwise transfers only animals kept primarily for reproduction.
Cat.Any cat that is a member of the feline family (Felis catus).
Commercial stable.A facility or property where a fee is charged to house, pasture, board, let, or rent horses, cattle, or other livestock and meets all other requirements of the City of Frisco Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance, as it currently exists or may be amended.
Currently vaccinated.Vaccinated and satisfying the following criteria:
(1) The animal must have been vaccinated against rabies according to the label recommendations of a USDA-approved rabies vaccine.
(2) At least 30 days have elapsed since the initial vaccination.
(3) The time elapsed since the most recent rabies vaccination has not exceeded the label recommendations of the USDA-approved rabies vaccine.
Custodian.Any human being or agency which feeds, shelters, harbors, has possession or control, or has the responsibility to control an animal.
Dangerous animal.An animal that:
(1) Makes an unprovoked attack on a person that causes bodily injury and occurs in a place other than a secure enclosure in which the animal was being kept and that was certain to prevent the animal from leaving the secure enclosure on its own; or
(2) Commits unprovoked acts in a place other than the secure enclosure in which the animal was being kept and was reasonably certain to prevent the animal from leaving the secure enclosure on its own, and those acts cause a person to reasonably believe the animal will attack and cause bodily injury to that person.
Disinfect.To free from infection by destroying harmful bacteria.
Disposition.The transfer of an animal from a pet store to another location, including the sale or adoption of the animal, the return of the animal to the person who supplied the animal to the pet store, or removal from the pet store of an animal that is deceased for any reason, including euthanasia.
Dog.Any dog that is a member of the canine family (Canine familiaris).
Domestic.Includes all domesticated species of animals adapted to live in intimate association with human beings or for the advantage of humans commonly accepted as being domesticated, excluding hybrids.
Euthanasia.A humane, painless method to end life for suffering, injured, contagious, or sick animals or as required by any state or federal law, as it currently exists or may be amended.
Ferret.Any ferret (Mustela putorius furo).
Gallinaceous fowl.Fowl of or relating to an order (Galliformes) of heavy-bodied largely terrestrial birds including pheasants, turkeys, grouse and the common domestic chicken.
Harboring.The act of keeping and caring for an animal or of providing a premises or other location to which the animal returns for food, shelter or care for a period of three consecutive days. This excludes the feeding of local or migratory birds (domestic or wild) on public or private property.
High risk animal.An animal that has a high probability of transmitting rabies including, but not limited to, skunks, bats, coyotes, raccoons, and foxes.
Home quarantine.Strict isolation of a domestic animal secured within a cage, crate, pen, or other LRCA approved isolation area, that consists of four sides, a top, and a bottom. The isolation area shall provide sufficient space to occupy the animal. Such isolation area shall prevent escape by the animal and prohibit all contact with other animals and any human beings by the animal (with exception of the pet owner). One pet owner who resides with the animal will be the sole care and maintenance provider for the animal during the home quarantine observation period.
Humane trap.Any trap designed to capture an animal without injuring the animal.
Hybrid.Any offspring of two animals of different species.
Impoundment.The seizing, taking, collecting, confining, or capturing of an animal.
Isolation.The confinement of an animal in a secure enclosure that prohibits all interaction with other human beings or animals (except one person responsible for the care of the isolated animal) to prevent the spread of disease or to observe an animal's health.
Kennel.Any premises wherein any person engages in providing pet care services (except veterinary) for four (4) or more animals, such as boarding, grooming, sitting and training pets, except as prohibited by the City of Frisco's Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance, as it currently exists or may be amended. Kennels are permitted only in zoning districts that allow that use.
Large livestock.Horses or any member of the domesticated horse family, including but not limited to, mules, donkeys and ponies; all types and varieties of cattle; alpacas, and other animals of the same approximate size and weight deemed by animal services to be large livestock.
Local rabies control authority (LRCA).The supervisor of animal services or his/her designee shall serve as the local rabies control authority (LRCA). He/she shall be authorized to enforce this chapter, receive reports of animal bites/scratches, investigate bite/scratch reports, ensure quarantine of possible rabid animals, ensure quarantine of biting/scratching animals, and otherwise carry out provisions of the Texas Health and Safety Code, chapter
826, as it currently exists or may be amended, to control and eradicate rabies.
Low risk animals.Animals that have a low probability of transmitting rabies, including, but not limited to, rats, mice, squirrels, gophers, beavers, prairie dogs, muskrats, nutria, jackrabbits, cottontails, swamp rabbits, opossums, shrews, moles, armadillos, or any animals of the orders Rodentia, Lagomorpha, Didelphimorphia, Insectivora or Xenarthra.
Microchip/microchip implant.A passive electronic device that is injected into an animal by means of a hypodermic-type syringe device. Each microchip implant shall contain a unique and original number that can be read by an electronic scanning device for purposes of animal identification and recovery by the animal's owner.
Microchip reader.An electronic scanner with an operating frequency that detects a microchip that has been implanted in an animal and that displays the number of the microchip implant to its operator. The microchip reader shall be of a type that activates and displays the number of a microchip implant manufactured by multiple vendors.
Notice.Providing written notice by personal service, certified mail (return receipt requested), or a notice left at the entrance to the premises where an animal is harbored.
Notify and notification.Unless otherwise provided in this chapter, a requirement to notify animal services means to contact animal services by telephone at (972) 292-6010. Notification shall be made immediately, but only as soon as can be done safely.
Owner.Any person, firm, entity, or corporation having ownership of any animal; or a person who has, harbors or keeps, or causes or permits to be harbored or kept, any animal in his/her care or who permits an animal to remain on or about his/her premises or who has custody or control of any animal. Proof that a person is in control of a premises where an animal is usually kept, harbored or maintained shall establish a prima facie presumption that such person is the owner of such animal.
Person.Includes an individual, partnership, firm, corporation, association, trust, estate, or other legal entity.
Pet animal.Includes domestic dogs, domestic cats, domestic ferrets, rabbits, rodents, birds, reptiles and any other species of animal that are customarily sold or retained as a household pet, but shall not include swine and wild animals, such as, among others, skunks, squirrels, coyotes, foxes, opossums, bats, nonhuman primates, and any other species of wild, poisonous or carnivorous animal that may be further restricted in this chapter or regulated by any state or federal law, as it exists or may be amended.
Pet store.A retail establishment open to the public and selling or offering for sale animals, including, but not limited to, animals for use as pets or animals intended as food for other animals. "Pet store" does not include a retail establishment open to the public and selling or offering for sale animals to agricultural operations for purposes that are directly related to the raising of livestock or poultry on a farm or ranch. A person who sells, exchanges or otherwise transfers only animals that were bred or raised, or both, by the person, or sells or otherwise transfers only animals kept primarily for reproduction, shall be considered a breeder and not a pet store.
Police dog.A domestic dog that is owned or employed by a governmental law enforcement agency.
Primary enclosure.Any structure used to immediately restrict an animal to a limited amount of space, including a cage, pen, room, pet carrier or a structure approved by the LRCA, or his/her designee.
Purchaser.A person who purchases an animal from a pet store operator without the intent to resell the animal.
Quarantine.The observation period during which a biting/scratching animal or an animal suspected of rabies is physically confined for observation as provided by local, state or federal laws, as they exist or may be amended.
Rabies.An acute viral disease of human beings and animals affecting the central nervous system and customarily transmitted by an infected/contagious warm-blooded animal.
Sanitize.To make physically clean and to destroy, to the extent practical, agents injurious to the health of animals and humans.
Secure enclosure.A fenced area behind the front building line or inside of a structure that is:
(2) Capable of preventing any entry by the general public, including children;
(3) Capable of preventing the escape or release of an animal;
(4) Clearly identified or marked as containing a dangerous animal with a sign no less than 12 inches by 12 inches; and
(5) Secured in such a fashion to prevent an animal from exiting of its own volition through any openings (i.e., windows, screen windows, screen doors, etc.) or other means.
Service animal.An animal qualified as a "service animal" under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act.
Shelter.A structure that is capable of providing cover and protection from the weather. At a minimum, a shelter must have three (3) sides, a top, a bottom and must be adequately ventilated; it must have bedding material; and it must be large enough so that the animal can enter, stand, turn around, and lie down.
Small livestock.All types of domesticated swine, sheep, lambs, goats, and other animals of the same approximate size and weight or deemed as such by animal services to be small livestock.
Stray animal.Any animal for which there is no identifiable owner, custodian, or harborer and/or is a public nuisance and may be impounded.
Supervisor of animal services.The person designated by the chief of police or his/her designee to supervise all aspects and operations of animal services.
TDSHS.The Texas Department of State Health Services, Zoonosis Control Division, as it currently exists or may be amended.
Tether.Any leash, chain, cord, rope or other means of restraining an animal or the act of chaining, tying, fastening or otherwise securing an animal to a fixed point so that it can move or range only within certain limits.
Transfer.The release of an animal by its owner to another person by sale, gift, adoption or other disposition, including the exchange of animals between pet stores.
USDA.The United States Department of Agriculture.
Vaccinated.Properly injected with an approved rabies vaccine licensed for use in that species by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and administered by a licensed veterinarian.
Veterinarian.A veterinarian licensed by the state board of veterinary medical examiners to practice veterinary medicine in the State of Texas or a person who practices veterinary medicine on an installation of the armed forces or National Guard.
Veterinary hospital/clinic.Any establishment maintained and operated by a licensed veterinarian for surgery, diagnosis, and treatment of diseases and injuries of animals.
Wild animal.Any animal that is customarily considered dangerous, or undomesticated, including, but not limited to:
(31) Any member of the families, classifications or order of: Helodermatidae (venomous lizards), Hydrophiidae (venomous snakes), Viperidae (rattlesnakes, pit vipers and true vipers), Elapidae (coral snakes, cobras, and mambas), Columbridae-Dispholidus Typus (boomslang), Bioga Dendrophila (mangrove snake) and Kirklandii (twig snake only), Suidae (i.e., swine), Crocodilia, Aves Order Falconiforms (i.e., hawks, eagles, falcons & vultures), Carnivores, Felidae (i.e., lions, tigers, bobcats, jaguars, leopards and cougars, except domestic cats), Canidae (i.e., wolves, dingos, coyotes, foxes and jackels and any hybrid or an animal listed in the section, except domesticated dogs), Mustelidae (i.e., weasels, skunks, martins, minks, badgers and otters, except domestic ferrets), Procyonidae (i.e., racoons and coati), Ursidae (i.e., bears), Marsupialia (i.e., kangaroos, opossums, koala bears, wallabys, bandicoots, and wombats), Chiroperta (i.e., bats), Edentata (i.e., sloths, anteaters, and armadillos), Proboscidea (i.e., elephants), Primata (i.e., monkeys, chimpanzees, orangutans and gorillas), Rodentia (i.e., beavers and porcupines), Ungulata (i.e., antelope, deer, bison, and camels), Amphibi (poisonous frogs, except nonpoisonous reptiles or nonpoisonous snakes);
(32) Any hybrid of an animal listed in this definition;
(33) All nonhuman primates, excluding registered therapy animals and service animals, unless certified for medical, biological, herpetological or other scientific research or study. This definition shall apply regardless of state or duration of captivity);
(34) Wild animal does not include small livestock, large livestock, fowl or normal household pet animals, such as, but not limited to domestic dogs, domestic cats, domestic ferrets, cockatiels, hamsters, guinea pigs, gerbils, rabbits, fish or nonpoisonous reptiles or small, nonpoisonous snakes (less than three feet total length).
(Ordinance 08-01-06, sec. 3, adopted 1/15/08; Ordinance 15-10-76, sec. 2, adopted 10/6/15; Ordinance 2020-01-03 adopted 1/21/20)