When used in this chapter, the following words, terms, and phrases, and their derivations shall have the meanings ascribed to them in this section, except where the context clearly indicates a different meaning:
Animal.Any live creature, both domestic and wild, including but not limited to fowl, fish, bees, and reptiles. The definition does not include humans.
Animal protection officer.An employee or agent of the City of Lakeway, designated by the chief of police to administer and enforce the inspection and enforcement requirements contained within this chapter.
Animal hospital.Any establishment maintained and operated by a licensed veterinarian for diagnosis and/or treatment of animal diseases and injuries.
Animal shelter.Any facility operated by the City of Lakeway or other county or municipality for the temporary care, confinement, and detention of animals and for the humane killing and other disposition of animals. The term shall also include any private facility authorized by the city to impound, confine, detain, care for, or destroy any animal.
At-large.An animal not under the direct physical control of its owner or handler and/or not on a leash under the immediate control of a person physically capable of restraining the animal; or not restrained securely within an enclosure or fence capable of fully and totally securing the animal.
Cat.Any member of the family felis domestica.
Cruelty.Any act or omission whereby physical pain, suffering, or death of an animal is caused or permitted, including failure to provide proper drink, air, space, shelter, or protection from the elements, a sanitary and safe living environment, veterinary care, or nutritious food in sufficient quantity. In the case of activities where physical pain is legally and necessarily caused, such as in medical and scientific research, food processing, customary and normal veterinary and agricultural husbandry practices, pest elimination, and animal training, “cruelty” shall mean a failure to employ the most humane method reasonably available.
Disposition.Adoption, quarantine, voluntary or involuntary custodianship or placement, or euthanasia humanely administered to an animal. The definition includes placement or sale of an animal to the general public, or removal of animal from any pet shop to any other location.
Dog.Any member of the family canis familiaris.
Domestic animal.Includes livestock, caged or penned fowl, pigeons, and normal household pets such as, but not limited to, dogs, cats, cockatiels, parrots, macaws, ferrets, hamsters, guinea pigs, gerbils, rabbits, fish, or nonpoisonous reptiles.
Enclosure.An area surrounded on all sides by a fence, wire, rail, wall, or other barrier for the keeping of animals. The definition includes cages and pens and excludes yard fences.
Exotic.Any live monkey, alligator, crocodile, cayman, raccoon, opossum, skunk, fox, wolf, hybrid wolf, sea mammal, bear, poisonous snake, nonhuman primate, prairie dogs, African Servals, member of the feline species other than domestic cat (felis domesticus), member of the canine species other than domestic dog (canis familiarus) or any other animal that would require a standard of care and control greater than that required for customary household pets sold by commercial pet shops or livestock. The definition does not include domestic cats (excluding hybrids with ocelots or margays), domestic dogs (excluding hybrids with wolves, coyotes or jackals), farm animals, rodents, and captive-bred species of common cage birds.
Feral cat.A cat that is born in the wild or is the offspring of a feral cat and is not socialized, or is a formerly owned cat that was abandoned.
Feral cat colony.A group of cats that congregates, more or less, together as a unit. Although not every cat in a colony may be feral, any non-feral cats that congregate with a colony shall be deemed to be a part of it.
Fowl.Any goose, pheasant, chicken, prairie chicken, peacock, guinea, duck, or turkey.
Guard or attack dog.A dog trained to attack on command or to protect persons or property, and who will cease to attack upon command.
Impoundment.The taking into custody of an animal by any police officer, animal protection officer, or any authorized representative thereof.
Kennel.Any establishment where domestic animals are being kept for boarding, training, or breeding purposes on a temporary or permanent basis.
Livestock.Any horse, stallion, mare, gelding, filly, colt, mule, hinny, jack, jenney, all species of swine, sheep, goat, llama, all species of cattle, or an emu, ostrich, or rhea. Livestock includes miniature livestock.
Microchip.A passive electronic implant device that is injected into an animal. Each microchip shall contain a unique and original number that is read by an electronic scanning device for the purposes of animal identification and recovery by the animal’s owners.
Nuisance.Any unreasonable disturbance, annoyance, or alarm to a person of ordinary sensibilities, or endangerment to the public health, safety, or welfare, or substantial interference with the rights of citizens to quiet enjoyment of life or property that arises out of the keeping, maintaining or owning of, or failure to exercise sufficient control of, an animal.
Owner.Any person or persons, firm, association or corporation, having temporary or permanent custody of, sheltering or having charge of, harboring, exercising control over, or having property rights to, any domestic animal covered by this chapter. A domestic animal shall be deemed to be harbored if it is fed or sheltered for three (3) or more consecutive days.
Public nuisance animal.Any animal that unreasonably annoys humans, endangers the life or health of persons or other animals, or substantially interferes with the rights of citizens, other than its owner, to enjoyment of life or property.
Sanitary.A condition of good order and cleanliness to minimize the possibility of disease transmission, including but not limited to maintaining a condition that is reasonably free of animal waste and does not allow insects, parasites, or flies to breed or cause an odor offensive to an adjacent residence or business.
Service animal.A dog that is individually trained to do work or perform tasks for a person with a disability, including a physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual, or other mental disability, as defined by title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The definition does not include an emotional support animal.
Stray animal.Any domestic animal, for which there is no identifiable owner, that is found in the city limits without traceable identification.
Traceable identification.Any type of identification, such as a microchip, tag with the owner’s address and telephone number, or tattoo that can be readily used by an animal protection officer to identify the current ownership of an animal.
Zoonotic disease.A disease that can be transmitted from animals to people or, more specifically, a disease that normally exists in animals but that can infect humans.
(Ordinance 2019-09-16-02 adopted 9/16/19)