As used in this chapter the following terms mean:
A 4-H/FFA animal is any animal under the control of an authorized 4-H or FFA program.
Any living creature except human beings, and including (without limiting the generality thereof) animals, birds, reptiles and fish, except the word “animal” shall mean only a mammal when referring specifically to the control of rabies.
The city animal control officer, or his or her designee, with authority over the city limits within which the dog, cat or animal is kept.
Facility in which the division of animal and rabies control is housed.
An abrasion, scratch, puncture, tear or piercing of the skin actually or suspected of being caused by the mouth of any animal.
Any person licensed by the city to keep, harbor, breed and/or raise in excess of four (4) dogs or four (4) cats, six (6) months of age or older, on any premises used or zoned for residential purposes and less than two acres in area.
A band, chain, harness or other suitable device worn around the neck of an animal to which a current rabies vaccination tag can be affixed.
Vaccinated and satisfying the following:
A dog that:
Makes an unprovoked attack on a person that causes bodily injury and occurs in a place other than an enclosure in which the dog was being kept and that was reasonably certain to prevent the dog from leaving the enclosure on its own; or
Commits unprovoked acts in a place other than an enclosure in which the dog was being kept and that was reasonably certain to prevent the dog from leaving the dog enclosure on its own, and those acts cause a person to reasonably believe that the dog will attack and cause bodily injury to that person.
The police department of the city.
An exotic animal is any animal that is not indigenous to the state of Texas. Exotic animals include the following: feral hog, Russian boar, aoudad sheep, axis deer, elk, elk hybrids, sika deer, fallow deer, red deer, and blackbuck and nilgai antelope.
An exotic fowl is any avian species not indigenous to the state of Texas. Exotic fowl include the following: guineas, peacocks, ratites, emu, ostrich, rhea, and cassowary.
An animal has been exposed to rabies if it has been bitten by any other animal or if it has been in contact with any animal known to be, or suspected of being infected with rabies.
To cause death of an animal by a method which:
The term including is not a term of limitation. It means “including but not limited to.”
A place where animals are bred and boarded that has been approved by the animal control officer.
A document issued by the officer or any other employee of the city that shows that the owner is entitled to keep an animal as required by this chapter. The term license includes the term permit.
Cattle, horses, mules, asses, sheep, goats, llamas, alpacas, exotic livestock, hogs, and miniature versions of same, unless otherwise defined.
Any animal warden or animal quarantine investigator employed by the city police department.
Any person who owns, harbors, handles, keeps or causes or permits to be harbored, handled, or kept, or has in his care, an animal or bird on or about his premises.
The word “person” shall extend and be applied to associations, corporations, firms, partnerships and bodies politic and corporate as well as to individuals.
A facility that is approved to keep and care for animals by the animal control officer. The facility houses homeless, lost or abandoned animals: primarily a large variety of dogs and cats. The animals are kept at the shelter until they are either reclaimed by an owner, adopted by a new owner, placed with another organization, or if necessary, euthanized.
Any act, condition, or thing existing, done, or in being within the city, or within the city’s extraterritorial jurisdiction, which endangers the public peace, property, health and safety of the citizens of the city. [Sec. 6.04.001 of Code of Ordinances].
A fenced area or structure that is:
A small identifying mark.
Inoculation of an animal with a vaccine that is licensed by the United States Department of Agriculture, and which is administered by a veterinarian for the purpose of immunizing the animal against rabies.
A doctor of veterinary medicine who holds a valid license to practice his profession.
Any animal that is not tame or domesticated.
(Ordinance 996 adopted 5/2/07; 2004 Code, sec. 2.101; Ordinance 1237 adopted 11/7/17; Ordinance 1243 adopted 2/6/18)