Regulations for the keeping of female chickens on residential
properties are hereby established as follows:
A. No more than six hens shall be allowed on each lot. Hens may only
be kept by a domiciliary of a dwelling unit located on the lot on
which the hens are kept.
B. Male chickens (roosters), guinea hens or peacocks are expressly prohibited,
regardless of age or maturity.
C. Hens must be kept in and confined in a properly designed and constructed
coop that is at least four square feet per chicken in size but is
not in excess of 144 square feet. The coop shall require a building
permit but shall not be defined as an "accessory structure" per this
chapter. In addition, an outdoor fence run/range area, which is connected
to the coop is required and must be constructed in a manner that contains
the hens from all sides and provides at least 10 square feet per hen.
The coop and run must be adequately constructed and fenced to contain
the hens and to prevent access to the hens by dogs and other predators.
D. Hens shall be provided with adequate food and water and kept in a
humane condition. Chicken feed must be stored in rodent-resistant
and weatherproof containers.
E. Hens shall be confined at all times to the property on which they
are kept. It shall be unlawful for any person to allow hens to run
at large upon the streets, alleys or other public places of the City,
or upon the property of any other person.
F. Coops and runs shall be located in the rear yard of the parcel and
be located no less than five feet from any property line. The square
footage of the rear yard must be a minimum of 500 square feet. In
the case of a rear yard where such required setback from property
lines cannot be met, or the minimum square footage in the rear yard
cannot be met, a coop or run may be located in a side yard at the
discretion of the Building Department. No coop or run may be located
in the front yard between the house and the public street under any
circumstances. No chickens, coops, pens, cages, fences or other shelters
are permitted on a lot within 100 feet of any lake, pond, river or
stream, unless such body of water is wholly contained on the same
lot.
G. A coop, and the premises where the chicken coop is located, shall
be maintained in a condition such that the facility or chickens do
not produce noise or odor that creates a nuisance for adjoining lots,
and the responsible domiciliary and the owner shall remove any odorous
or unsanitary condition. The lot owner shall be responsible for the
repair on any adjoining lot of any damage caused by the chickens,
including but not limited to damage to dwellings, structures and yards,
and shall be responsible for repair of any unsafe condition.
H. The use and consumption of such hens and their eggs is limited to
the occupants of the premises and shall not be sold. Selling chickens,
eggs, or breeding chickens for commercial use is prohibited.
I. The killing or slaughter of hens is limited to killings or slaughters
undertaken for private use by the occupants of the premises and is
prohibited outside of enclosed buildings. Waste materials from the
slaughter of such animals shall be disposed of immediately in a clean
and sanitary matter.
J. The keeping of hens is prohibited unless a permit is obtained from
the City Building Inspector. An annual fee for such permit shall be
established by the Common Council pursuant to resolution. The Building
Inspector shall maintain a current listing of all permits issued hereunder.
Applications for a backyard hen permit will be available in the City
Building Inspector's Office. Applications shall be made on forms as
approved by the Common Council by the Building Inspector. Necessary
information shall include, but not be limited to proof of compliance
with this article. The City Building Inspector may impose any other
restriction on the location, size or design of the coop or run that,
in their sole judgment, protects the accessibility, health, safety
and welfare of the public. The City Building Inspector may revoke
a backyard hen permit for a specific site via written notice to the
property owner when the Building Inspector or designee finds, at his
or her sole discretion, that any requirements of this article are
not met, a rebuttable presumption of which shall be created by a)
a record of three or more complaints to the City Police Department
or City Building Inspector's Office about a specific site's chickens;
b) on the recommendation of Cornell Cooperative Extension; or c) on
the recommendation of the City Police Department. Upon revocation,
the City Building Inspector shall notify the permit holder in writing
of the same, and if the revocation stands, the owner must remove the
hens from the property per the requirements of the City Building Inspector.
Any appeal of the City Building Inspector's revocation or denial of
a permit issued under this article may be brought to the City of Plattsburgh
Zoning Board of Appeals pursuant to the City Code.