A.
The maintenance of animals which are potentially dangerous or vicious and involve a threat to property and the health and safety of those on streets, sidewalks and private property where the animals are not maintained constitutes a serious hazard within the city. The increasing tendency to maintain animals, especially dogs, which by virtue of breeding or training have a propensity to attack others, compounds the hazard. Specific injuries to persons and animals resulting from attacks by such animals illustrates the need for regulation.
B.
Every owner of an animal is held accountable for the exercise of such control over the animal as necessary to insure that the animal does not destroy the property of other persons or injure human beings or other animals who are not on the premises where the animal is maintained. Such accountability is imposed whether or not the damage or injury results from the negligence or other fault of the owner, and regardless of the degree of precaution or control exercised by the owner.
C.
Further, within the city there are potentially dangerous and vicious animals which constitute a public nuisance which should be abated. The provisions of this chapter provide an expedited, alternative administrative procedure by which animals found to be potentially dangerous or vicious may be abated and their owners or keepers appropriately penalized and otherwise held responsible for injury or damage caused by their animals. This chapter is intended to supplement rather than supplant any other remedy available either under state law or city ordinance.
D.
This chapter does not apply to commercial kennels, veterinarians, or to dogs utilized by the Sheriff, Police Department, or any law enforcement officer in the performance of police work.
(O2008 1)