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Please Help Us to Help Others
If you learn things as you deal with zoning regulations,
ordinances, and the neighbors that others should/should not
do when dealing with
zoning regulations, ordinances, and the neighbors, please convey that
information
to one of the officers or directors of the American Poultry
Association and we will make that information available here for others.
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Raising Birds in an Urban Area
Dealing with Zoning Regulations, Ordinances, and the
Neighbors Bart Pals’ article, “Helping Poultry Breeders Raise Birds
in an Urban
Area” that was originally published in the 1996 APA Yearbook,
pages 121-28.
In his article, Avery offers eight suggestions of things that you
should do
(find out about building codes, permits, and licenses; get your
neighbors on
your side; be a good neighbor, etc.) before you build a pigeon
loft in your
back yard. Copyright restrictions are such that we can not reprint
Avery’s
article here. But we can point out that virtually all of the
points that
Avery makes in his article are covered in greater detail in Bart
Pals’ article.
But, by all means, do contact James Avery (Post Office Box 439,
Newalla, OK
74857-0439. Phone 405-386-6884; e-mail:
James4Bird@aol.com,
) and
ask him if
he or the NPA has any additional information on the topicc
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Helping Poultry
Breeders Raise Birds in an Urban Area
By Bart Pals
Raising poultry within the city limits can be a fun and
rewarding experience for everyone
involved, but much planning is required. Many people are
very successful in raising poultry
in a residential area. All types of poultry
are being bred successfully and without problems in
urban settings.
This article is designed to be an aid in helping people
protect their right to raise
poultry within city limits. Please remember that it is not
the
birds that you keep but how you keep them that is important.
Check local ordinances to know
what is allowed.
The first thing that must be considered are the rights of
your neighbors. Your birds must
fit in with the neighborhood and the city. Cleanliness is
the most important requirement for raising poultry in town.
Your birds must be kept clean.
Keeping the area neat and tidy will help with the general
feeling towards your birds. It doesn’t matter what you raise
or what type of facilities you
have, keep everything clean. Keeping pens fresh, keeping
things picked up, and keeping the area swept will all aid in
the general feeling of your
neighbors towards your birds.
Insect control goes hand in hand with cleanliness. Backyard
poultry breeders must control
insects. Parasites must be kept off the birds and flies must
be controlled around the poultry
house. Keeping pens clean will aid in insect
control but spraying or other measures may also be
needed. Secure a place to dispose
of waste and have a backup place secured in case the first
one fails. Feed should be stored
in containers that will help prevent rodents.
The type of building you use must fit in with the
neighborhood. Take into
consideration the type of siding, roofing, fencing, size,
and the height of
the building. This structure should blend in with the
existing buildings. When designing
the building, you must make sure that your birds are not
going to wake the neighborhood at 5:00 A.M. Individual doors
for each pen, that can be opened
and shut at reasonable times, should be built into the
structure to help minimize noise problems. The type
and size of pens that you will be
able to use may determine what type or types of poultry you
will be able to raise. Your birds
will have to be confined. Very few people will
appreciate birds running around the neighborhood.
Security measures may also have to
be taken. Stray dogs, varmints, and vandals should be
guarded against. Security lights,
gates, fences, and strong wire will all help to
protect your birds. Included in your building should
be an area designed forshow boxes, extra feeders and
waterers, etc.
Plant shrubs or build a fence that will help deaden the
sounds that thebirds will make. Shrubs and fences also help
the building blend in with the
neighborhood. Planting flowers around the building also
helps make the structure—and your
birds—look more attractive to the neighbors.
Starting small and setting goals are essential. Start out
with a pair or trio of birds and
know how many birds you can easily handle. A trio of birds
can produce a lot of chicks and these chicks will grow into
adults. Know exactly how many
birds your facility can handle and always remember not to
overcrowd your birds. One must realize that not every
chick hatched will be a “winner,”
so if you plan on hatching many chicks be prepared to cull
and have an outlet for the culls. When raising birds in
town, you can not keep the culls.
Realizing this fact before hatching will help keep things
under control.
You must consider what species of poultry to raise. It is
pretty difficult to raise Toulouse
geese in a residential area. Standard birds can be raised
but in a limited area. Remember that you can not keep as
many as you might llike because of
limited space. Remember that noise is a factor and that
large fowl have a lower-pitched crow that travels
farther than the sharp,
high-pitched crow of a bantam. Ducks can be raised in town,
but they are messy and rather
noisy. Ducks can be raised in town but remember that there
will be extra work involved in keeping the area
clean. Extra precautions may have
to be implemented to help control the extra sound from
waterfowl as well
What particular breed of poultry you raise should be
considered. Docile breeds should
be considered. Many breeds are known for their wild or
tenacious behavior. These should be steered away from.
Breeds that are not “flighty” and
are not aggressive are the breeds that should be considered.
Some breeds mature much faster and can be culled much
sooner than others.Japanese bantams can be culled for long
legs from the incubator. Slower
maturing breeds mean that the young birds must be kept that
much longer before you can cull,
which means that fewer chicks can be hatched. Faster
maturing breeds mean that you can cull sooner and
hatch a few more chicks. It is
very easy to get wrapped up in setting eggs and hatching
chicks and in a few months you’re
out of room and don’t know what to do with all of the
young birds. You must always remember that you are dealing
with limited space and manage your
birds accordingly.
What variety of poultry you raise is yet another aspect that
should be considered. Solid
colored birds will give you a higher percentage of adults
birds to pick from. Laced birds will provide more culls due
to color problems. Some varieties
will produce multiple colors of offspring. The blue
variety will produce blue, black, and splash offspring.
Choosing the particular species, breed, and variety are very
important aspects to consider
before you begin raising poultry within the city limits.
It doesn’t matter what kind of poultry you raise. Be sure
you understand everything that may
be involved in raising that breed or variety of birds.
Investigate the breed that you are going to raise. Read and
talk with other breeders about the
breed and the variety that you have chosen. Many of these
breeders have seen and dealt with some of the
problems involved with a
particular bred or variety. Learn from their experiences and
perhaps you will have an easier
time.
Educate your neighbors about the birds you are raising.
Frequently people think of poultry
as either broilers or layers. They have no idea that there
is such a wide variety of poultry. Educating your neighbors
can have a very positive effect on
your venture.
You can help educate your community by becoming involved
with your local 4-H group. You can
be involved in several areas of 4-H—by being a leader, a
poultry project leader, or through the Extension
Office as an Extension Council
member. Being involved with your poultry club can help
educate your city. Many clubs
sponsor shows, set up displays at malls, print educational
material, and do whatever they can to help promote
exhibition poultry. Getting
involved can help the local club, community—and you. Many
peoplegive talks in elementary schools and take live birds
with them. All of thesethings help educate the community
about poultry.
Things To Consider Before You Begin
Know the laws and ordinances pertaining to birds. Know the
restrictions the city may have.
Many cities have restrictions requiring poultry to be a
certain distance from the property line, house, street, and
alley. They also may restrict the
number of birds you can have.
Know the laws and ordinances pertaining to other pets.
Compare their restrictions with
those for poultry.
Consider your birds as pets, not livestock, and treat them
the same way a pet would be
treated.
Follow the enclosed guidelines and remember that keeping
poultry in a city is a privilege.
If You Have A Problem
If things go wrong, isolate the problem as soon as possible
and correct it if possible. Make
sure the problem is yours. One individual was accused of
having a bad odor coming from his chickens. In fact, the
odor problem was caused by a
neighbor who had spread cow manure on his garden. It was
mistakenly thought that the chickens were the cause
of the odor.
Always remain calm, cool, and collected. When you become
upset is when you are the most
likely to make mistakes. Never accuse a city official of
being wrong. Rather, suggest they
“consider” your idea. One city official’s idea
of being “grandfathered in” was that the city leg band all
the birds. As the birds die, then
the individual would turn in the leg band and would not be
able to replace that bird. When all of the birds were dead
then the grandfathered-in
individual would no longer be able to raise poultry. The
official was asked to listen, compare, and consider the
following. If the individual were
a business and the chickens were the inventory, the business
would have to close when the inventory was depleted. Usually
a business is grandfathered in
until that person dies, moves, or the business is sold—not
until the inventory is gone. The officials saw their
error and accepted the iindividual's
idea.
Invite the city’s health inspector to come to your place and
see first hand your operation.
Without the support of the city’s health inspector, you will
have a very difficult time trying to pursue the matter any
further. Show the health inspector
your pens and explain to him/her how often the pens are
cleaned and how you dispose of waste. Explain your
insect and rodent control methods.
Show the health inspector how clean your operation really
is.
Make your birds a benefit to the neighborhood. Offer extra
eggs to the neighbors. Most people
find the fresh eggs to be a treat. If the
neighborhood children want to see your birds, take the time
to go with them and let them see
and touch the birds. Let them feel that they are part of
your poultry program. If the neighborhood children
don’t like your birds, their
parents probably won’t either.
If a petition is filed against you please remember that most
people will sign anything. You can
get a copy of the petition from city hall and
carefully go through it. Check names and addresses to make
sure that they are actual and not
invented. Check to make sure the addresses are within
your area. One petition had the forged signature on
it of the sister of one of the
city officials.
Come up with your own petition. It is simply a matter of
writing your point of view on a
piece of paper and having people sign below it. Take your
petition to all of your neighbors within a two-block radius
of your place. If a neighbor will
not sign it, then perhaps you have located the person
making the complaint. If so, ask him/her what the problem is
and correct it as soon as
possible.
Try to secure as much local support as possible. If there is
a council meeting scheduled, then
make sure to attend it, along with as many other
people as you can muster up. Sometimes there is strength in
numbers.
Just because you have raised poultry in a particular area
for many years does not guarantee
that you will always be able to enjoy that privilege.
Simply because you are “grandfathered in” does not mean that
the privilege cannot be taken
away.
Invite city officials and council members to your house.
Show them your facilities and
explain to them how your birds are cared for.
Explain to the city officials what you are trying to
accomplish. If you raise birds to
be exhibited, then show them your awards. Explain the
achievements that you have made through your hobby.
If the city officials and/or council members can not or will
not come to your place, then send
them a packet of information. Include pictures of your
building, your birds, and an explanation of what you are
trying to accomplish. Include a
brief summary of how the birds are judged. Explain
that you are trying to follow a standard of perfection.
Include in this packet written
support statements from city leaders and other people who
are
aware of your accomplishments, your petition, and any other
information that you may feel
important for them to know about.
Hints
Consider your birds as pets, not livestock. When a bird
lives for ten ormore years and is cared for the way many
people care for their birds, then
they are more than simply farm livestock; they are pets.
Most larger cities allow poultry.
Most cities have no ordinances against crowing roosters.
Most noise ordinances refer to
barking dogs and loud vehicles.
Petitions do not generally hold much weight with city
officials but they do usually
thoroughly go over them to see if the people who have signed
them are legitimate. City
officials also realize that some people will sign
anything. If a petition is signed by a limited number
of people, all of whom
live in the neighborhood, then the city officials will take
them more seriously.
Make sure the complaint has come from within the
neighborhood. Most cities will not
consider a complaint except from a neighbor. A neighbor is
usually within a two-block radius
of your home.
Raising poultry is a hobby not a business. If you call it a
business, you may be opening up a
whole new can of worms.
Most elections are decided by a very small percent of the
people so the more support you can
show at a council meeting or public meeting the more
influence you will have with the city officials.
If city officials receive more than four letters regarding a
particular problem, they will take
it seriously.
If your city allows dogs, cats, and other small pets, then
they should allow bantams as pets.
Some city governments have been challenged on this
discrimination and have lost. Restrictions may apply, but
they should be allowed.
Some cities have tried to include poultry with wolves,
alligators, and other animals that
may be dangerous to other people. If you are raising
exhibition birds, you are not
raising dangerous animals.
Remember: All states and cities have different
laws and ordinances. Simply
because one state does something one way does not mean that
another state will do it that way.
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