For the purposes of
this chapter, the following words and phrases shall mean:
(a) Abandon includes the leaving of an
animal by its owner or other person responsible for its care or custody without
making effective provisions for its proper care.
(b) Animals means all vertebrate and
invertebrate animals such as but not limited to bovine cattle, horses and other
equines, hogs, goats, dogs, cats, rabbits, sheep, chickens, ducks, geese,
turkeys, pigeons, and other fowl or wild animals, reptiles, fish, bees or birds
that have been tamed, domesticated or captivated.
(c) Animal Shelter means the facility or
facilities operated by the city or its authorized agents for the purpose of
impounding or caring for animals under the authority of this chapter or state
law.
(d) At-large means to be outside of a
fence or other enclosure which restrains the animals to a particular premise or
not under the control, by leash or lead, of the owner or other authorized
person capable of restraining the animal. Animals tethered to a stationary
object within range of public thoroughfares are deemed to be “At-large.”
(e) Bite means any actual or suspected
abrasion, scratch, puncture, tear, bruise, or piercing of the skin, caused by
any animal, which is actually or suspected of being contaminated or inoculated
with the saliva from the animal, directly or indirectly, regardless of the
health of the animal causing such bite.
(f) Cat means any member of the species
felis catus, regardless of sex.
(g) Dangerous or Vicious Animal means any
animal deemed to be dangerous or vicious pursuant to section 2-115 of this
chapter.
(h) Dog means any member of the species
canis familiaris, regardless of sex.
(i) Fowl means all animals that are
included in the zoological class aves.
(j) Harbor means any person who shall
allow any animals to habitually remain or lodge or to be fed within his or her
home, store, yard, enclosure or place of business or any other premises where
he or she resides or controls.
(k) Humane Live Animal Trap means any cage
trap that upon activation encloses an animal without placing any physical
restraint upon any part of the body of such animal.
(l) Humanely Euthanize means the proper
injection of a substance that quickly and painlessly terminates the life of an
animal, or any other method approved by the American Veterinary Medical
Association or the American Humane Society.
(m) Immediate Control means the regulation
and supervision by a competent person so that an animal is unable to run or get
loose at will.
(n) Kennel means any establishment,
commercial or otherwise, maintained for breeding, rearing, grooming, boarding,
or otherwise harboring in an enclosure in one location only, four or more dogs
of the age of six months or older.
(o) Livestock includes, but is not limited
to cattle, horses, goats, sheep or other animals, commonly regarded as farm or
ranch animals.
(p) Neutered means any male or female cat
or dog that has been permanently rendered sterile.
(q) Own means and includes own, keep,
harbor, shelter, manage, possess, or have a part interest in any animal,
including but not limited to cats, dogs, exotic animals, fowl and livestock. If
a minor owns any such animal subject to the provisions of this chapter, the
head of the household of which such minor is a member shall be deemed to own
such animal for the purposes of this chapter.
(r) Owner means the one who owns, his or
her employee, agent, or other competent person into whose charge the actual
owner has placed an animal described in subsection (q) above.
(s) Vaccination means an injection of a
vaccine, approved by the State Board of Public Health and administered by a
licensed veterinarian for the purpose of immunizing an animal against rabies.
(t) Veterinarian means a doctor of
veterinary medicine licensed by the State of Kansas.
(Code 1990)
(a) There is hereby created the position of
animal control officer for the city and such officer shall be charged with the
enforcement of this chapter. Any person employed by the city as an
animal-control officer and commissioned by the chief of police of the city
shall have such powers and authority as allowed by law in the enforcement of
this chapter.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (c), it
shall be the duty of the animal control officer to take up and impound all
animals found in the city in violation of the provisions of this article.
(c) As an alternative to the provisions of
subsection (b) of this section, any law enforcement officer or the animal
control officer may issue a citation to the owner, harborer or keeper of an
animal in violation of this chapter, and the person receiving the citation
shall, within 10 days, appear in the municipal court of the city to answer the
charged violation of this chapter.
(Code 1990)
When deemed necessary
by law enforcement officers or the animal control officer for the health,
safety and welfare of the residents of the city, such officers and/or their
agents may:
(a) Place a humane trap on public or a requesting
resident’s property for the purpose of capturing any animal defined in this
chapter as creating a nuisance in the city;
(b) Use any tranquilizer guns, humane traps, or
other suitable devices to subdue and capture any animal that is deemed by the
animal control officer, in his or her discretion, to be of a danger to itself
or to the public health and safety.
(c) Use firearms or other suitable weapons to
destroy any rabid animal, any vicious animal as defined in section 2-115, or
any animal creating a nuisance as defined in section 2-111, where such animal
is impossible or impractical to catch, capture or tranquilize.
(Code 1990)
The animal control
officer shall have the right of entry upon any private unenclosed lots or lands
for the purpose of collecting any animal whose presence thereupon is a
violation of this chapter. It shall be unlawful for any person to interfere
with the animal control officer in the exercise of this right.
(Code 1990)
A municipal pound
shall be established to carry out the provisions of this chapter. Such a pound
may be operated by a contractor and all services required herein may be
provided by a contractor. When so contracted, the pound shall have the
following services and facilities as a minimum:
(a) Adequate pickup and impounding of all stray
and ownerless dogs and cats and animals otherwise in violation of the
provisions of this chapter.
(b) Group holding facilities for stray, ownerless
and unvaccinated animals impounded for violation of the provisions of this
chapter.
(c) Individual isolation facilities for sick,
biting, rabid and suspected rabid animals.
(d) Facilities for the humane destruction of
animals.
(Code 1990)
(a) It shall be unlawful for any unauthorized
person to open, unlock, break open or attempt to break open the pound, or to
take or let out any animal placed therein, or take or attempt to take from an
officer of this city any animal taken up by him or her under the provisions of
this chapter, or in any manner interfere with or hinder any officer or employee
of this city in catching, taking up, or impounding any animal.
(b) It shall be unlawful for any person or
persons, other than those duly authorized, to care for, feed, attempt to feed,
or interfere in any way with the care of impounded animals.
(Code 1990)
It shall be unlawful
for any person to:
(a) Willfully or maliciously kill, maim,
disfigure, torture; beat with a stick, chain, club or other object; mutilate,
poison, burn or scald with any substance; or otherwise cruelly set upon any
animals, except that reasonable force may be employed to drive off vicious
animals;
(b) Drive or work any animal cruelly or cruelly
work any maimed, mutilated, infirm, sick or disabled animal, or cause, allow or
permit the same to be done;
(c) Have, keep or harbor any animal which is
infected with any dangerous or incurable and/or painfully crippling condition
except as provided in section 2-108.
(d) Sell or offer for sale, barter, give away, or
use as an advertising device or promotional display, living baby chicks,
rabbits, ducklings or other fowl under two months of age in any quantity less
than 12; or to sell, offer for sale, barter, give away, or display animals or
fowls as specified in this section which have been dyed, colored or otherwise
treated so as to impart to them an artificial or unnatural color. This section
shall not be construed to prohibit the sale of animals or fowls as specified in
this subsection, in proper facilities, by hatcheries or persons engaged in
raising and selling such animals and fowls for recognized animal husbandry
purposes;
(e) Promote, stage, hold, manage, or in any way
conduct any game, exhibition, contest or fight in which one or more animals are
engaged for the purpose of injuring, killing, maiming, or destroying themselves
or any other animal;
(f) Neglect or refuse to supply such animal with
necessary and adequate care, food, drink, air, light, space, shelter or
protection from the elements as necessary for health and well-being of such
kind of animal.
(g) Abandon or leave any animal in any place
without making provisions for its proper care;
(h) These provisions shall not apply to the
exceptions sanctioned under section 2-108.
In addition to the
penalties provided in section 1-116 of this code, the municipal court judge may
order a person convicted of violation under this section to turn the animal
involved over to a designated humane society. All such animals taken by the
designated agency may be placed with another or more suitable person or
destroyed humanely as soon thereafter as is conveniently possible.
(Code 1990)
The provisions of
section 2-107 shall not apply to:
(a) Normal or accepted veterinary or veterinary
hospital practices or treatment of animals under active veterinary care;
(b) Bona fide experiments carried on by commonly
recognized research facilities;
(c) Killing, attempting to kill, trapping,
catching or taking of any animal in accordance with the provisions of Chapter
32 or Chapter 47 of the Kansas Statutes Annotated;
(d) Rodeo practices accepted by the rodeo cowboys’
association;
(e) The humane killing of an animal which is
diseased or disabled beyond recovery for any useful purpose, or the humane
killing of animals for population control, by the owner thereof or by an
authorized agent such as a licensed veterinarian, at the request of the owner;
(f) The humane killing of an animal by the animal
control officer, a public health officer or a law enforcement officer in the
performance of his or her official duty;
(g) The humane killing of an unclaimed animal
after three full business days following the receipt of such animal at a
municipal pound or an incorporated humane society shelter by the owner,
operator or authorized agents of such establishments.
(Code 1990)
It shall be unlawful
for the owner, lessee, occupant or person in charge of any premises in the city
to possess and maintain any animal or fowl within the city or permit to be
maintained thereon any stable, shed, pen or other place where horses, mules, cattle,
sheep, goats or swine, or undomesticated animals are kept within 100 feet of a
lot line. This provision shall not apply to:
(a) Uses existing before the adoption of this
code;
(b) The maintaining of a stockyard or sales barn
for the loading, unloading, temporary detention and sale of such livestock, if
the location of such stockyard or sales barn does not otherwise violate the
zoning ordinances of the city;
(c) The maintaining of dogs which are regulated
by Article 2 of this chapter;
(d) The maintaining of non-poisonous and
non-vicious animals and fowl which are commonly kept as household pets, such as
cats, hamsters, rabbits, parakeets, and comparable animals, when kept as
household pets and in a safe and sanitary manner in accordance with section
2-113 of this chapter;
(e) The transporting of animals through the city
by ordinary and customary means.
(Code 1990)
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person to keep
or harbor for any purpose chickens except under the conditions set forth below.
(b) Up to 6 laying hens may be kept on any one
residential lot or tract (this restriction applies even though a residence may
include more than one lot) by permit only.
(c) A $20 annual permit fees shall be charged for
each residential lot or tract owner. A permit form shall be obtained from the
city clerk before a permit is issued. The Animal Control Officer shall inspect
the appropriateness of the coops and compliance with other requirements set
forth herein.
(d) Roosters are not permitted. Laying hens only
are allowed.
(e) Chicken coops are required, and structures
housing chickens must be located at least 50 feet away from any structure that
includes a dwelling unit on an adjacent lot.
(f) It shall be unlawful for any person to allow
chickens owned by or under the control of such person to run at large within
the city. Chickens shall be confined within a secure, outdoor, enclosed area
such as a four-foot fence. The enclosure area shall include a chicken coop.
(Ord. 613; Code 2025)
It shall be unlawful
for any person to use, place, set out, or deploy any animal trap aboveground,
which makes use of a spring gun, spring jaws, clamping devices, cutting or
stabbing mechanism or any other devices that will damage or severely injure any
animal when caught or trapped by the device or trap; except that nothing herein
contained shall prohibit the use of animal traps that are so designed to trap
and hold animals without injuring the animals.
(Code 1990)
The owner of any
animal shall take all reasonable measures to keep such animal from becoming a
nuisance. For the purpose of this section, “nuisance” is defined as any animal
which:
(a) Molests or interferes with persons in the
public right-of-way;
(b) Attacks or injures persons, or other domestic
animals;
(c) Damages public or private property by its
activities or with its excrement;
(d) Scatters refuse that is bagged or otherwise
contained;
(e) Causes any condition which threatens or
endangers the health or well-being of persons or other animals.
(f) Aggressive animals must be restrained in such
a manner as deemed necessary by the animal control officer.
If a summons is issued
charging violation of this provision, a subpoena shall also be issued to the
complainant to testify to the nuisance under oath.
(Code 1990)
The keeping, or
harboring of any animal which by loud, frequent and habitual barking, howling,
yelping, mewing, roaring or screeching shall disturb the peace of any
neighborhood is hereby prohibited and declared to be a public nuisance and
unlawful under this chapter. It shall be the duty of any person harboring or
keeping such loud or noisy animal or animals to abate the nuisance, and if he
or she fails to do so, the city may abate the nuisance, by taking up,
impounding and/or disposing of the animal at the expense of the owner.
(Code 1990)
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person to keep
or maintain any animal in any yard, structure or area that is not clean, dry
and sanitary, free from debris and offensive odors that annoy any neighbor, and
devoid of rodents and vermin.
(b) Excrement shall be removed at least once each
week from any animal shelter, pen or yard area where animals are kept, or more
often if necessary to prevent or control odors, fly breeding, or rodent
infestation. If excrement is stored on the premises by any animal owner, it
shall be stored in adequate containers with fly-tight lids, and all such stored
or accumulated wastes shall be disposed of at least once each week.
(c) All animal shelters, pens and yards shall be
so located that adequate drainage is obtained, normal drying occurs, and
standing water is not present.
(d) All animal shelters and board fences
confining animals shall be maintained in good repair, and all animal shelters
and board fences confining animals subject to residential and commercial
classification shall be protected from deterioration by painting or comparable
treatment.
(e) Barbed wire fences and electrically charged
fences shall not be permitted for animal confines except on properties for
which an agricultural classification permit is held or where the barbed wire
fence or electrically charge fence is protected by an exterior fence.
(f) All premises on which animals are kept shall
be subject to inspection by the animal control officer, duly authorized law
enforcement officer, or public health official. If the officer or official
determines from such inspection that the premises are not being maintained in a
clean and sanitary manner, he or she shall notify the owner of the animals in
writing to correct the sanitation deficiencies within 24 hours after notice is
served on the owner. Any animal kept under any condition which could endanger
the public or animal health or create a health nuisance may be impounded.
Animals shall be released after fees are paid and cause for impoundment has
been corrected.
(Code 1990)
Animal shelters owned
or operated as a stockyard or commercial holding pen shall be adequately
maintained and cleaned as often as is necessary, as determined by the health
officer, to control fly breeding or to control other conditions adversely
affecting the public health including the following:
(a) Collected fecal material and other solid
organic waste shall be disposed of at a sanitary landfill, fertilizer
processing plant, or by proper disposal on land used for agricultural purposes.
(b) Grain or protein feed shall be stored in
tightly covered rodent proof metal containers or rodent-proof bins.
(c) Premises subject to the terms of this section
shall be maintained free of rodent harborage.
(d) Wherever reasonable, use shall be made of anti-coagulant
rodenticides for the control of rodents and organo-phosphorus insecticides for
the control of flies or any other effective chemical means for the control of
rodents and flies.
(e) Wherever reasonable, use shall be made of soil
sterilants and herbicides or other effective means for the control of weeds and
grass around structures and buildings.
(f) Enclosures including fences where animals
such as horses, cows, sheep and goats are maintained shall be constructed in a
manner, using dimension lumber materials, or other effective means to prevent such
animals from breaking out or causing hazards to persons or property.
(g) The solid waste accumulated from the cleaning
of animal shelters and holding pens maintained by persons subject to a
residential classification permit as herein provided shall be stored in metal
containers, with tightfitting metal lids, and all such stored or accumulated
wastes shall be disposed of at least once each week.
(h) Holding lots, pens and floors of sheds and
buildings where animals are held and which are maintained by persons subject to
a commercial, industrial or agricultural classification permit according to the
terms of this chapter shall be surfaced with concrete or asphaltic materials
and that the drainage system of such surfaced areas shall include proper
retaining walls and traps to control the waste from draining into watercourses
and such drainage system shall be subject to the approval of the health
officer. The health officer shall waive this standard for domestic animal holding
operations where such animal holding is longer than 24 hours for any domestic
animal involved or where dirt lots are more appropriate to the proper care of
cattle, horses or sheep.
(i) Solid wastes accumulated from the cleaning
of animal shelters and holding pens maintained by persons subject to a
commercial, industrial or agricultural permit according to the terms of this
chapter shall be stored on concrete slabs or other facilities, such as dirt
lots on which is stockpiled manure with an exposed perimeter as approved by the
health officer; provided that all solid waste shall be properly disposed of at
least once each week or as may be approved by the health officer.
(Code 1990; Code 2025)
All animals which die
shall be disposed of by the owner or keepers within 12 hours, by burial,
incineration in a facility approved by the animal control officer, by rendering
or by other lawful means approved by the animal control officer. No dead animal
shall be dumped on any public or private property.
(Code 1990)
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person to keep,
possess or harbor a vicious animal within the city. Impoundment of animals
whose owners have been cited for violation of this section shall be at the
discretion of the animal control officer. If the animal presents a clear and
present danger to the public health or safety, it shall be the duty of the
animal control officer or his or her agent to impound such animal.
(b) For purposes of this chapter a vicious
animal shall include:
(1) Any animal with a known propensity, tendency
or disposition to attack unprovoked, to cause injury or to otherwise endanger
the safety of human beings or domestic animals; or
(2) Any animal which attacks a human being or
domestic animal without provocation;
(3) Any animal owned or harbored primarily or in
part for the purpose of fighting or any animal trained for fighting;
(4) Any animal which is urged by its owner or
harborer to attack, or whose owner or harborer threatens to provoke such animal
to attack, any law enforcement officer while such officer is engaged in the
performance of official duty.
(c) Whenever a sworn complaint is filed in the
municipal court against the owner of an animal alleging that such animal is
vicious and in violation of this section, the municipal judge shall hold a
hearing to determine whether or not the animal is vicious within the meaning of
this section and thereby in violation of this section. The owner of the animal
shall be notified in writing of the time and place of the hearing at least one
week prior to the hearing. In making a determination, the municipal judge shall
consider the following:
(1) The seriousness of the attack or bite;
(2) Past history of attacks or bites;
(3) Likelihood of attacks or bites in the future;
(4) The condition and circumstances under which
the animal is kept or confined;
(5) Other factors which may reasonably relate to
the determination of whether or not the animal is vicious.
The municipal judge
shall order the impoundment, the muzzling in accordance with subsection (d)
and/or the confinement of the animal accused of being in violation of this
section in a manner and location that will insure that it is no threat to
persons or other animals pending the outcome of the hearing. If such
impoundment, muzzling or otherwise safe confinement is not possible or if prior
court orders to restrain such animal have gone unheeded, the municipal judge
may order the animal immediately destroyed.
(d) It shall be the duty of every owner, keeper
or harborer of any dog in the city, which dog is vicious or has been known to
bite, chase, or run after any person or animal in the streets, alleys, or any
public place in the city, to keep the same muzzled with a good and sufficient
wire or leather muzzle, securely fastened so as to wholly prevent such dog from
biting any animal or person until such time as a determination has been made by
the court as to whether the dog is vicious or not. Any person owning, keeping
or harboring any dog within the city limits contrary to this section shall be
guilty of a violation of this code.
(e) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to
prevent the animal control officer or any law enforcement officer from taking
whatever action is reasonably necessary to protect himself or herself or
members of the public from injury or danger, including immediate destruction of
any vicious animal without notice to the owner.
(f) If a complaint has been filed in the
municipal court against the owner of an impounded animal for a charge under
this section, the animal shall not be released except on the order of the
municipal judge, who may also direct the owner to pay all impounding fees in
addition to any penalties for violation of this chapter. The municipal judge
may, upon making a finding that an animal is vicious or that it represents a
clear and present danger to the citizens or to other animals in the community,
order the animal to be destroyed in a humane manner by the animal shelter.
Surrender of an animal by the owner thereof to the animal control officer does
not relieve or render the owner immune from the decision of the court, nor to
the fees and fines which may result from a violation of this section.
(Code 1990)
It shall be unlawful
for any person to willfully allow any animal or fowl under his or her control
to be or to run at large within the city. Any animal or fowl found at large
shall be impounded as provided in section 2-118 or 2-206 (dogs).
(Code 1990)
(a) The animal control officer or law enforcement
officer shall impound any animal or fowl found at large in the city or
constituting a nuisance or otherwise in violation of this chapter in a suitable
pound or enclosure provided or contracted for by the city. The impounding
officer shall make diligent inquiry as to the owner of the animal and shall
notify the owner thereof of such impoundment as soon as reasonably possible.
(b) The city shall be entitled to receive from
such owner an impoundment fee of the actual cost of feeding and maintaining the
animal while impounded.
(c) In case the identity of the owner of the
impounded animal or fowl cannot be ascertained, the animal control officer or
police officer shall, upon taking any such animal into custody and impounding
the same, make a record thereof, with a description of the animal and the date
and place taken into custody and the place of impounding, and shall thereupon
immediately post a public notice stating that the animal, describing the same
with the date and place of taking, has been taken up, and that unless the charges
of impounding the same, together with any license fees due and unpaid, are paid
within 10 business days from the date of the notice, that the animal will be
disposed of as provided in this code.
(d) The animal control officer shall each month
submit a report to the governing body showing the number of animals impounded
and disposed of, and the fees collected pursuant to this article and shall pay
those fees to the city clerk for credit to the general operating fund.
(Ord. 603; Code 2025)
At any time before the
sale or destruction of any animal impounded under the provisions of this
article, except for animals impounded under sections 2-116 (vicious) and 2-120
(rabid), the owner thereof may redeem the animal by paying the animal control
officer or any person in charge, the impounding fee and all costs incurred as a
result of such impoundment.
(Code 1990)
(a) Any law enforcement officer or local health
officer may take up, upon private or public property, any animal which has
bitten or scratched a person or other animal and impound the animal in the city
pound, securely penned and separated from other animals, or in a veterinary
hospital or animal care facility for a period of not more than 10 days during
which time the local health officer shall determine whether or not such animal
is suffering from a disease and, if not, the local health officer shall
authorize the release of the animal upon payment by the owner of the boarding
fee therefore. The health officer may authorize the keeping of any such animal
on the owner’s premises if the owner produces a rabies vaccination certificate
showing that the animal has valid rabies vaccination protection. Impoundment
costs shall be borne by the owner. If in the opinion of the local health
officer symptoms develop justifying a microscopic examination, then the animal
shall be killed and examination made by the state board of health.
(b) In lieu of the provisions of subsection (a),
the owner of any such animal may, at his or her own expense, take such animal
to any duly qualified and licensed veterinarian in the city for observation. Such
veterinarian shall report his or her findings in writing to the local health
officer. If in the opinion of such veterinarian a microscopic examination is
justified, then the animal shall be turned over to the animal control officer
or any law enforcement officer to be killed and examination made by the state
board of health.
(c) Any animal desired for observation by the
local health officer under this section shall be delivered to the animal
control officer or any law enforcement officer upon demand and shall not be
withheld, hidden or harbored. Any person violating this provision shall be
guilty of a violation of this code. Upon refusal of any person to so deliver
such animal, the municipal judge shall cause a warrant to be issued for the
arrest of such person, which warrant shall also provide for the surrender of
the animal and shall be lawful authority for the apprehending and forcible
taking of such animal.
(Code 1990)
Whenever a dog, cat or
other animal is bitten by a rabid animal or an animal later proved to have been
rabid, it shall be the duty of the owner of the animal that is bitten, to
report that fact to the local health officer and/or the police department. It
shall also be the duty of the owner of the bitten animal to either destroy or
have his or her bitten animal destroyed unless:
(a) The animal which was bitten had been
vaccinated against rabies at least three weeks before being bitten and has a
current vaccination; and
(b) If the bitten animal has a current
vaccination, it shall be confined for 90 days; and
(c) The bitten animal shall be released from
confinement only upon written order from the local health officer, who declares
the animal to be free of rabies; and
(d) If the animal is found to have contracted
rabies during confinement, it shall be properly disposed of.
(Code 1990)
Any person who as the
operator of a motor vehicle strikes any animal shall stop at once and shall
immediately report such injury or death to the owner of such animal, or in the
event that the owner cannot be ascertained, and located, the operator shall at
once report the accident to the animal control officer or any law enforcement
officer.
(Code 1990)
The mayor is hereby
authorized whenever in his or her opinion the danger to the public safety from
rabid animals is made imminent to issue a proclamation ordering all persons
owning any animal in the city to confine the animal in a good and sufficient
enclosure from which the animal cannot escape, or fasten such animal by means
of a chain on the premises where the owner may reside, for such time as may be
specified in such proclamation. Any animal not confined during such time may be
disposed of wherever found by any police officer, or the animal control officer
of the city. The owner of such animal shall be prosecuted for such violation
thereof.
(Code 1990)
(a) No person or household shall own or harbor
more than four dogs of six months of age or older or more than one litter of
pups, or more than four cats of more than six months of age or more than one
litter of kittens, or more than a total of six dogs and cats more than six
months of age in any combination, or engage in the commercial business of
breeding, buying, selling, trading, training, or boarding cats or dogs or both
cats and dogs, without having obtained a kennel license from the city clerk.
(b) Kennel licenses must be renewed annually. No
kennel license shall be issued until an inspection certificate has been issued
by the animal control officer certifying approval of the kennel and compliance
with the applicable laws of the city and the State of Kansas, and a certificate
by the zoning code enforcement officer has been issued certifying that the
applicant for the kennel license is not violating zoning laws of the city. If
the city clerk has not received any protest against the kennel, the city clerk
may issue a renewal of an existing kennel license at the same location without
any report from the animal control officer and zoning code enforcement officer.
If the animal control officer or the zoning code enforcement officer finds that
the holder of any kennel license is violating any zoning law, or any other law
of the State of Kansas, or of the city, or is maintaining the facility in a
manner detrimental to the health, safety or peace of mind of any person
residing in the immediate vicinity, he or she shall report such fact to the
city clerk, and the license shall not be renewed except after a public hearing
before the governing body.
(c) The animal control officer, the zoning
enforcement officer, or any law enforcement officer shall have the right to
inspect any premises licensed under this section at any reasonable time and
nothing shall prevent the entry onto private property for the purpose of
inspection. The application for a kennel shall constitute consent to such entry
and inspection.
(d) The governing body may suspend or revoke a
kennel license if, pursuant to a public hearing, it finds any of the following:
(1) The kennel is maintained in violation of any
applicable law of the State of Kansas, or of the city.
(2) The kennel is maintained so as to be a public
nuisance.
(3) The kennel is maintained so as to be
detrimental to the health, safety or peace of mind of persons residing in the
immediate vicinity.
(e) The annual kennel license fee shall be $75. Payment
of such license fee is in addition to, and not in lieu of, the dog license fees
otherwise required under this chapter.
(f) This section shall not apply to and will not
be construed to require a kennel license for a licensed veterinarian to operate
an animal hospital.