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Vancouver council approves backyard chicken plan
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By: ctvbc.ca
Date: Saturday Apr. 10, 2010 12:32 PM PT
Vancouver City Council has approved a controversial proposal to allow residents to keep up to four chickens in their backyard for home-fresh eggs.
Councillors voted almost unanimously in favour of a 32-page staff report detailing everything from coop sizes to the creation of a $20,000 shelter for abandoned chickens.
The report cites increasing attention to issues of "sustainability, food security, and consumption of locally grown food" as the source of enthusiasm for urban chickens.
Chicken keepers would be required to register with the city, and provide chickens – hens only, roosters will not be allowed -- with adequate food, water, light and veterinary care.
COPE councillors Ellen Woodsworth and David Cadman supported the motion, but opposed the creation of a city-run chicken shelter.
"I am not prepared to support the city of Vancouver getting into the business of housing abandoned or seized hens. I just think that is a pandora's box that if we open it will grow and grow and grow." Cadman said.
NPA Coun. Suzanne Anton opposed the motion entirely, dismissing the entire issue as frivolous.
"We should be paying attention to serious and pressing issues," she said.
The report will go to a public hearing next month before council implements the plans.
Responsible chicken ownership
Leanne McConnachie of the Vancouver Humane Society admits the city's guidelines are comprehensive, but she worries about Vancouverites buying chickens as a "fad."
"In our experience, even the best intentioned people can fail to properly care for their animals," she told ctvbc.ca. "People don't really know how to care for chickens; it's not something we all grew up with."
McConnachie calculated dietary requirements, veterinary costs and coop upkeep at about $400 per year – enough to buy roughly 70 cartons of free-range organic eggs.
And though the guidelines suggest making it illegal for owners to kill their own chickens, she worries that could prove difficult to enforce.
"We have all kinds of bylaw enforcements -- that doesn't mean people abide by them," McConnachie said. "You can't force somebody to drive to Venables Street to bring their chicken to a slaughter plant."
"This whole movement has the earmarks of a fad, and when it comes to fads, they rarely end well for animals."
The entire report is available at the City of Vancouver website here.
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You have to be kidding me. Gregor R. our mayor, what a loser. He would be a better farmer it appears. Bike lanes, and now chickens in the City. |
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Awesome news... grain fed, organic chicken tikka masala on my Broil King this summer... my neighbors are going to be drooling!!!! |
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I wonder if the Mayor and council truly understand what it takes to look after these birds as well as how noisy they are.How many of these birds will be mistreated and abandoned as people do with rabbits, cats and dogs when they get tired of them or ....move. |
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If you live in the lower mainland of BC,and knew anything about the current gaggle of left wing pinheads that make up Vancouver's "silly council", you had to see this coming. At a time when schools are closing,people are going hungry,health care is in trouble,this bunch of first class dufus's find it necessary ti create yet another program that tax payers cannot afford to maintain. The program will involve,and require a system of monitoring.More public service employees to milk the system.It will also require a home for abandoned chickens,and those who escaped on their own.Complaints about noise and smells will have to be responded to.There will be more rodents,coyotes,foxes,stray dogs,and a host of other hungry predators in Vancouver neighbourhoods.Back yard chickens are like a free buffet for urban wildlife.And believe me,city council will be hiding under their rocks when complaints come in.And,as "Jimmy Choo" rightly pointed out,bird flu and other virus's will be more common,and harder to manage.Good luck selling Canadian poultry if even one of these back yard chickens so much as sneezes.World markets will close to Canadian poultry before we can get the sick one into the broiler. This has got to be one of the stupidest things council could be involved in.You want chickens? Buy a farm,not a high class home on some of the most expensive real estate in the whole darn country. |
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Wow, people living the way that people used to live for eons before we all moved to the proverbial city. Imagine that. I thought we were supposed to be getting our entire lives out of a vending machine. What's going on??I think you guys are the ones who have to be kidding me. In most other countries in the world, you're allowed to keep a chicken. You losers need to come back down to Earth. |
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So, the new taxable item for Vancouver! Have chickens will tax! Chicken poop adds to the global warming problem. Really chickens do not belong in a urban environment like Vancouver. They do belong on a property that is at least one acre in a agricultural setting or a undensified suburban location. The City of Vancouver does not fit the scene.Imagine, chickens on a highrise roof. Waht a laugh!!! |
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Why not chickens - city folk have all kinds of pets, including other birds that are allowed & enjoyed, so what's the big deal with chickens. At least there's natural fresh eggs to enjoy for breakfast. |
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So, most don't want chickens in the backyards? So what. What exactly DOES it mean to be a free country? A man used to be able to obtain some land, build a home, and raise his own food. Now he has to have a permit for the home, pay a small fortune for the land, and God forbid that he still be able to supply his own food. Why are so many against this? Do you all like having to pay for everything? A man (or woman) should simply have the choice, the freedom, to have and raise chickens for food, even if it does change the immaculately perfect urban backyard landscape. |
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This will be a bonanza for our urban coyote population! Maybe it will take the pressure off the population of domestic cats which form a large part of their current daily menu. |
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