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City Scraps Plans for Mandatory Spay/Neuter Ordinance

Huntington Beach, Calif., City Council will draft an incentive-based resolution for altered and microchipped cats and dogs instead.

City Scraps Plans for Mandatory Spay/Neuter Ordinance for Cats and Dogs
Cat owners in Huntington Beach Calif., will not be required to alter or microchip their pets.
In a marathon city council session that began Monday afternoon and lasted until half-past midnight Tuesday morning, the Huntington Beach, Calif., City Council dropped its pursuit of a mandatory spay/neuter and microchip ordinance in favor of incentive-based licensing fees that reward those who alter and microchip their pets.

After hearing spirited comments from a strongly divided audience that packed the auditorium, the council eventually decided to scrap the original legislation and direct the city attorney to draft a new resolution that would create a five-tiered registration fee scale. The scale would reduce licensing fees for those whose pets are altered and microchipped in an effort to provide incentives for dog and cat owners.

The highest fees would be reserved for those whose pets are not spayed, neutered or microchipped.

Currently, cats are not required to be licensed in the city. The new ordinance would require cat licensing, and the same tiered fee system would apply. However, dog licensing fees will be higher. If it passes, the exact fees will be established at a future council meeting.

“It’s a great compromise solution,” said council member Don Hansen, who opposed the original ordinance. “It eliminates the mandatory nature and gives people the comfort that if they don’t want to alter their animals, they don’t have to alter their animals.” 

In a straw vote, the council voted unanimously to draft the resolution for the tiered fee structure for dogs. The council voted 4 to 3 in favor of requiring cat licensing and applying the same tiered structure to felines.

In ascending order from lowest to highest licensing fees, the resolution will be drafted as follows: service animals; altered and microchipped animals; altered, but not microchipped animals; not altered, but microchipped animals; and not altered and not microchipped animals.
 
Competition animals would not be exempt from the higher licensing fees for unaltered animals.

The city attorney is expected to return with the new resolution at the Dec. 17 council meeting.

-Heidi Hatch, Associate News Editor for CatChannel.com

Posted: November 8 2007 2 a.m. EDT

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City Scraps Plans for Mandatory Spay/Neuter Ordinance
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About the City Scraps Plans for Mandatory Spay/Neuter Ordinance

Well I really like this because I think the mandatory spay/neuter thing is good, generally, but what if you are a big family and you loveee cats and you have a male and a female and you WANT 4 kittens?? But still spay/neuter is really good too.
M., Somewhere, NY
Posted: 7/26/2009 10:02:41 AM
Interesting article
Sheryl, Bloomington, IN
Posted: 10/7/2008 7:05:07 PM
RIGHT ON, Debby from Oxford!
Karen, Bellingham, MA
Posted: 11/9/2007 5:07:46 AM
Our city has an incentive-based system, too. Cats are required to be licensed. The incentive part deals with the price you pay for the license. The price of $25.00 per cat is cut drastically if you neuter/spay your cat - down to $10.00 per year. If you also "chip" your cat, it drops to $5.00.
Sheryl, Casa Grande, AZ
Posted: 11/8/2007 4:23:05 PM
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