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Spay/Neuter Law for Cats, Dogs Delayed in Santa Barbara, Calif.

County supervisors will consider findings of community task force.

Posted: May 12, 2008 2 a.m. EDT

Santa Barbara County, Calif., will not require pet owners to spay or neuter their cats and dogs, for now. Instead, county supervisors decided to form an 11-member community task force, charged with studying the impacts of a mandatory spay/neuter ordinance.

Tuesday’s 4-1 vote by the board of supervisors means that the implementation of a countywide spay/neuter ordinance will be delayed for months. The task force will consist of board-appointed individuals.

The goal of the county’s draft spay/neuter ordinance is to “reduce pet overpopulation and arrest the growth of the associated costs,” a staff report prepared for the board of supervisors states. The usual exemptions in such ordinances include:

  • Veterinary medical exemption

  • Purebred and/or show cats and dogs

  • Pets living in the county temporarily

  • Working dogs (law enforcement, service, search and rescue, herding and others if determined)

  • Breeding permit, if breeding

If pet owners don’t comply, they typically get “fix-it” tickets, with a grace period to resolve their cases. Exemptions and grace periods, however, are not enough to gain the support of some animal groups.

On one side of the ongoing spay/neuter debate, opponents say that a mandatory spay/neuter law infringes on the property rights of pet owners and also might put cats and dogs at risk. Supporters, however, say that enacting such laws helps manage the pet population and prevent the mass euthanasia of millions of unwanted cats and dogs.

Within the county of Santa Barbara, the city of Lompoc passed its own spay/neuter ordinance in 2006. Various counties and cities across the United States also mandate the spaying or neutering of cats and dogs.

A mandatory ordinance in place since 1995 in Santa Cruz County, Calif., served as a model for similar legislation passed in California counties, including San Mateo, Lake, Stanislaus, Sacramento and Los Angeles. California cities with such ordinances on the books include Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Sacramento, Agoura Hills, Santa Clarita, La Puente, Palmdale, Walnut and Clearlake.

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Spay/Neuter Law for Cats, Dogs Delayed in Santa Barbara, Calif.

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Reader Comments
Enforce Animal Cruelty Laws BEFORE you pass another law. Our county government/law enforcement can't keep drunk drivers off public streets, so I doubt if they could enforce this kind of a law.
Philip, Durango, CO
Posted: 5/12/2008 11:00:48 PM
What is missing from the article is that the proposed age limit for cats and dogs was 4 months. A bit young. A similar Arizona oridinance puts the age at a more reasonable 6 months.

Also, an ordinance is only as good as its enforcement. And there are always loopholes. In Arizona one only needs to pay a little extra fee for an "intact" permit, at least that is the option available for law abiding folks. The rest don't care and are never penalized anyway for not spaying or neutering or licensing their pets. So, is the point of the ordinance only to collect additional monies for the government? until the law is enforced the answer to that cynical question is, Yes. Maybe the Santa Barbara officials who shelved the law did the right thing. I hope they come up with something workable and something that can and will be enforced.
John, Tucson, AZ
Posted: 5/12/2008 12:53:32 PM
I have mixed feelins on this law. I think it is good in respect to people that do not take care of their animals, yet I feel if I wanted a litter of kittens, I should be able to have one as long as I am responsible for them. I neuter/spay all my kitties and they are strays or adopted.
Cathy, Hubbard, OH
Posted: 5/12/2008 6:06:39 AM
When this county and other counties around the nation ban Animal Cruelty(cat declawing) then and only then do they have any business passing laws like this. Get Your Priorities in order Santa Barbara County, California. Same goes for La Plata County, Colorado whose law enforcement fails to respond to Animal Cruelty Calls(my cat. Good Friday 2008).
Philip, Durango, CO
Posted: 5/10/2008 10:00:12 PM
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