In 2o13, an effort to change the city code to allow people to raise chickens in Hudson failed when Mayor William Hallenback vetoed it, and there were not enough votes on the Common Council to override a mayoral veto.
In 2020. a renewed effort to permit raising chicken in Hudson was successful. The proposed law was approved by the Common Council with a vote of 7 to 4, and Mayor Kamal Johnson did not veto it. The law, which is now part of the city code, specifies that keeping chickens requires a conditional use permit from the Planning Board. Gossips is a pretty diligent follower of the Planning Board, and to Gossips' recollection the Planning Board has only granted three conditional use permits for raising chickens.
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| Photo: The Humane Society of the United States |
At the Common Council Safety Committee on Monday, Code Enforce Officer Nick Fox reported there had been complaints about roosters crowing and rats, and he suggested the chicken law should be reviewed. He said that the person with the offending rooster was unaware that the law banned roosters. Someone at the meeting said the law did not address rats, and Council president Margaret Morris said the Legal Committee would look into amending the law as needed.
The law as it stands addresses both roosters and rats. Section 70-17.C of the code states unequivocally: "No more than five female chickens shall be allowed per lot. Roosters shall not be permitted." Section 70-17.I states in part: "All such enclosures and coops shall be properly cleaned and maintained and shall be constructed of materials and in a manner designed to prevent predators, rodents and other vermin from entering into or remaining therein."
It's possible the language of the law could be amended to make the language relating to rats more obvious and direct, but Gossips recalls that, back in 2013, in a discussion of the proposed law, Cheryl Roberts, who was then city attorney, declared unequivocally: "If you have chickens, you have rats." Roberts knew whereof she spoke. She kept chickens at her home in Austerlitz.
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