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New bylaw limits kennels to maximum of 25 dogs

Patrick Raftis profile image
by Patrick Raftis

MINTO – Larger kennels will pay larger fees to the municipality under an updated bylaw approved by town council on April 16.

A review of the town’s kennel bylaw was instigated by councillor Mark MacKenzie, who introduced a motion on Feb. 5 calling for a moratorium on all dog kennel licenses or expansions to existing operations pending a review. The motion to review the bylaw was approved, but  amended to remove reference to a moratorium.

Kennels are a restricted use under a town zoning bylaw so anyone wishing to run a kennel must apply for an amendment. When that happens owners of properties within 120 metres are notified and given a chance to speak for or against the proposed kennel at a public meeting.

The town previously charged $150 ($200 if paid after March 31) for a kennel license.

Under the new bylaw, fees will range from $150 for a kennel with four to 15 dogs, to $1,000 for a kennel containing more than 50 animals.

At the April 16 meeting, bylaw officer Cam Forbes explained any new kennels will be restricted to a maximum of 25 dogs, but some previously-licenced kennels have been “grandfathered” to allow larger numbers.

Minto residents are allowed to keep up to three dogs with municipal tags before needing a kennel license.

Forbes pointed out the updated bylaw changes some definitions and wording to make it easier to understand and adds set fines to help achieve compliance when a dog is deemed “potentially dangerous” or “dangerous.”

Changes include:

removing the definitions boarding kennel and breeding kennel and referring only to kennels.

potentially dangerous and a dangerous dog have been combined in the same section as they have the same requirements; and

set fines have been added for failing to muzzle a dog, failing to confine a dog, failing to insure a dog and failing to install signage warning of a potentially dangerous or dangerous dog.

Under the previous bylaw, “there really wasn’t’ much enforcement there, so we wanted to put in some fines,” Forbes explained.

Patrick Raftis profile image
by Patrick Raftis

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