County prepares to adopt livestock regulations
By JoAn Bjarko
North Forty News
Seven years ago, a plan to change animal regulations in the Larimer County
Land Use Code drew hordes of angry citizens to the courthouse, causing
the county commissioners to dump all portions of the code pertaining to
animals a day after the hearing started.
Much has happened since, and adding small animal regulations to the code
in 2004 sparked little notice. Now, however, it's time to talk about horses,
emu, alpacas and rabbits, to name a few of the animals considered livestock.
The county planning commission will hold a public hearing on proposed livestock
regulations on Jan. 18, 6:30 p.m., in the courthouse offices building in
downtown Fort Collins. No date has been set for a hearing by the county
commissioners, who make the final decision.
At press time, the regulations were still being drafted, but they should
be available online at www.larimer.org prior to the hearing. The county's
code does not affect property within a town or city.
Concepts about regulating large animals have evolved since 1998. In the
intervening years, an appointed, volunteer animal task force held meetings
throughout the county to gather ideas. The county's agricultural advisory
board has also debated the issue, and many drafts have come and gone.
Overall, the proposed regulations are less stringent, with the exception
of keeping horses on individual lots, according to Al Kadera, principal
planner for the county. Even then, new regulations will not affect any
existing legal use involving horses or other livestock, he said.
Current regulations on residential properties allow one horse per half
acre. The proposed changes are based on the concept of a stocking rate
that allows one animal equivalent unit for every acre available to the
animals. A horse is one unit. Fifty rabbits are one unit.
The phrase "available to the animal" means that portions of the property
with a house, garage or driveway are not counted toward the available acreage.
Consequently, future horse owners will need more land than is now required
to keep horses. Stocking rates can be exceeded, however, if the livestock
owner gets approval through the county's special review process.
Kadera noted that the proposed regulations avoid any performance requirements
for keeping livestock. Whether an animal is properly fed and cared for
falls under the jurisdiction of the Humane Society, not land use, he said.
Larimer County Extension provides educational outreach on topics such as
animal husbandry, he added, but it is not in the enforcement business.
The regulations also do not deal with issues such as dust control or weeds.
The simplicity of stocking rates means the county planning staff can easily
answer questions about livestock. "We don't have to say 'maybe' - we can
figure it out," Kadera said.
Where the current code says nothing about ostriches, emu, sheep or goats,
for example, the proposed code says five goats or five sheep are one unit.
Two ostriches or eight emu are one unit.
Typical ranching operations on large acreages do not fall under the livestock
regulations, but new and expanded dairies will if the changes are adopted.
The proposed regulations also increase from 30 days to 90 days the time
a livestock producer can confine cattle in a small area prior to shipping
them to market.
Livestock regulations are not new, Kadera noted. Larimer County has regulated
some livestock issues since 1963 when it adopted zoning laws. Enforcement,
however, generally occurs only when someone files a complaint.
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