Ohio legislator seeks to outlaw zoning bans on raising chickens, rabbits, other small livestock
Staff report
COLUMBUS
Local zoning rules could not prohibit residents from raising chickens, rabbits and other small livestock, so long as the animals are not creating a nuisance, under legislation being considered in the Ohio House.
Rep. Tom Brinkman, a Republican from Mount Lookout, offered House Bill 175 after hearing from a resident who was fined and threatened with jail time for having half a dozen backyard chickens.
“This bill allows every person in our state to grow food on their own property and to responsibly raise small livestock such as chickens and rabbits,” Brinkman told members of the House’s Agriculture and Rural Development Committee, where the bill had its first hearing last week. “Families will be able to exercise their freedom to provide their own healthy food for their families.”
The legislation would allow property owners “to keep, harbor, breed or maintain” goats, chickens and similar fowl, rabbits and similar small livestock, according to an analysis by the state’s Legislative Service Commission.
Roosters would not be allowed under the bill — Brinkman said many of the complaints he hears stem from the noise from the male fowl.
Residents would have to ensure that their animals cause no noxious odors or unsanitary conditions and that livestock housing is solidly constructed and kept at least 10 feet from property lines.
The legislation also sets limits on the number of animals allowed, based on property sizes. And it would bar zoning regulations that prohibit certain non-commercial agricultural activities, so long as the latter are not creating a nuisance for neighbors.
Read the full story Monday in The Vindicator and on Vindy.com.