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Mayfield proposes updated dog rules, adds citations and raises household limit to three
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Summary
Council members reviewed a modernized animal ordinance, proposing a shift from a two-dog to a three-dog household limit, new dangerous-dog definitions, and a citation structure (first offense $75; second $150); the ordinance and fee resolution will go to public notice in April.
Mayfield Town Council reviewed an updated animal ordinance during its March 4 work meeting that would modernize dog-control enforcement, clarify dangerous-dog language and authorize the town’s animal-control officer to issue citations.
"The ordinance clarifies limitation of two dogs per household..." staff (S1) said while presenting the draft, and council members then discussed raising that limit to three because many residents already keep more than two dogs.
Why it matters: The proposed ordinance would give the town clearer enforcement tools (licensing and citations), expand the definition of dangerous animals to include harm to other animals as well as people, and identify financial penalties and licensing steps that will appear in a companion fee resolution.
What the draft covers: Staff proposed new language to (1) allow dog-control officers to issue citations rather than only pursuing complaint-driven court filings; (2) replace the older "vicious dog" wording with a broader "dangerous dog" definition; and (3) require dog licensing and vaccination (rabies) proof. Council members discussed enforcement priorities and agreed that problem properties (repeat nuisance or dangerous animals) will be the focus of enforcement action.
Household dog limit: Several members argued for raising the household limit from two to three dogs, saying many responsible households already keep more than two animals. The council concluded it would adopt three dogs per household as the default limit while emphasizing licensing and enforcement for problem animals.
Citations and park enforcement: The council reviewed proposed citation amounts (first offense $75; second $150) and discussed enforcement of the park rule that prohibits dogs in the town park. Members noted the dog-control officer often issues warnings on first encounters but will have citation authority for repeat or egregious violations.
Next steps: The ordinance requires a 10‑day public-notice period; staff will prepare the public-notice materials and a companion resolution establishing fines and fees for the council to consider at the April meeting.
