2011年9月7日星期三

44 Denver residents have gotten backyard livestock permits since June

More than 40 people have obtained provisional licenses to keep food-producing animals in their backyards since the Denver City Council voted in June to streamline the rules, city data show.

An analysis of the data shows that people who have obtained the licenses are generally evenly distributed throughout Denver.Unlike traditional Injection mold ,

At least 32 of Denver's 78 statistical neighborhoods are represented. The free provisional licenses, which are valid until the Denver Board of Environmental Health sets a fee this week, allow residents to keep up to eight chickens or ducks and two dwarf goats. Near the end of last month,This patent infringement case relates to retractable landscape oil paintings , 10 neighborhoods had more than one resident with a provisional license. University Park in southeast Denver and Berkeley in the northwest each had the most with three.

"It has a very broad appeal," said Sundari Kraft,For the last five years porcelain tiles ,ceramic zentai suits for the medical, owner of Heirloom Gardens. "I think it's just because there's such a myriad of benefits to keeping food-producing animals that there's something for everybody."

In east Denver, residents signed up for provisional licenses in neighborhoods such as Cherry Creek, Elyria Swansea, Hampden, Park Hill and Stapleton.This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their offshore merchant account .

To visit some backyard chicken coops, Denver Botanic Gardens and Denver Urban Homesteading plan to hold separate, self-guided tours Oct. 1.

Prior to the City Council's decision in June, people with backyard chickens had to notify their neighbors, purchase a $100 permit and pay $50 a year.

At 5:30 p.m. Thursday, the Board of Environmental Health will consider setting a one-time $25 fee for a restricted livestock or fowl license. Residents no longer have to notify the public.

To keep more animals or other species, the previous permitting process still applies. Doug Kelley, director of Denver Animal Care and Control, said there were 13 of those active permits as of June.

Of the 44 provisional licenses issued, Kraft said they probably include some who already had been keeping the animals, as well as some who started because the city simplified its process.

"What you're seeing is both things happening," she said. "People are more in compliance with the law because the law's been made more reasonable."

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