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Us Chicken People are at it, again!

I have been waiting on giving a final update to the Black Jack chicken news, since it is still in its death wigglings, but there is new dissent afoot in Brentwood.

Angie Hulshoff, mother of three (human children) and "mother" to 5 pet chickens, who all come when called by name and follow her children around, got a notice on her door, out of the blue.

It called her into city hall to face fined for violations of city ordinances for keeping chickens.

Angie and her family have had these pet backyard birds for over three years.  When she first got them, she called City Hall and inquired about the ordinances, and was told that she was on the up and clear for having backyard birds.  She has had no complaints for noise, nuisance or odor from any neighbours.  In fact, one of her very next door neighbours is an alderwoman for Brentwood City Hall and spoke eloquently in defence on her behalf as a stellar animal caretaker and encouraged support for her cause for keeping her beloved childrens' pets.

Angie immediately did some research and came up with our local backyard St. Louis chickens meetup list.  We have grown to over 700 members in a very short period of time, have regular sustainable living/backyard chicken coop tours/education events, and a very active membership. You can join here at: http://www.meetup.com/stlouischickens/

The mayor of Brentwood was very supportive of Angie's case.  Ann Martin, of Clayton, did some wonderful research and noted by law that there does not need to be any new ordinances written as there already are nuisance and noise laws written into code that would cover any chicken issues, and laws against keeping a bull, donkeys, or other farm stock inside your homes.  Yup.  I think that about covers it ...

It looks hopeful for Angie, but we have been working diligently with Richmond Heights, Black Jack, Ballwin, Valley Park, etc. St. Louis is a very different community for city laws and city structures but we are all bonded together for the continuity of support for the national "green" movement of people growing their own food sources and knowing where and how it came from, and chickens are a dual commodity.  They are simultaneously backyard food sources, family pets, AND they provide healthy, nutritious eggs.  They are quieter than barking dogs and lawn mowers and provide healthy fertilizer that is expensive to buy. 

We are all rooting for Angie, who has very good support in city hall, and rooting for the education of a greater sponsorship of the importance of being able to know where your food comes from, how it is fed and grown, and how its intake affects your family.

And then, there is the "pet thing" - I do have to admit, I sit both sides of the fence ...

Dorene, off to snuggle/huggle her flock

Angie

5:54 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Thank you for your support! I feel so lucky to have found our local chicken supporters. I feel like I've made a bunch of new friends....chicken lovers rock!!

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Mary Meers

8:08 pm on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Mary
I grew up on Rosalie Ave. and the family at the end of the street always had chickens. In fact I had 2 chicks when I was a little girl. One passed and the other grew up to be a rooster. At that point I then had to give him away. I fully support you hen people.

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Dorene Olson

12:44 am on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Angie, Mary, you are chicken peers in spirit, keep up the good work, and Angie, you are the best, we are all together with you till the end!

Dorene

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Philip Scherry

8:18 am on Wednesday, January 9, 2013

The neighboring municipalities of Rock Hill and Webster do allow for chickens, with certain regulations.
Rock Hill classifies them as 'pets', and any house is allowed only 4 pets. So as long as you don't have roosters its ok.
Webster is a bit more complicated. Look at their City code Section 33.205.

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Nick from Maplewood

8:34 am on Thursday, January 10, 2013

What is the law in Maplewood concerning Chickens?

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Doug Miner

8:38 am on Thursday, January 10, 2013

Maplewood allows up to six chickens, no roosters.

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Rebecca K

2:09 pm on Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Go Angie! And I will look for when the board meets on this subject again because I hope to be there to support you.

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Donna Neal

3:07 pm on Monday, April 15, 2013

Well, if you are going to allow chickens, which are farm animals, then yo must allow
horses, cows, and other farm animals. This is ridiculous, get rid of the chickens.

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Philip Scherry

3:17 pm on Monday, April 15, 2013

Horses, Cows, Goats, and other 'farm' animals tend to need a lot more land to live on.

Guy Niere

12:54 pm on Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Chickens are home bodies and do quite well on a small plot of land.
The US government throughout most of the last century encouraged every family to keep a small flock of chickens in their backyards.
They eat bugs and weed seeds eliminating the need for pesticides and herbicides, They fertilize the land when they forage.
The bedding from the coop makes great compost further enriching the garden soil.
Keeping chickens is great for animal welfare. For every backyard chicken, there is one less in a battery layer cage with 100,000 others stacked 6 deep that never feel sunlight, can't spread their wings, can't take a dust bath, can't have privacy when they lay an egg and must be fed antibiotics every day to keep disease from spreading through the flock.
It's also recommended that veterans with PTSD keep chickens because it is one of the few activities that seem to alleviate the disorder.
It's one of the only pets that feeds you breakfast. Except maybe for ducks, geese, turkeys, emus, rheas and ostrich.

For anyone concerned about animal welfare but can't raise their own - find someone that does and buy their eggs. We can diminish the need for factory farms.

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