Toronto Star

Chickens win right to roam

- SUE CARLTON

Score one more for the chickens that roam free on the historic brick streets of Ybor City.

Weary of chicken poop, torn-up landscapin­g and early-morning crowing, an Ybor condominiu­m resident recently looked to the city for legal guidance regarding his rights versus the birds’.

Steve Calkins, who owns two condos at the Quarter at Ybor on Palm Avenue, wanted to know this:

Could he shoo chickens off private property with a broom, hose or leaf-blower? Could he periodical­ly have them trapped and relocated?

“They are not bald eagles,” Calkins, 69, told the Tampa Bay Times.

No and no, the city said, pointing to a 1989 ordinance declaring all of Tampa a bird sanctuary. That makes it illegal to “hunt, kill, maim or trap … or otherwise molest” birds, or to even attempt it.

That ordinance covers domestic birds, song birds, migratory birds, waterfowl and wildfowl, but excludes birds raised in captivity for eating purposes.

“Whether you are a private property owner or on public property, you can’t do anything that harms a protected bird,” said assistant city attorney Camaria Pettis-Mackle. As for shooing chickens with a hose or blower, she would not advise it.

Calkins insists he is not anti-animal. He says he sees this as a private property rights issue. He says the birds’ poop must regularly be cleaned from walkways and the pool deck and the chickens destroy the grass.

The chickens that strut the streets, roost in parks and stroll the sidewalks of Tampa’s bustling Latin Quarter of bars, restaurant­s and shops are beloved by many. But the occasional clash of fowl and their foes is not new.

Years ago, a trapper came to Ybor after someone complained of chickens scaring customers inside a business. More recently, complaints to the City Council about a burgeoning bird population had elected officials waxing on about the chickens’ contributi­on to the ambiance. In such skirmishes, the chicken has generally prevailed.

Dylan Breese, founder of the Ybor Chickens Society, which promotes harmony between Ybor’s humans, businesses and chickens, said the city’s interpreta­tion of the ordinance makes sense.

“Tampa’s home to a lot of wildlife,” he said. “And to expect protected wildlife to know what a sidewalk is and stay on the sidewalk isn’t reasonable.”

Breese and other chicken supporters have pointed out that Ybor City’s free-roaming roosters, hens and chicks are a well-establishe­d part of the community and should come as no surprise to anyone who chooses to live there.

Calkins said when he moved to the eclectic neighbourh­ood east of downtown Tampa four years ago, he was fully prepared for the late-night partiers and homeless people.

“I did not think about the chickens destroying property and squawking all night,” he said.

 ?? CHERIE DIEZ TAMPA BAY TIMES/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Some residents at the Quarter at Ybor complex complain chickens ruin landscapin­g.
CHERIE DIEZ TAMPA BAY TIMES/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Some residents at the Quarter at Ybor complex complain chickens ruin landscapin­g.

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