Thu
Jul 29 2010
11:10 am
By: agrarianurbanite
Dr. Chad Hellwinckel posted today at the KUHC:
**IMPORTANT**
I just talked to council members. I have assurance that there is no way that the last amendment will be in there. It will either be withdrawn or it will be voted down. They understand that the amendment would kill the intent of legalization. I still encourage you to contact your reps to let them know the amendment is not acceptable, but don't loose sleep over it!! Good news!!
|
|
Discussing:
- Alcoa Hwy construction to extend to 2030 (2 replies)
- Smith & Wesson noise problem (3 replies)
- Are Chat bots a waste of time? (1 reply)
- Musicians dropping out of President's Freedom Concert Series (1 reply)
- It's time for new blood in Congress, Barnett in - Burchett out (1 reply)
- Burning Down The House... (2 replies)
- Behind Lege Lies (1 reply)
- Peace (1 reply)
- Speak your truth, fight and believe. (1 reply)
- Large banks have too much AI data center debt? (1 reply)
- GOP misleading on federal health care funding (1 reply)
- Feds indict civil rights group (3 replies)
TN Progressive
- Alcoa property taxes will probably not go up (BlountViews)
- Smith & Wesson not a good fit for Blount County (BlountViews)
- Pellissippi Parkway extension delayed again (BlountViews)
- Blount County early voting record turnout (BlountViews)
- WATCH THIS SPACE. (Left Wing Cracker)
- America As It Is Right Now (RoaneViews)
- A friend sent this: From Captain McElwee's Tall Tales of Roane County (RoaneViews)
- The Meidas Touch (RoaneViews)
- Massive Security Breach Analysis (RoaneViews)
- (Whitescreek Journal)
- My choices in the August election (Left Wing Cracker)
- July 4, 2024 - aka The Twilight Zone (Joe Powell)
TN Politics
- Stockard on the Stump: Don’t bet your life savings on a gubernatorial debate (TN Lookout)
- Trump couldn’t send troops to the polls without approval of Congress under Dem bill (TN Lookout)
- More Americans are hungry in the face of federal cuts, rising grocery prices (TN Lookout)
- 60-day clock starts for negotiations with Iran over strait, nuclear future (TN Lookout)
- Feds seek dismissal of xAI lawsuit in Memphis and Mississippi (TN Lookout)
- FEMA nominee pressed on whether Trump favors disaster funding requests from GOP states (TN Lookout)
Knox TN Today
- Play catch with Lady Vols softball players (Knox TN Today)
- Norris Lake at Oak Grove + Beaver Creek + West Hills picnic (Knox TN Today)
- Dishing It Out: Million Dollar Spaghetti (Knox TN Today)
- Close to Home, Far from Ordinary: East Tennessee ghost stories and local legends (Knox TN Today)
- William Carder, Powell, crowned Tennessee’s Best Bagger (Knox TN Today)
- Bisky is a special resident at Zoo Knoxville (Knox TN Today)
- Dining Duo gives statistics plus two favorite pizza eats (Knox TN Today)
- Hiking with Harrington: Rich Mt. Road (Knox TN Today)
- Plant flowers like wildlife depends on it. They do! (Knox TN Today)
- 6/19 HEADLINES: News and events from Knox, World, USA, Tennessee & Historic Notes (Knox TN Today)
- Unmasking bright futures for pets at Mask-Fur-Ade 2026 (Knox TN Today)
- Belmont Blooms (Knox TN Today)
Local TV News
- Former ORNL employees pleads guilty to acting as a foreign agent (WATE)
- Jellico board votes down Bitcoin mine zoning ordinance despite resident frustration (WATE)
- Man pleads guilty after 2023 overdose death in Monroe County (WATE)
- Man dead after truck drives into Tennessee River in Downtown Knoxville (WATE)
- United Way of Greater Knoxville annual report highlighes $8.3 million rasied, challenges in 2025 (WATE)
- 'Peaceful but with a pulse' Why campers and glampers are choosing Townsend (WATE)
News Sentinel
State News
- Isaiah Rashad’s ‘awful’ press tour to make a stop in his hometown of Chattanooga - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- What’s going there? Developer still deciding what to place at old church site - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Teen charged in connection with disappearance of Collegedale man - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Daughter of Chattanooga woman who joined ISIS rescued, awaits fate outside a Syrian detention camp - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- Live updates: Vance no longer traveling to Switzerland for Iran talks as Lebanon clashes strain agreement - CNN (US News)
- Global stock markets mixed as investors assess durability of U.S.-Iran peace deal - CNBC (Business)
- Musk's SpaceX stake is worth over $1 trillion. Here are the other billionaire shareholders - CNBC (Business)
- Obama Presidential Center Opening: See the Celebs Who Attended - Business Insider (US News)
- What's open and closed on Juneteenth 2026? Find out if banks, USPS and stores are operating. - CBS News (US News)
- US export ban on Anthropic’s AI models further strains alliances - Al Jazeera (Business)
- Why did the newly refurbished Reflecting Pool turn green? The quiz knows - NPR (US News)
- Why right now might be the best opportunity to get hired at Silicon Valley's most coveted employers - Business Insider (Business)
- Dollar Rises to One-Year High, U.S. Markets Closed for Holiday - WSJ (Business)
- Hannah Pingree and Bobby Charles Will Face Off in Maine Governor’s Race - The New York Times (US News)
- New First-of-Its-Kind Flu Vaccine Approved by FDA Expert Panel - ScienceAlert (Business)
- In bid to make a deal, billionaire tax backers offer to slash tax in exchange for Newsom’s support - San Francisco Chronicle (US News)
- Proposed immigrant detention center site in Salt Lake City to be offloaded, newspaper reports - KSL News (US News)
- Mangione Withdraws Emotional Disturbance Defense in New York Case - The New York Times (US News)
- The discount for student loan payers who enroll in autopay just went up - The Washington Post (Business)
Local Media
Lost Medicaid Funding
To date, the failure to expand Medicaid/TennCare has cost the State of Tennessee ? in lost federal funding. (Source)
Search and Archives
TN Progressive
Nearby:
- Blount Dems
- Herston TN Family Law
- Inside of Knoxville
- Instapundit
- Jack Lail
- Jim Stovall
- Knox Dems
- MoxCarm Blue Streak
- Outdoor Knoxville
- Pittman Properties
- Reality Me
- Stop Alcoa Parkway
Beyond:
- Nashville Scene
- Nashville Post
- Smart City Memphis
- TN Dems
- TN Journal
- TN Lookout
- Bob Stepno
- Facing South

Good deal
Good deal, agie.
Has anyone with your group yet copied council members with Alcoa's text? Why reinvent the wheel?
chicken
If Della Volpe is so worried about the chaos and disease hens will unleash upon Knoxville, he should vote against the ordinance rather than encumbering it with worry-wart, busy-body babble. Surely it is not necessary to write inspection and enforcement protocols into every ordinance, nor to redundantly include Constitutional constraints.
Della Volpe made it clear during the discussion that animal husbandry is foreign to him. His amendments are at best needless micromanagement, at worst poison pills designed to delay or sabotage an ordinance he lacks the courage to oppose. He should stop being such a chickenshit and just cast a No vote.
I have assurance that there
and do we now have a sunshine law violation over a chicken squabble?
*
Not necessarily, rs. It's likely the case that Chad has just spoken with more than one council member. No sunshine violation in that.
"Chicken Ordinance"
IMO,the "Chicken Ordinance" should be passed.
City Animal Control is very good @ enforcing existing code & will do the same if the "Chicken Ordinance",is passed.
However,we can not ask or expect the city law department to advise on the ramifications of this ordinance because we simply don't know all the ramifications.
It could be the "Chicken Ordinance" & existing code is sufficient.OTH,maybe not.
But it is a waste of the city law department's time to attempt to advise Council on pure speculation.
Council should pass the "Chicken Ordinance".
And if the "Chicken Ordinance" passes,in a month or so,it would not be a bad idea to bring City Animal Control Officers before Council to review the ordinance to insure that the ordinance & existing code cover any problems that may arise.
Then the City Law Department will be able to advise Council
as to how to properly proceed with respect to a remedy per the city code.
And if the "Chicken
And if the "Chicken Ordinance" passes,in a month or so,it would not be a bad idea to bring City Animal Control Officers before Council to review the ordinance to insure that the ordinance & existing code cover any problems that may arise.
Why have them review after the fact? Why not have them review it before passage so that it doesn't have to be changed in the future?
Seems they could use the same text in the ordinance covering other animals and be done with it.
The City of Knoxville ordinance section regarding Inspections (Sec. 5-6.)
Yes but..
I agree that the ordinance itself & existing code may well be sufficient,in this matter.
However,one would "review",the ordinance,"after the fact" because,when passing any ordinance,we never know all the ramifications.
That is especially true when passing an ordinance concerning animals.
We may discover unforeseen ramifications,with respect to this
ordinance.
And I don't believe we can legislate the unforeseeable.
Therefore,if the ordinance passes,Council should provide that
City Animal Control,in a month or so,come before Council to make sure the provisions of the ordinance & existing city code
are sufficient in the matter of the "Chicken Ordinance".
If so..move on.
If not..fix it.
At one time I worked for the Humane Society & worked with
City Animal Control officers with respect to city code.
So I'm not just talking off the top of my head.
hey understand that the
Chad, I'm not following why you think the amendment would kill the intent of legalization.
Allowing inspections if they have reasonable cause to suspect violations or in the case of a health emergency - with the caveat below as in Alcoa -
but only if the consent of the occupant or owner of the property is freely given or a search warrant is obtained,
doesn't seem to me to be that onerous or to "kill the intent of legalization."
And I'll have to defend Nick Della Volpe - I believe he has been an excellent representative of his constituency. I think he was trying to work out a compromise because he has constituents who are on both sides of the issue - it's a way to ease the fears of the anti-chicken people while allowing him to vote to pass the ordinance at the behest of his pro-chicken constituents, like me.
I am a urban-chicken supporter - think local food is definitely the the way to go - but believe it is crucial to make sure the chickens don't cause problems for neighbors.
Della Volpe needs to decide
Della Volpe needs to decide which is more important to him, the fears of the anti-chicken people or his pro-chicken constituents. He can't represent everyone on every vote. He should choose one or the other and stop trying to drag everyone into his dilemma.
Animal control has been involved in drafting this ordinance throughout the long process, and waiting a month or two after it passes is not going to suddenly illuminate problems no one anticipated. Cities all over the country have made hen ownership legal in recent years. If we can't learn from them, maybe we are simply beyond help.
This much is clear: if lawyers always decided things, we'd still be in the trees munching fruit trying to anticipate every possible outcome of climbing down and creating agriculture and civilization. It may be an intellectual quandary whether the chicken or the egg came first, but it's obvious lawyers came long after the real challenges were worked out.
Ordinance Examples from Others
I agree Rikki, we should look to other cities for successful ordinances. That's why I think the Alcoa language is especially interesting.
Rikki
"Waiting a month or two after it passes is not going to illuminate problems no one anticipated".
More than likely your comment is correct.
But simply,a problem nobody anticipated is just that..
a problem nobody anticipated.
So why not review the ordinance in 60 days..to make sure
all th i's are dotted & all the t's are crossed?
And reviewing the ordinance,in 60 days,would go a long way
in addressing the concerns of those in opposition.
That way the debate on the ordinance doesn't get caught up
in two hours of..what if?
Pass it & in 60 days review it.
If the ordinance covers all the bases..move on.
If not..fix it.
It maybe moot..but..
It maybe a moot point but,as I pointed out on the previous thread,the language giving inspection power to the Animal Control Board,IMO,is not the way to go.
Because the Animal Control Board simply can not act quickly enough if a situation warrents quick action.
KPD & City Animal Control officers can.
And it could be that if the "Chicken Ordinance" codifies
the Animal Control Board to inspect violations of the
ordinance..it could present a problem for citizens wanting
a quick resolution of said violation.
I have worked with City Animal Control in matters of violations of the city code.
One must always be aware of the prevailing state law &
city code when dealing with these matters.
It doesn't take much to envision a quick resolution to a violation of this ordinance,being hampered,if KPD & Animal
Control officers must go,first,to the city law department & then a judge to resolve a conflict between the "Chicken Ordinance",the Animal Control Board shall inspect,& existing code that states,KPD & Animal Control shall inspect.
Bizgrrl has posted the city code vis a vis the inspection power vested in KPD & City Animal Control & those powers should not be in conflict with the "Chicken Ordinance".
Futhermore,the inspection powers granted to KPD & Animal Control,should not be changed..period.
Because,in all violations of the city code regarding animals,inspections should be the sole power of KPD &
Animal Control,especially in emergency situations.
60 days
I think in the case of agriculture, problems may be seasonal and take time to show up. Or the life cycle of the birds. So a 60 day review may be too short.
Agreed. The part of the
Agreed.
The part of the ordinance that said you couldn't kill the chickens after they quit laying didn't make much sense to me. And what happens if an egg hatches and it's a male?
I'm in favor of urban hens, but my opinion is that we would be better off going with a broad ordinance and dealing with regulating individual problems with nuisance behavior ordinances rather than nuisance chicken ordinances.
I agree,Goose
Goose,when talking about city code & animals many factors are
in play.
And your comment has brought that to light.
I had not thought about agriculture animals vs domestic
animals.
And raising chickens is about agriculture.
How about this?
First review in 60 days.Just to make sure,intially,the ordinance works ok.
I guess that would be in early October.
Then I would defer to someone that knows more about
agriculture,than I,to set the next review.