(1)
Rental and Carriage Horse Licenses.
(a) No person
shall use or offer the use of any horse in a rental riding or carriage horse
business unless such horse shall be licensed by the Department of Licenses and
Inspections. The Department of Public Health in conjunction with the Department
of Licenses and Inspection shall promulgate regulations for the licensing of
rental and carriage horses, which regulations may from time to time revise the
annual license or renewal fee to reflect the costs incurred by the City in
regulating rental and carriage horses under this Section. Unless otherwise
provided by regulation, the annual fee for a license or renewal of a license
shall be twenty-five dollars ($25.00) per horse. No license shall be
transferable. All applications for a license or the renewal of a license shall
be accompanied by a health certificate signed and dated by the examining
veterinarian.
[15] (b) Horses
shall be sold or disposed of only in a humane manner. The Department of Licenses
and Inspections shall be notified of the transfer of ownership or other
disposition of a licensed horse within ten (10) days of the transfer or
disposition. Upon the transfer of ownership of any horse to a new owner, the new
owner shall obtain a license for such horse within fifteen (15) days after the
date of the transfer of ownership.
(c) Each horse licensed pursuant to
this Section shall be assigned an official identification number by the
Department of Licenses and Inspections. The identification number shall be
displayed on the horse, in a manner provided by regulation, at all times the
horse is being
worked.
[16] (d) The
certificate of license shall at all times remain at the stable where the horse
is kept and shall be available for inspection by animal control officers of the
Department of Public Health or persons designated by the Department of Public
Health to enforce this Chapter.
(2)
Working
Conditions.
(a) Owners shall insure that appropriate and sufficient
food and drinking water are available for each horse and that while working each
horse is permitted to eat and drink at reasonable intervals, provided however
that horses shall not be allowed to drink in large quantities unless first
rested.
(b) Owners shall not allow a horse to be worked on a public
highway, path or street when the temperature is over ninety-one (91) degrees
Fahrenheit, or when the wind chill factor is less than twenty-six (26) degrees
Fahrenheit, or during other dangerous conditions which are a threat to the
health or safety of the horse. A horse being worked when such conditions develop
shall be immediately returned to the stable by the most direct route. The
Department of Public Health shall promulgate regulations specifying how the
temperature and wind chill factor shall be measured for purposes of this
subsection, and how persons working horses shall determine that the temperature
is not within the permitted
range.
[17] (c) Carriage
horses shall not be in harness for more than nine (9) hours in any continuous
twenty-four (24) hour period. Riding horses shall not be at work for more than
ten (10) hours in any continuous twenty-four (24) hour period. Riding horses
shall be rested a minimum of fifteen (15) minutes for every riding hour.
Carriage horses shall be rested a minimum of fifteen (15) minutes for every
pulling hour. Daily records shall be maintained as prescribed by regulation of
the Department of Public Health, indicating the time and daily activity of a
rental horse and shall be available for inspection by animal control officers or
others authorized by the Department of Public
Health.
[18] (d) Carriage
horses shall not be driven at a pace faster than a trot.
(e) Saddles,
blankets, harness, bridles and bits and any other equipment shall be properly
fitted and kept in good repair. Blankets, bridles and bits shall not be used by
another horse unless first disinfected.
(f) A rental horse or carriage
horse which suffers from any physical disability may be ordered to be removed
from work until such time as deemed appropriate by a veterinarian authorized or
retained by the Department of Public Health.
(g) Horses shall not be
left untethered or unattended except when confined in a stable or other
enclosure.
(3)
Medical Care.
(a) Every horse required to
be licensed under this Section shall be examined by a veterinarian prior to its
use in a rental horse or carriage business and thereafter at intervals of not
less than once a year. The horse shall be examined and treated for internal
parasites; for its general physical condition, which is to include inspection of
teeth, hoofs, and shoes; and for its physical ability to perform the work or
duties required of it. The examination shall also include a record of any
injury, disease, or deficiency observed by the veterinarian at the time,
together with any prescription or humane correction or disposition of same. A
health certificate provided by the Department of Public Health and signed by a
veterinarian shall be maintained at the stable premises at which such horse is
located, and shall contain the identification number, age and condition of the
horse, as well as the maximum number of hours a day that, in the opinion of the
veterinarian said horse should work. A copy of said certificate shall be filed
with the Division of Animal Control of the Department of Public
Health.
(b) Horses shall be kept clean and in an ectoparasite control
program. Carriage horses shall be trimmed or shod as often as necessary or
appropriate.
(4)
Removal from Work. A horse required to be
licensed under this Section which is lamed or suffers a physical condition or
illness making it unable for work may be ordered to be removed from work by an
Animal Control Officer or other designee of the Health Commissioner. A horse for
which such an order has been issued shall not be returned to work until it has
recovered from the condition which caused the issuance of the order or until
such condition has improved sufficiently that its return to work will not
aggravate that condition or otherwise endanger the health of the horse. In any
proceeding under this Section, it shall be presumed that a horse which is found
at work within forty-eight (48) hours after the issuance of an order of removal
and which is disabled by the same condition which caused such order to be issued
has been returned to work in violation of this Section. Such presumption may be
rebutted by offering a certificate of a veterinarian indicating suitability to
return to work prior to the expiration of the forty-eight (48) hour
period.
(5)
Further Regulations to be Promulgated. The Health
Commissioner shall promulgate such further regulations which may be required to
carry out the intent of this Section, or to further safeguard the health and
humane treatment of rental and carriage horses.