Our township is at it once again. We pulled a permit for our coop back in June. In May we purchased 59 acres with two houses on it. Since we have 2 houses, there are 2 addresses and 2 separate tax IDs. Apparently when we pulled the permit we may have accidentally put the wrong tax ID. Now instead of just changing it and putting the correct number down, they are trying to figure out how to hit us with another ordinance violation.
I guess the bullying continues! Once RTF is being used, the bullying can start? It's just not right!
This is why the statewide Right to Farm law is so important, even for people who only want very small operations.
Local officials tend to err on the side of reducing all possible friction between neighbors, with a result that we end up with a lot of communities in which people aren't allowed to do reasonable things, like growing their own food. Even on 59 acres!
This might have made a little more sense when the balance between ag areas and urban areas was more balanced, but it certainly doesn't make sense now, with 20% of the state rural and 80% urban - and growing. It just makes no sense to make it illegal for the vast majority of the state to grow food, or to have any idea of how to grow food; the ability to grow food isn't a skill that we can afford to lose on this scale.
This may not be the larger kind of issue that every local unit of government is concerned with, which is why they should not be charged with regulating it. It is the kind of larger issue that the state should be concerned with, and they should respond by creating and enforcing laws that protect the rights of all people in the state to grow their own food at some level. What the appropriate level is in different areas is a fair question. But I don't think there should be any question that people should be allowed to keep small livestock where they live.
Chickens, in particular, are less of a nuisance than dogs or kittens, as far as I can tell, and each one produces an egg almost every day. It is hard to find much fault in that.
I Agree!
