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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."Ordinance at a glance
Here are major provisions of Belleville’s new chicken ordinance:

Chickens will be allowed only on properties with single-family dwellings.

People who want chickens must get permits that cost $25 a year.

Permits require inspections by health, housing and building officials.

Each permit allows up to six chickens, all hens (no roosters).

Selling eggs and other commercial purposes are prohibited.

Fighting, breeding and slaughtering chickens also are prohibited.

Chickens must be kept inside a sturdy wire fence or other enclosure at all times.

They must be secured in a hen house or chicken tractor at night.

Enclosures must be clean, dry, odor-free, neat and sanitary.

Hen houses must provide 4 square feet of space per chicken.

They must have adequate ventilation, sun and shade.

They must be impermeable to rodents, wild birds, dogs and cats.

They must be made of uniform materials and no taller than 6 feet.

They must be 10 feet from homes, churches, schools or businesses.

“Odors from chickens, chicken manure or other chicken related disturbance shall not be perceptible beyond the boundaries of the permitted tract of land,” the ordinance states.

“Noise from chickens shall not be loud enough beyond the boundaries of the permitted tract of land at the property boundaries to disturb persons of reasonable sensitivity.”

Motivated by egg prices
A proposal for allowing chickens in Belleville came up in 2015, but it didn’t even make it out of the City Council’s Public Health and Housing Committee. Collinsville lifted its ban the same year, followed by Swansea in 2016, Shiloh in 2017 and Edwardsville in 2018.


In February, Belleville resident Louis Holm stood up at a City Council meeting and reintroduced the idea of changing the ordinance. At that time, he was motivated by the skyrocketing cost of eggs.

Today, the public seems more open on the chicken issue than in the past, and other metro-east communities have reported few problems since lifting their bans, according to Scott Tyler, Belleville’s director of health, housing and building.

“As long as you keep the roosters out of the equation, waking everybody up, you’re OK,” he said.

Tyler said he isn’t concerned about coop inspections putting too much of a burden on his department because he doesn’t think that many Belleville residents will want to spend the time and energy it takes to care for chickens.

In addition to approving the new ordinance, the City Council amended the existing ordinance on “animal care” so that it no longer prohibits chickens. Still prohibited are goats, pigs, sheep, cattle and other farm animals and ducks, geese, guinea hens, pigeons and other fowl."
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