2019 Connecticut General Statutes
Title 26 - Fisheries and Game
Chapter 490 - Fisheries and Game
Section 26-47 - Permits to take wildlife damaging crops. License to control nuisance wildlife.

Universal Citation: CT Gen Stat § 26-47 (2019)

(a) When it is shown to the satisfaction of the commissioner that wildlife is causing unreasonable damage to agricultural crops during the night and it is found by the commissioner that control of such damage by wildlife is impracticable during the daylight hours, the commissioner may issue permits for the taking of such wildlife as the commissioner deems necessary to control such damage by such method as the commissioner determines, including the use of lights, during the period between sunset and sunrise, upon written application of the owner or lessee of record of the land on which such crops are grown. Such permits may be issued to any qualified person designated by such landowner or lessee. The person to whom such permit is issued shall be held responsible for complying with the conditions under which such permit is issued. The provisions of this section shall not apply to deer.

(b) (1) No person shall engage in the business of controlling nuisance wildlife, other than rats or mice, without obtaining a license from the commissioner. Such license shall be valid for a period of two years and may be renewed in accordance with a schedule established by the commissioner. The fee for such license shall be two hundred fifty dollars. The controlling of nuisance wildlife at the direction of the commissioner shall not constitute engaging in the business of controlling nuisance wildlife for the purposes of this section. No person shall be licensed under this subsection unless the person: (A) Provides evidence, satisfactory to the commissioner, that the person has completed training which included instruction in site evaluation, methods of nonlethal and approved lethal resolution of common nuisance wildlife problems, techniques to prevent reoccurrence of such problems and humane capture, handling and euthanasia of nuisance wildlife and instruction in methods of nonlethal resolution of common nuisance wildlife problems, including, but not limited to, training regarding frightening devices, repellants, one-way door exclusion and other exclusion methods, habitat modification and live-trapping and releasing and other methods as the commissioner may deem appropriate; and (B) is a resident of this state or of a state that does not prohibit residents of this state from being licensed as nuisance wildlife control operators because of lack of residency.

(2) The licensure requirements shall apply to municipal employees who engage in the control or handling of animals, including, but not limited to, animal control officers, except that no license shall be required of such employees for the emergency control of rabies. Notwithstanding the requirements of this subsection, the commissioner shall waive the licensure fee for such employees. The commissioner shall provide to such municipal employees, without charge, the training required for licensure under this subsection. A license held by a municipal employee shall be noncommercial, nontransferable and conditional upon municipal employment.

(3) The commissioner shall adopt regulations, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54, which (A) define the scope and methods for controlling nuisance wildlife provided such regulations shall incorporate the recommendations of the 1993 report of the American Veterinary Medical Association panel on euthanasia and further provided such regulations may provide for the use of specific alternatives to such recommendations only in specified circumstances where use of a method of killing approved by such association would involve an imminent threat to human health or safety and only if such alternatives are designed to kill the animal as quickly and painlessly as practicable while protecting human health and safety, and (B) establish criteria and procedures for issuance of a license.

(4) Except as otherwise provided in regulations adopted under this section, no person licensed under this subsection may kill any animal by any method which does not conform to the recommendations of the 1993 report of the American Veterinary Medical Association panel on euthanasia. No person may advertise any services relating to humane capture or relocation of wildlife unless all methods employed in such services conform to such regulations.

(5) Any person licensed under this subsection shall provide all clients with a written statement approved by the commissioner regarding approved lethal and nonlethal options, as provided in this subsection, which are available to the client for resolution of common nuisance problems. If a written statement cannot be delivered to the client prior to services being rendered, the licensee shall leave the statement at the job site or other location arranged with the client.

(6) Each person licensed under this subsection shall submit a report to the commissioner, on such date as the commissioner may determine, that specifies the means utilized in each case of nuisance wildlife control service provided in the preceding calendar year including any method used in those cases where an animal was killed. Any information included in such report which identifies a client of such person or the client's street address may be released by the commissioner only pursuant to an investigation related to enforcement of this section.

(c) Any person who violates any provision of this section, or any condition under which a permit or license is issued, shall be guilty of a class D misdemeanor; and any permit or license issued to such person, and all other such permits or licenses issued to any other person for such property, shall be revoked by the commissioner and the right to obtain such permit or license shall remain suspended for such period of time as the commissioner determines.

(d) Any permit or license issued under this section shall not authorize the taking of deer.

(1957, P.A. 497; 1971, P.A. 872, S. 242; P.A. 85-100, S. 3; P.A. 97-255; P.A. 98-199, S. 1, 2; P.A. 01-204, S. 1, 29; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 01-9, S. 73, 131; May 9 Sp. Sess. P.A. 02-1, S. 90; P.A. 03-19, S. 66; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 09-3, S. 450; P.A. 12-80, S. 131.)

History: 1971 act replaced references to director of board of fisheries and game with references to environmental protection commissioner; P.A. 85-100 added provisions re license for controlling nuisance wildlife and specifying that issuance of license or permit does not authorize taking of deer and divided section into Subsecs.; P.A. 97-255 amended Subsec. (b) to provide for training requirements for wildlife control licensees, criteria for determining methods for the control of nuisance wildlife, conditions governing certain methods, options to be provided to clients of such licensees and reporting requirements re methods of control used by such licensees; P.A. 98-199 amended Subsec. (b) to add training in nonlethal resolution of nuisance wildlife problems and to require that if statement of control options cannot be provided to clients before services are rendered that statement be left at job site or agreed upon location, effective July 1, 1998; P.A. 01-204 amended Subsec. (a) to make technical changes for purposes of gender neutrality, amended Subsec. (b) to delete the license expiration date from the last day of the December next succeeding its issuance, making it valid for a period of two years, and renewable in accordance with a schedule established by the commissioner, to change the license fee from $50 to $100, to make technical changes for purposes of gender neutrality, to add a provision prohibiting the commissioner from issuing a license to a person unless that person is a resident of this state or of a state that does not prohibit residents of this state from being licensed as nuisance wildlife control operators because of lack of residency, to add a new Subdiv. (2) re application of licensure requirements to municipal employees, renumbering the remaining subdivisions accordingly, to make technical changes, and to change the date that licensees must submit a report re the means utilized in each case of nuisance wildlife control service from February first of each year to a date as the commissioner may determine, effective July 11, 2001; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 01-9 revised effective date of P.A. 01-204 but without affecting this section; May 9 Sp. Sess. P.A. 02-1 increased license fee from $100 to $200 in Subsec. (b)(1), effective January 1, 2003; P.A. 03-19 made a technical change in Subsec. (c), effective May 12, 2003; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 09-3 amended Subsec. (b)(1) to increase fee from $200 to $250; P.A. 12-80 amended Subsec. (c) to change penalty from a fine of not less than $25 or more than $200 or imprisonment of not more than 60 days or both to a class D misdemeanor.

See Sec. 26-82 re regulation of killing of deer.

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