Fairfield County has no operational government (abolished 1960). Dog control in Connecticut is governed by Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-364 (roaming-dog prohibition) and Sec. 22-363 (nuisance dogs), with each town employing a municipal animal control officer under Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-331. Stamford Code Sec. 70, Bridgeport Code Sec. 5.16, Norwalk Code Sec. 16-1 et seq., Greenwich Municipal Code Sec. 4-1, and Danbury Code Sec. 5-1 layer additional leash and licensing provisions on top of the state framework.
Connecticut's primary dog-control statute is Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-364, which makes it unlawful for any owner or keeper to allow a dog to roam at large on the land of another, or in a public area, unless on the owner's land or accompanied by a person and under that person's reasonable control. Sec. 22-364(a) specifically requires dogs to be controlled by leash or otherwise restrained when off the owner's premises. Sec. 22-363 prohibits a dog from being a nuisance by barking or otherwise disturbing the peace. Sec. 22-358 governs dogs that injure persons or chase livestock and authorizes municipal animal control officers and state animal control officers to take custody of such animals. Every Connecticut municipality must employ at least one municipal animal control officer under Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-331. Dogs over six months old must be licensed annually with the town clerk under Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-338, with proof of current rabies vaccination required under Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-339a. Enforcement in Fairfield County is town-by-town: Stamford Code Sec. 70 prohibits dogs at large; Bridgeport Code Sec. 5.16 requires leash restraint in public; Norwalk Code Chapter 16 prohibits dogs running at large and authorizes impoundment; Greenwich Municipal Code Sec. 4-1 requires leash control; Danbury Code Sec. 5-1 has parallel rules. Dogs running at large can be impounded; owners must pay impoundment, board, and licensing fees to redeem the dog. A dangerous-dog determination under Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-358 can result in restrictions or euthanasia.
Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-364 makes a violation an infraction punishable by a fine. Sec. 22-363 nuisance violations also carry fines. Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22-338 makes failure to license a dog over six months a separate infraction. Municipal animal control officers can issue citations and impound dogs running at large, with redemption fees set by each town. Dangerous-dog orders under Sec. 22-358 can require muzzling, confinement, or euthanasia. There is no county-level animal enforcement because Fairfield County has no operational government.
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See how Fairfield County's dog leash laws rules stack up against other locations.
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