Barking dog rules in Gladstone, MO — also called nuisance dog, dog noise, or excessive barking ordinances — define when a barking dog becomes a code violation and how complaints are handled.
Persistent barking in Clay County is a nuisance handled by each city's animal control and ordinance. Missouri's peace disturbance law, RSMo 574.010, backs enforcement, making unreasonable loud noise a Class B misdemeanor.
Chronic barking is handled locally in Clay County. Liberty, Gladstone, Excelsior Springs, and Kearney address dogs that disturb neighbors through their animal control and nuisance ordinances, usually starting with a warning and asking complainants to log dates, times, and recordings. Repeated complaints can escalate to citations or a nuisance hearing. In unincorporated areas the Clay County Sheriff responds, and extreme, sustained barking can be charged as peace disturbance under RSMo 574.010. Separately, Missouri RSMo 273.036 imposes strict liability on dog owners for bite injuries, a distinct issue from noise.
A nuisance or animal-noise citation carries city-court fines. Sustained disturbance can be charged as peace disturbance under RSMo 574.010, a Class B misdemeanor up to $500 and six months.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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See how Gladstone's barking dogs rules stack up against other locations.
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