Urban chicken documentary to be shown Saturday
by Jeremy Stewart, staff writer
Jan 22, 2013 | 5352 views | 21 21 comments | 15 15 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Holly McHaggee holds a Jersey Giant chicken named Blitzen while her daughter, Iris, feeds another Jersey Giant named Cupid. (Jeremy Stewart / RN-T.com)
Holly McHaggee holds a Jersey Giant chicken named Blitzen while her daughter, Iris, feeds another Jersey Giant named Cupid. (Jeremy Stewart / RN-T.com)
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When Holly McHaggee first heard of the documentary “Mad City Chickens,” she didn’t realize it would become a bit of commentary on the current state of livestock in Rome.

McHaggee and her husband, Chris, owners of the Claremont House Bed and Breakfast on Second Avenue, are sponsoring a Saturday screening of the film in the upstairs event space of the Rome Area History Museum, 305 Broad St.

Tickets for the 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. showings are $7 per person or $5 for senior citizens and students, and a 4 p.m. screening is $5 per person.

The money raised will go toward the rental of the event space and the cost of exhibiting the movie. Any remaining proceeds will go toward promoting backyard chickens, according to Holly McHaggee.

Released in 2009, the film is an independent documentary that focuses on the issue of residents keeping chickens in their backyards in Madison, Wis., including the history and the misconceptions of raising urban poultry.

McHaggee said the film is relevant locally, with the Rome City Commission currently wrestling with the issue of allowing chickens inside the city limits.

“We hope that this film will illustrate some of the issues our city has been discussing,” the couple said in a joint press release. “Furthermore, we hope that this film brings people together for a fun evening of entertainment and camaraderie.”

A supporter of small families owning livestock, McHaggee said she usually gets eggs from Morning Glory Farm in Cedartown and is concerned with the state of some of the breeds of chicken that need space to thrive.

“That’s part of the reason I feel so strongly about this,” she said. “There are some of the American Heritage breeds that are in trouble of becoming extinct.”

“Mad City Chickens” is a serious but whimsical look at people who keep urban chickens in their backyard.

The documentary was directed by Tashai Lovington and Robert Lughai.

“I would really love to see the people who are against this to come and see the movie,” McHaggee said. “It puts a face with those that keep chickens and why they do it.”

She said they have invited members of the Rome City Commission and the Rome-Floyd County Planning Commission to the screenings and hope it helps draws attention to the debate.

Tickets are available at the door or in advance. For more information, call the Claremont House at 706-291-0900.
Comments
(21)
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oldnewswoman
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January 23, 2013
HoumaBoy: You betcha'. Probably meeting for lunch at CCC right now.

redneckme
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January 23, 2013
Rnt did a poll and the chicken won by a landslide. If you dont allow chickens ,cats or dogs should not be allowed either for they are farm animals to. At least most farms have them. How about all the wild birds? I recon ban them too! Sorry i agree with eribeck and old news woman they hit it right on the head.
eribeck79
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January 23, 2013
Like all the geese at Garden Lakes... didn't the city put them there intentionally? I'm hearing the dogs a few streets over barking right now... it doesn't bother me, but surely neighbors find the noise more bothersome than four relatively quiet hens?

Thanks for the support.
wish2010
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January 23, 2013
Mor chikin available, mor chikin to eat. Eat mor chikin!!!!!!!!!!

MOOOOOOOOOOOOO
davidwe
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January 23, 2013
Jeez. This is insanity. POULTRY belongs on a farm or cooked up at home or a restaurant period. How long are we gonna have to read this bull?
MmmHmm
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January 23, 2013
You never "have to read this bull". You are reading and commenting on here by choice. You do know that, right? Also, oldnewswoman is correct in her post about Rome and it's people. I wonder how many of you on here blasting these families that have a few chickens even own your homes. More than likely, considering the job and housing market in Rome, I'm guessing that most of you are renters. If this is the case, you may want to check yourself when telling property owners that they need to move. If it were that easy, Rome would be 35% deserted and West Rome could ooze its way across the whole town.
Prossarian
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January 23, 2013
I'd like to see this issue as a referendum during the next city election. Make it a straight yes or no vote. I bet it would be a landslide no chickens vote. Then we won't have to listen to this crap anymore from ericbeck79.
eribeck79
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January 23, 2013
You are free to choose not to read any of it. Way to make people feel welcome in Rome. Do you know I have actually had an opposed neighbor go out of his way to drive past my house and lay on the horn as he passed? Just because I want to see a law changed with reasonable restrictions, my family gets harassed and gets ugly anonymous comments online. As silly as I might think some of your beliefs are, I would never go online and call your thoughts "crap."

You are also free to contact the newspaper and tell them you are sick of them covering it. I haven't asked them to write stories. I'm not showing the chicken documentary. Obviously there are other people who don't think it is "crap."
Casket
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January 22, 2013
I'm honestly sick of hearing about this chicken $#!
useurhead
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January 22, 2013
If you want to live like a farmer and raise chickens, then you should move to the country. City limits is no place for chickens. Before you reply stating come see your chickens in your backyard, I will tell you up front, I've raised chickens before. They are dirty and carry many diseases. If you want to have chickens, MOVE TO THE COUNTRY!
eribeck79
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January 22, 2013
Four hens is not the same as a farm. Birds only carry five diseases that are transmittable to humans, whereas dogs carry 21 and cats carry 22 that can be transmitted to humans. Maybe I should move to Dunwoody, GA or the city of Atlanta rather than the country, where a few backyard hens are totally fine and part of life. This certainly isn't a "country" issue if you look at nationwide trends.

I can demonstrate that my four hens are less of a nuisance than barking dogs and are not even noticeable by my neighbors.

By the way, I grew up in Sandy Springs, GA - suburb of Atlanta - and Rome *is* the country to me, ha ha! :)
useurhead
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January 22, 2013
Maybe they should raise chickens in their living room where the dogs and cats live, with the smells and salmonella..that way the neighbors don't have to deal with them!
oldnewswoman
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January 22, 2013
eribeck79 -- I very much agree with you. Since you are not a "true" Roman you cannot begin to understand how very special, sensitive & empirical true Romans are. Somehow the fowl have offended the delicate sensibilities of some of Rome's hierarchy. All things happening within the fragile confines of this snobby but underhanded, dirty little backwater swamp are decided by a handful of quiet citizens. This group sends word down to the hired help (commissioners, sheriff, law enforcement, etc.) as to what is to be done in any slightly contentious situation. Obviously, the "group" is also split on this & that is why a decision has not come down from on high. My vote is with the chickens.
eribeck79
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January 22, 2013
Useurhead, there are no smells experienced by neighbors with four hens. Just as my living room is my own property, so is my backyard. My fenced in backyard. If you use your head, and your nose, you will figure out that four chickens don't make a stink to the neighbors. One dog makes as much waste as ten hens, and dog poop is a far worse smell since they eat meat. Maybe my neighbors should take their dogs inside too?
LogicalThinker
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January 22, 2013
This whole thing became an issue because a family knowingly broke an ordiance and instead of enforing the fine or punishment, we are allowing this issue to drag out. Put it to rest!!

People claim that chickens do not affect the value of a home. I disagree with this statement. Go out and try to sell 2 homes of the same value in Maplewood, Old East Rome or between the rivers. One house that has neighbors with backyard chickens and one without backyard chickens and let us know how the sales go.

If you want chickens, live in the COUNTY!
eribeck79
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January 22, 2013
The county actually has laws that say chickens must be kept 200 feet from all property lines. It would hardly be affordable for people to just move to a lot of this size in the county just to have a few hens. The laws in the city have no "punishment" or fine associated with chicken-keeping - the laws essentially say that if a neighbor reports you, you get a letter saying to remove your fowl (it actually says to remove your "foul" from your property) within a certain time frame or else they will put liens on your property. I would like to see the laws on dogs running at large enforced, but animal control won't help unless the dog happens to still be on your property by the time they get there hours later.

If I had two homes in Maplewood I would attempt to take your challenge; however, I do not have the means to do this. Please research towns with some of the highest property values nationwide and see that they allow chickens. As noted to another commentor, the city of Atlanta and Dunwoody, GA allow backyard hens. Dunwoody is a very affluent community near Atlanta. They don't seem to be having propblems maintaining property values. If you cannot see, hear, or smell the chickens, then how do they reduce the property values of the neighborhood? If my next door neighbor keeps three large, sometimes loud dogs in his backyard, does that reduce my property values?
LogicalThinker
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January 22, 2013
Dogs and cats are considered pets. You can take them out for a run, play with them and are considered normal to have. Chickens are farm animals and there is a stigma attached to them of being low class or trashy if located in somebodies yard instead of a farm setting. You cannot take them on a walk though the neighborhood, throw a stick for them to go get or feel comfortable letting them sleep in the same room as your child, thus, making then not a pet. My point is, people consider dogs and cats family pets and consider chicken an animal that should be located on a farm, not a residential neighborhood.

Your point of looking at Dunwoody for property values not being affected means little to me. You cannot look at a city as a whole and say that the property values are not affected by having backyard chickens because the city has so many houses that are very expensive compared to houses that are lower end (real estate price wise).So it would take a good majority of lower end houses to even put a dent in the city wide property value. Do you think that people that have the money to afford/live in expensive houses raise back yard chickens? I am pretty sure that 99.9999% of those people do not. In order to get an accurate account of effect chickens have on property value is to do it on a house to house basis instead of a city as a whole basis. You would have to have an appraiser come in (if you knew that in a few weeks you were having a new neighbor come in that has backyard chickens) appraise your home and then a few weeks later once the back yard chickens moved in and see if the numbers are the same. I doubt they would be the same.

I will ask this in a form of a question instead of a statement, as I did in my last post. Why did you and your family deem it necessary to not abide by the ordiance that was already in place not allowing backyard chickens? Feel like you are above the law and the law doesnt apply to you? didnt feel like asking for a special use permit? Since you knew that chickens arent allowed within the city limits, why not live in the county?
eribeck79
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January 22, 2013
I actually have had my home appraised with the hens in my backyard. It had *gained* value, in a declining housing market. The appraiser did go in my backyard and saw the hens. Clearly they did not cause my property to be devalued. My property was worth more after the hens were on it.

You can look at nationwide trends and you will find that it actually is upper-class families that are jumping on the urban poultry thing. This is not some trash movement. Trashy people will just keep as many chickens as they want and let them roam the streets. People like us want to keep hens responsibly.

I will say it again: the county requires chickens to be 200 feet from any property line. This is because they are assuming only agricultural uses. The urban chicken movement is not something that was anticipated under those laws. Moving to the county would not help because I doubt I could afford a lot with 200 feet from property lines. I also could not have anticipated the urban chicken movement when i moved here over ten yrs ago.

We did inquire with the city before buying hens. My husband asked the planning department what the rules were for chickens, and they told him, basically, that as long as your neighbors don't mind, you should be okay although technically they are not allowed. I also believe that opposing something based merely on "But it's the law!" is not the highest level of moral reasoning. Neighbors who are opposed based on the grounds of, "But they are breaking the law!" are only opposed on those grounds. They are not opposed because of any harm that has come to the neighborhood. They also see this as "the law" as opposed to a codes violation. This is like keeping junky cars on bricks in the front yard or like building a 7 foot fence without requesting a permit, not like theft or assault. When somebody goes against a code that does not cause any ill to come to anybody, then why report them? To cause tension in the neighborhood? To rat them out so you can be "right?" Why not come to a neighbor and voice your concerns instead? I think it is because my neighbors don't have concerns beyond "But it's the law!" They haven't seen any other concerns come to fruition over the years these hens have lived in our yard. They only wanted to oppose them because they heard that they were here, and, by golly, that's not allowed.
eribeck79
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January 23, 2013
Also, just ten years ago, hens were perfectly acceptable in the city limits. The laws can and do change and evolve. Some things are always wrong regardless of laws: it is always wrong for a person to kill another innocent person; It is wrong because it is wrong, not because there is a law about it. Keeping hens on one's property is not objectively right or wrong.
TevoD
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January 22, 2013
Any remaining proceeds will go toward promoting backyard chickens...

“I would really love to see the people who are against this to come and see the movie”.

Well, if that is the case, then don't charge them for it. You are basically asking people who are against the idea to finance your cause.
eribeck79
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January 22, 2013
I believe all the commissioners are invited to attend free of charge. I can understand that this may cost some money to put on, which is why admission is being charged.

I would welcome anyone who wants to see what real-live backyard chickens in a city neighborhood are like to come see mine, free of charge. I want people to be able to see and know what it is they are supporting or are opposing.
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