Connecticut General Statutes
Chapter 433 - Diseases of Domestic Animals
Section 22-303. - Brucellosis vaccination.

(a) Each owner of bovine animals may have all of his female calves vaccinated for the control of brucellosis at ages the commissioner shall establish by regulation pursuant to the uniform methods and rules for brucellosis eradication of the United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. Calves may be vaccinated at the owner's expense by an approved licensed veterinarian, an approved federal or state full-time employed veterinarian assigned directly and authorized by the Commissioner of Agriculture or by a livestock inspector employed and authorized by the commissioner.

(b) The state shall not be liable for any damages incurred or alleged to have been incurred by the use of any vaccine.
(c) No person, firm or corporation, and no agent or employee of any corporation, shall have in his possession any brucellosis vaccine or any product containing any Brucella organisms unless written permission has been obtained from the commissioner.
(d) No female bovine animal over the maximum vaccination age, as established by the commissioner in accordance with the uniform methods and rules for brucellosis eradication of the United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, shall be vaccinated with Brucella Abortus vaccine. Brucellosis vaccine or any product containing any Brucella organisms shall not be shipped into the state except upon written permission of the commissioner.
(1949 Rev., S. 3329; 1949, 1953, S. 1354c; 1955, S. 1790d; 1957, P.A. 36, S. 4; March, 1958, P.A. 2, S. 1; 1959, P.A. 477, S. 6; 637, S. 2; 1961, P.A. 67; 1963, P.A. 391, S. 3; February, 1965, P.A. 35, S. 1; 1969, P.A. 109; 1971, P.A. 872, S. 446, 448; P.A. 79-203, S. 1; P.A. 80-86, S. 1; P.A. 81-180, S. 1; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 91-10, S. 12, 20; P.A. 95-14, S. 1; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 146(e); P.A. 04-189, S. 1.)
History: 1959 acts replaced commissioner of agriculture with commissioner of agriculture, conservation and natural resources and required heifers to be vaccinated between ages of 4 and 8 months rather than between 6 and 8 months and changed age at which nonvaccinated heifers quarantined from 8 to 9 months; 1961 act replaced commissioner of agriculture, conservation and natural resources with commissioner of agriculture and natural resources; 1963 act substituted “female bovine animal over two hundred seventy days old” for “mature cattle” in Subsec. (d); 1965 act required vaccination of heifers “between the ages of four through eight months”, substituting “through” for “and”, deleted reference to heifers “born after April 3, 1957,” added proviso allowing sale of unvaccinated or vaccinated when overage female bovines on intrastate basis, prohibited payment of indemnity on unvaccinated or overage vaccinated animal and in Subsec. (d) referred to animals over 8 months old rather than over 270 days old; 1969 act reduced age for vaccination of heifers from 4 through 8 months to 3 through 7 months and reduced other age references by one month accordingly; 1971 act replaced commissioner of agriculture and natural resources with commissioner of agriculture; P.A. 79-203 permitted livestock inspectors to vaccinate calves; P.A. 80-86 reduced vaccination age to 2 through 6 months and reduced other age references accordingly; P.A. 81-180 changed the age at which livestock required to be vaccinated from specified age to one determined by the commissioner pursuant to federal law and replaced reference to “standard tube agglutination test” with reference to any required test; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 91-10 amended Subsec. (a) to provide that calves shall be vaccinated pursuant to this section at the owner's, rather than the state's expense; P.A. 95-14 amended Subsec. (a) to make vaccination of cattle by owner optional and to delete provisions re quarantine of unvaccinated heifers; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6 replaced Commissioner of Agriculture with Commissioner of Agriculture and Consumer Protection, effective July 1, 2004; P.A. 04-189 repealed Sec. 146 of June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, thereby reversing the merger of the Departments of Agriculture and Consumer Protection, effective June 1, 2004.

Structure Connecticut General Statutes

Connecticut General Statutes

Title 22 - Agriculture. Domestic Animals

Chapter 433 - Diseases of Domestic Animals

Section 22-278. - Orders and regulations for control of livestock diseases.

Section 22-279. - Quarantine of animals. Penalties.

Section 22-279a. - Quarantine of animals being tested for disease or biological or chemical residue.

Section 22-280. - Control of communicable diseases. Fees.

Section 22-280a. - Transporting and possession of vaccines and serums for dogs and cats.

Section 22-281 to 22-283. - Glanders or farcy. Inspection of animals; quarantine. Disposal of infected animal.

Section 22-284. - Anthrax or charbon.

Section 22-284a. - Vaccination of equine animals against encephalomyelitis.

Section 22-285. - Emergency appropriations for suppression of diseases.

Section 22-286. - Cooperation with United States government.

Section 22-287. - Tuberculin tests; disposition of reactors; addition to herds; surveillance tests.

Section 22-288. - Compensation for condemned cattle.

Section 22-288a. - Condemnation of herd. Compensation. Appeals.

Section 22-289. - Manufacture and sale of tuberculin.

Section 22-290. - Tuberculin test.

Section 22-291. - Tuberculosis-free accredited herd defined.

Section 22-292. - Additions to an officially tested herd.

Section 22-293. - Additions or sales to be reported.

Section 22-294. - Care of herds.

Section 22-295. - Owners to keep records.

Section 22-296. - Quarantine of infected herd. Permit for removal of animals.

Section 22-297. - Appraisal on post mortem examination.

Section 22-298. - Test for brucellosis. Branding. Quarantine.

Section 22-299. - Inclusion of calfhood vaccinated animals in herd test. Modified certified areas. Removal of animals under quarantine.

Section 22-299a. - Brucellosis class free areas. Quarantine.

Section 22-300. - Compulsory testing.

Section 22-301. - Permit for sale of milk contingent on herd complying with statutes.

Section 22-302. - Informative tests to be at state expense.

Section 22-303. - Brucellosis vaccination.

Section 22-304. - Control of disease in imported cattle. Disposal of reactors.

Section 22-305. - No distinction between dairy and beef cattle.

Section 22-306. - Enforcement. Regulations.

Section 22-307. - Indemnities.

Section 22-308. - Permit for importation of cattle and goats.

Section 22-309. - Refusal of permit.

Section 22-310. - Importation of dairy and breeding cattle and goats.

Section 22-311. - Report of arrival.

Section 22-312. - Requirements concerning dairy cattle and goats.

Section 22-313. - Cattle for slaughter.

Section 22-314. - Disinfection of carriers.

Section 22-315. - Illegal importations. Reward for information.

Section 22-316. - Disposal of diseased cattle and goats.

Section 22-317. - Cattle in transit.

Section 22-318. - Importation of feeder cattle.

Section 22-318a. - Dispersal sale of herd.

Section 22-318b. - Issuance of interstate health charts for cattle at time of sale.

Section 22-319. - Registration of growers of swine. Control of disease.

Section 22-319a. - Hog cholera serum or vaccine prohibited. Penalty.

Section 22-319b. - Growers of swine. Registration. Control of disease. Regulations. Investigation. Importation.

Section 22-320. - Control of vesicular exanthema in swine.

Section 22-320a. - Definitions.

Section 22-320b. - Garbage to be heated to boiling point.

Section 22-320c. - Registration.

Section 22-320d. - Suspension, revocation or withholding of registration.

Section 22-320e. - Inspections concerning cooking of garbage.

Section 22-320f. - Regulations.

Section 22-320g. - Feeding of household garbage to swine excepted.

Section 22-320h. - Penalty.

Section 22-321. - Penalty.