(a) The standards
for animal rabies vaccination are the following:
(1) the United States Department of Health
and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Compendium of Animal Rabies Prevention and Control, 2011,
prepared by the National Association of State Public Health Veterinarians, Inc.
as amended from time to time is adopted by reference to govern the use of
animal rabies vaccines;
(2) the
rabies vaccination certificate developed by the National Association of State
Public Health Veterinarians, Inc. is adopted as the only valid rabies
vaccination certificate; these certificates are available from the division;
computer generated certificates may be used if they contain all of the
information required in the certificate developed by the National Association
of State Public Health Veterinarians, Inc. and the certificate is signed by a
licensed veterinarian or lay vaccinator approved by the department;
(3) rabies vaccination of dogs, cats, and
ferrets is required in accordance with schedules in the
Compendium of
Animal Rabies Prevention and Control, 2011, as adopted by reference in
(1) of this subsection; evidence of such a vaccination is to be recorded on the
rabies vaccination certificate specified in (2) of this subsection; at the time
of vaccination, the owner or keeper of a vaccinated dog must be given a metal
tag bearing a number and the year of the vaccination as it is recorded on the
rabies vaccination certificate; the owner or keeper of a dog must affix the tag
to a collar or harness that must be worn by the dog for which the certificate
is issued, except that the dog need not wear the tag while harnessed in a dog
team or while participating in organized training or competition;
(4) a rabies vaccination is valid only when
performed by or under the direct supervision of a licensed veterinarian or by a
lay vaccinator approved by the department as qualified to administer the
vaccine and for whom the department determines, in its discretion, that
approval is in the best interests of the state in carrying out the purposes of
this section and
7
AAC 27.030; the availability of a licensed
veterinarian does not of itself preclude this approval;
(5) sale of rabies vaccine to any person or
entity other than a veterinarian licensed in this state, veterinary biologic
supply firm, or public agency is prohibited;
(6) any dog, cat, or ferret not vaccinated in
compliance with this subsection may be confiscated and either vaccinated or
euthanized; owners of confiscated animals are subject to payment of costs of
confiscation, boarding, and vaccination, as well as any other penalties
established by a municipality under AS 29.35.
(b) An order for quarantine for the purpose
of preventing the spread of rabies will contain a warning to the owners of
animals within the quarantined area to confine on the owner's premises or tie
down all animals so as to prevent biting; after such an order is issued, any
animal found running at large in the quarantined area or known to have been
removed from or to have escaped from the area may be destroyed by a peace
officer or by a person designated by the department.
(c) The standards for impounding or
euthanizing animals that may be rabid are the following:
(1) a dog, cat, or ferret vaccinated or
rabies in accordance with (a)(3) of this section that bites an individual must
be placed under observation for 10 days, except that a clinically ill or stray
animal that does so may be euthanized immediately and submitted to the
department or to a laboratory designated by it for rabies testing;
(2) a dog, cat, or ferret not vaccinated for
rabies in accordance with (a)(3) of this section that bites an individual may
be euthanized immediately and submitted to the department or to a laboratory
designated by it for rabies testing;
(3) a bat or a free-ranging carnivorous wild
animal that bites an individual must be euthanized immediately and submitted to
the department or to a laboratory designated by the department for rabies
testing;
(4) an unvaccinated dog,
cat, or ferret bitten by a known or suspected rabid animal may be euthanized
immediately; if the bitten animal has a current rabies vaccination, as defined
in the
Compendium of Animal Rabies Prevention and Control,
2011, adopted by reference in (a)(1) of this section, the animal must be
immediately revaccinated and confined a minimum of 45 days;
(5) a prior rabies vaccination of an animal
does not preclude the necessity for euthanasia and testing if the vaccine was
not administered in accordance with its label specifications or the vaccine is
not licensed for that species.
The Compendium of Animal Rabies Prevention and Control,
2011, is available from the section of epidemiology, division of public health,
Department of Health and Social Services, State of Alaska, 3601 C Street, Suite
540, Anchorage, Alaska 99503