The Deltona commission approved first reading of an updated Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) ordinance (Ordinance 05-2026) to move the city program beyond a volunteer pilot toward a city-funded model and asked staff to refine enforcement of abandonment penalties.
Danny from code compliance summarized that the city currently manages TNR scheduling with volunteer trapping assistance and performs roughly 10–15 surgeries per week; staff said an organization (Concerned Citizens for Animal Welfare) has indicated interest in operating the program. Commissioners discussed procurement history (no bids returned), budgetary estimates (staff cited a $48,000 budget line but noted the budget could be adjusted if an outside organization takes over), and monitoring and reporting requirements.
Commissioner Nabicht and others asked how the program will be measured and urged concrete metrics; the Concerned Citizens representative said the group has reporting systems and a long track record in local jurisdictions and recommended memorializing policies and procedures to ensure continuity. Commissioners unanimously asked staff and the attorney to draft proposed enhancements to the city’s abandonment enforcement between first and second readings; the ordinance itself was advanced on first reading with a motion to proceed.
Next steps: staff will return with an agreement and reporting standards and a draft strengthening abandonment penalties for commission consideration before second reading.