Are chickens fit only for a farm, or are they egg-laying pets that belong in suburban back yards?
That question has landed on city council agendas across Minnesota, driven by chicken enthusiasts who name their birds and create Facebook pages to fight city chicken bans.
In White Bear Lake and Bloomington, residents have asked for looser rules that would allow for backyard hens. There have been so many similar requests that the League of Minnesota Cities has been researching chicken ordinances around the state.
The discussion can get heated, especially between people who grew up on farms and those who see backyard chickens as charming pets and bearers of organic eggs.
"It's a hot topic," said Rachel Carlson, research staff attorney for the League of Minnesota Cities. "The classic debate seems to be between one side that says [chickens are] noisy and they don't want to smell chicken poop. The other side says dogs are much more noisy, and they have bigger poop."
Most Minnesota cities still prohibit chickens within their borders, including Eden Prairie and Golden Valley, each of which briefly discussed changes but stuck to their chicken bans.
White Bear Lake is debating an ordinance that would allow residents to keep up to six hens.
And in Bloomington, the City Council next month will consider letting residents keep up to four hens in coops that are shielded from neighbors and at least 30 feet from the property line. Existing rules make it impossible for most homeowners in the city to have chickens.