| # | Full Name | Comments |
|---|
| 351 | Jennifer Hayter | |
| 352 | Walter Lis | |
| 353 | Anonymous | |
| 354 | Angela Barber | |
| 355 | Trevor Dunseith | |
| 356 | Sandra Cina | |
| 357 | Lesley Provost | |
| 358 | adrian newbould | |
| 359 | Anonymous | |
| 360 | Melissa Gow | |
| 361 | Fereshteh Hashemi | |
| 362 | Christopher King | Beats having pigeons. |
| 363 | Denise Lambert | We should be allowed to raise a limited amout of chickens, they are cleaner and more productive than pigeons, and lots of people raise pigeons. |
| 364 | Emily-Kate Hunter | I eventually want chickens, so I support this petition |
| 365 | Anonymous | |
| 366 | Anonymous | |
| 367 | Katie Burns | I want the option of owning chickens for eggs when I become a home owner. |
| 368 | Anonymous | We should embrace options that allows for a more sustainable future. |
| 369 | victor miron | |
| 370 | Janet Smith | Strongly support his petition!!!! |
| 371 | Anonymous | |
| 372 | Anonymous | |
| 373 | Shelagh Rowan-Legg | |
| 374 | Greg Schreiber | I really hope this gains enough support and makes its way through city council! This is really important...and I didnt even realize some of the side benefits listed on this website. |
| 375 | Stephanie Fysh | |
| 376 | Latham Bromwich | |
| 377 | Anonymous | |
| 378 | Juliet Palmer | Let us eat eggs! Home-grown and laid by well-loved happy backyard chooks! |
| 379 | Ronit Little | I support the responsible keeping of chickens in Toronto backyards with a restriction on the number allowed. |
| 380 | Joshua B. Bloom | |
| 381 | Hamutal Dotan | |
| 382 | Chloe Philip | |
| 383 | Troy Forster | I had no idea it was legal in ANY city and I wish it were legal in ALL cities. |
| 384 | Emma Dines | |
| 385 | Anonymous | Responsible chicken keeping is good good for us, for the birds, for the food supply, and for the planet! |
| 386 | Anonymous | I love this idea. |
| 387 | Tim Grant | |
| 388 | Anonymous | |
| 389 | Gail Littlejohn | |
| 390 | Alejandro Ramos | Please Allow chickens to be permitted in backyards of Toronto homes...They will contribute to the society economically, in health-care, and most importantly in the education of new generations; they are sure to inspire a whole new generation of people towards a healthier and better relationship with nature and food. |
| 391 | michelle johnson | I would like to keep a chicken or two in my backyard. It would be great to go out, pick fresh eggs every morning and teach my son that we can be more responsible towards the environment and our food sources. |
| 392 | Anonymous | |
| 393 | Danylo Korbabicz | |
| 394 | Kwan Ho Tse | People should have the option to grow their own food.
Toronto should stop micro-managing it's citizens and let them have this option. |
| 395 | Emily Cook | I lived in Baton Rouge Louisiana, which is the capital of Louisiana. They allow exactly three cihickens in any one backyard |
| 396 | Anonymous | Yes please! |
| 397 | David Hughes | I believe that with proper care, raising a limited number of chickens for eggs in one's backyard - assuming there is acceptable space and conditions - should pose no problems and should be permitted. |
| 398 | Jean-Paul Davidson | Local food is really important, great cause. |
| 399 | Anonymous | chickens are good as long as there are strong rules regulating them. |
| 400 | Alison Chan | If Toronto wants to be more sustainable, chickens have to be part of the solution so that people can grow their own food.
I don't want to be a part of chicken abuse in factory farming, and the only way to guarantee that in a city is to raise my own chickens. |