City Council votes to pull horse-drawn carriages off the streets of Chicago by year end.

Horse-drawn carriages in Chicago will be a thing of the past after City
Council voted 46-4 Friday to ban them by the end of the year.
For years, animal rights activists and some aldermen have tried to ban
horse-drawn carriages, citing traffic congestion downtown, multiple
citations from the city and animal welfare concerns. The carriages are often
stationed at Chicago Water Tower and other points around the city, and take
tourists on rides around the Loop, Millennium Park, and Buckingham Fountain.

The ordinance passed by the Council Friday, which was first approved by
the city’s Committee on License and Consumer Protection in March, will
effectively pull carriages off the road by Jan. 1. Operators will not be
able to renew their licenses, and the city will stop issuing new ones. The
city’s 10 existing carriage licenses, each of which has a $500 annual fee,
will expire at the end of the year.
Friday’s vote took place even though several groups made last-minute
attempts to delay it.
The Illinois State Veterinary Medical Association, the Horsemen’s Council of
Illinois and the Cook Country Farm Bureau each asked aldermen not to vote on
the issue and work instead to find a compromise.