Community Corner

Rabid Raccoon Found In Neighboring East Haven

Local health officials are urging area residents to take safety precautions, as interactions between wild animals and people and their pets rise in the spring.

The East Shore District Health Department is reporting that a case of rabies has been found in a wild raccoon in East Haven. 

An East Haven Patch reader reported via the site's Facebook page that animal control shot a raccoon in the Foxon section of the town on Sunday.

As spring arrives so does the interactions between wild animals and people and their pets. Last year, the department also issued a rabies alert just before the official start of spring.

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"All residents should take safety measures," health department officials urged in a press release. 

Any Mammal Could Carry Disease

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In Connecticut, rabies is usually carried by skunks, raccoons, and bats — but any mammal could carry the disease. 

The department wants to remind residents to protect themselves and their pets from contact with these wild animals.

Precautions, Safety Tips

  • Don't feed, touch or adopt wild animals, stray dogs or cats. Enjoy wildlife from a distance. If you see an animal that is sick, injured or orphaned, call an animal control officer or a wildlife rehabilitator. Do not handle the animal yourself.
  • Vaccinate your pets. Be sure your pet dogs, cats and ferrets as well as horses and valuable livestock animals are up-to-date on their rabies vaccinations. Pets too young to be vaccinated should be kept indoors and allowed outside only under direct observation.
  • Keep family pets indoors at night. Don't leave them outside unattended or let them roam free.
  • Don't attract wild animals to your home or yard. Keep your property free of stored bird seed or other foods that may attract wild animals. Feed pets indoors. Tightly cap or put away garbage cans.
  • Get wild animals removed from your home. If nuisance wild animals are living in parts of your home, consult with a nuisance wildlife control expert about having them removed.
  • Teach children not to touch any animal they do not know and to tell an adult immediately if they are bitten by any animal.
  • Let wild animals wander away if they are on your property.  Bring children and pets indoors and alert neighbors who are outside.
  • Report all animal bites or contact with wild animals to your local health department. If possible, do not let any animal escape that has possibly exposed someone to rabies.

More Info, Animal Control Contacts

To learn more about rabies in both humans and animals, contact the Centers for Disease Control at 1-800- CDC-INFO (1-800-232-4636), or visit www.cdc.gov/rabies.  

For further information, contact the East Shore District Health Department, serving the towns of Branford, North Branford, and East Haven at (203)-481-4233 or by visiting our website at www.ESDHD.org.

Animal Control Officer Contact phone numbers:

  • Branford: (203) 315-4125
  • East Haven: (203) 468-3249
  • North Branford: (203) 315-4125


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