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Rabies baits distributed countywide May 14-16; residents advised to keep pets indoors during drop

St. Lawrence Valley to receive oral rabies vaccines via aerial distribution

Posted 5/1/25

CANTON—St. Lawrence County Public Health Department was notified that the USDA Wildlife

Services will be hosting an additional oral rabies vaccine distribution next month.

The baits …

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Rabies baits distributed countywide May 14-16; residents advised to keep pets indoors during drop

St. Lawrence Valley to receive oral rabies vaccines via aerial distribution

Posted

CANTON—St. Lawrence County Public Health Department was notified that the USDA Wildlife

Services will be hosting an additional oral rabies vaccine distribution next month.

The baits will be distributed by air throughout St. Lawrence County from May 14 through May 16. Bait distribution in New York is part of a nationwide, cooperative effort by the USDA to prevent the westward spread of rabies in the eastern United States.

This will distribute approximately 165,600 oral rabies vaccine baits in the St. Lawrence Valley Region.

The bait, which resembles a fast-food ketchup package, includes a vaccine wrapped in a plastic packet that is dipped in fish oil and coated with fish-meal crumbles to attract target wildlife. The vaccine has been proven safe when given to more than 60 species of mammals and birds.

Residents who come in contact with wildlife vaccine packets can call the USDA at (315) 857 - 4311 with questions or concerns.

  • Do not disturb vaccine packets. Most packets are eaten within four days; almost all baits will be gone within a week.
  • If packets are not found and eaten, they will harmlessly dissolve, and the exposed vaccine will become inactivated.
  • If you must move a vaccine packet, wear gloves or use a plastic bag or paper towel to pick it up. Place any damaged baits in the trash; throw intact baits into a wooded area or other raccoon/wildlife habitat.
  • Residents should wash hands immediately if they come into direct contact with the vaccine or packets, then call the SLCPHD at (315) 386 - 2325.
  • Supervise children’s outdoor activities during bait distribution and for one week afterward.
  • Confine dogs and cats indoors and observe leash laws during the bait distribution interval and for one week afterward. This will increase the probability of wildlife vaccination and decrease the chance of pets finding the bait.
  • Baits and vaccines are not harmful to domestic animals. However, an animal may vomit if it consumes several baits.
  • Residents should not risk being bitten while trying to remove bait from your pet’s mouth.