Sacramento County bans no dog breed. Under California Food & Agricultural Code 31683, no local dangerous-dog program may be breed-specific โ except a mandatory spay/neuter program authorized by Health & Safety Code 122331. Acting on that exception, the County requires unaltered pit-bull-type dogs to be sterilized. General dog rules (licensing, leash, dangerous-dog declarations) apply to all breeds equally.
California law preempts most breed-specific regulation. Food & Agricultural Code section 31683 provides that a city or county may adopt its own potentially-dangerous/vicious-dog program but that, except as provided in Health & Safety Code section 122331, no program regulating any dog may be specific as to breed. Section 122331 is the single exception: it authorizes local mandatory spay/neuter and breeding programs that may be breed-specific. Relying on this exception, Sacramento County adopted a requirement that pit-bull-type dogs in the unincorporated county be spayed or neutered (an ordinance widely reported when the Board of Supervisors enacted it). Beyond that sterilization rule, the County does not prohibit owning any breed, and its dangerous-dog and leash provisions apply to all dogs regardless of breed. Owners of intact pit-bull-type dogs should confirm current requirements with Animal Care and Regulation, since exemptions (for example, veterinarian-certified health reasons or qualifying registered/working dogs) and intact-license options may apply much as they do under the County's general mandatory-sterilization framework.
Failing to sterilize a pit-bull-type dog as required by the County's breed-specific spay/neuter ordinance can result in code citations and penalties enforced by Animal Care and Regulation. General dangerous-dog determinations against any breed proceed under the County's dangerous-animal rules and California Food & Agricultural Code Chapter 9.
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