Santa Barbara County does not impose breed-specific bans. County Code Chapter 7, Article VIII (Vicious and Restricted Dogs), Sections 7-53 through 7-62, regulates dogs by behavior — not breed — defining "restricted" and "vicious" dogs based on aggression and bite history, consistent with California Food & Agricultural Code Section 31683.
Chapter 7, Article VIII of the Santa Barbara County Code governs dangerous dogs in unincorporated areas. Section 7-54 defines a "restricted dog" as one that, when unprovoked, engages in behavior requiring defensive action to prevent injury, bites a person off the owner's property, or injures a domestic animal or livestock off the owner's property. A "vicious dog" is one trained for illegal fighting, that inflicts severe injury on or kills a person, that kills or severely injures a contained or leashed animal, or that repeats restricted-dog behavior. These definitions are entirely breed-neutral — the ordinance contains no list of prohibited breeds. This approach tracks California Food & Agricultural Code Section 31683, which authorizes counties to regulate potentially dangerous and vicious dogs but bars breed-specific provisions that declare a dog dangerous solely by breed. After an administrative hearing under Section 7-57, a hearing officer may order conditions for a restricted dog under Section 7-60 — including fencing or enclosure requirements, muzzling in public, spay/neuter, microchipping, liability insurance, and training. A vicious dog may be euthanized or, under conditions, removed to a sanctuary, and the owner may be barred from owning dogs for up to three years (Section 7-59).
Failure to comply with hearing-imposed conditions on a restricted or vicious dog is a misdemeanor under Section 7-61, punishable by a fine up to $1,000, up to six months in county jail, or both, and may trigger seizure of the dog. Owning a dog at large that bites is a misdemeanor under Section 7-55.
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