Dallas County coordinates coyote conflict response with Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, which classifies coyotes as nongame predators. Dallas County HHS handles vector and rabies issues; cities run hazing education programs to reduce attractants and bold-coyote behavior.
Under Texas Parks and Wildlife Code, coyotes are classified as nongame predators and may be hunted year-round on private land with a hunting license, subject to local discharge ordinances. Inside Dallas County cities, firearms discharge is banned, so management focuses on hazing, attractant removal, and trapping by licensed wildlife controllers. Dallas County Health and Human Services tracks rabies surveillance and coordinates with TPWD and US Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services on aggressive or sick animals. Dallas Animal Services, Plano, Frisco, and Richardson all publish hazing guidance. Feeding wildlife, including coyotes, is prohibited under most municipal codes; nuisance feeding cases drive the majority of complaint volume.
Discharging firearms in cities violates municipal code with fines up to two thousand dollars. Feeding wildlife typically draws Class C misdemeanor citations near five hundred dollars; trapping without a TPWD nuisance-control license is a state offense.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Garland, TX
Amplified sound in Garland is regulated under Chapter 32; sound 'plainly audible' more than 50 feet from the source after 10 PM is a violation.
Garland, TX
Garland restricts construction noise to daytime hours, with most loud work prohibited overnight and limited on Sundays under Chapter 32 of the Code of Ordina...
Garland, TX
Garland permits leaf blower use under its general noise ordinance, restricting operation to daytime hours with no specific gas-powered ban.
Garland, TX
Garland regulates noise from industrial uses along the I-30 and IH-635 corridors through zoning performance standards and the Code of Ordinances Chapter 32 n...
Garland, TX
Garland generally allows overnight on-street parking in residential areas, but restricts vehicles parked continuously in the same spot for more than 48-72 ho...
Garland, TX
Garland follows Texas Transportation Code Chapter 683, defining vehicles as junked or abandoned if inoperable, unregistered, wrecked, or left on public prope...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Dallas County.
See how Garland's coyote management rules stack up against other locations.
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