Kings County is a major dairy, cattle and farm county, and livestock keeping in unincorporated areas is shaped by zoning. The County Code defines livestock broadly and makes it unlawful to let animals run at large; livestock running at large is separately regulated.
Livestock is central to Kings County's economy — dairies, cattle, sheep, goats, swine and poultry are common — and the County Code (Chapter 4, Animals and Fowl) addresses livestock alongside dogs, cats and fowl. The Code defines 'livestock' broadly to include horses, ponies, mules, burros, jacks or jennies, cows, bulls, calves, heifers, sheep, goats, swine, hogs, pigs and all other domestic or domesticated animals other than household pets. It is unlawful for any person owning or having possession of any animal to permit it to be at large without reasonable control, or to be pastured or kept on any street or other public place or on private property against the occupant's wishes (Sec. 4-67), and the Code separately addresses livestock running at large (Sec. 4-68). Whether — and how many — livestock animals you may keep depends primarily on the parcel's zoning: agricultural zones permit substantial livestock operations, while residential parcels allow far less or none. Kings County Animal Services advises that residential-area residents may keep 'some livestock,' but numbers and types are governed by the zoning ordinance and the Code's animal provisions. Owners must keep animals confined, provide humane care, and prevent stray livestock from entering roadways or neighboring land. Confirm specific allowances with Kings County Community Development and review Chapter 4 with Animal Services.
Allowing livestock to run at large (Sec. 4-67, 4-68), keeping livestock in numbers or zones not permitted, or failing to confine animals so they stray onto roads or neighbors' property, can result in impoundment, abatement and citations. Neglect of livestock can be prosecuted under California animal-cruelty law.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Kings County implements California's SB 1383 organic-waste law through Code Chapter 13. Most homes and businesses must use the three-container (blue/green/gr...
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Artificial turf is not banned in unincorporated Kings County, and there is no County synthetic-lawn ordinance. Small ground-level installs generally need no ...
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Kings County does not mandate native plants and does not prohibit removing or replacing them on private land. For new permitted development, low-water and cl...
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Rainwater harvesting is legal in California and not prohibited by Kings County. Simple rain barrels and small landscape-irrigation catchment need no County p...
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Day-to-day outdoor watering limits in unincorporated Kings County are driven mainly by California state rules and your local water provider, not a County lan...
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Unincorporated Kings County enforces a weed-abatement ordinance (Code Ch. 10, Art. II). It is unlawful to accumulate dry grass, weeds, brush, and other flamm...
See how Kings County's livestock rules stack up against other locations.
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