Feeding wildlife is illegal in unincorporated San Bernardino County. County Code 32.1301 prohibits leaving food outside for nondomesticated mammalian predators - coyotes, raccoons, foxes, opossums, bears, mountain lions, and bobcats - with narrow exceptions for permitted owners and animals awaiting pickup by animal control.
County Code Section 32.1301 (Food Left Outside for Certain Mammalian Predators) makes it unlawful to feed, or in any manner provide food for, one or more nondomesticated mammalian predators. The code defines that category to include coyotes, raccoons, foxes, opossums, bears, mountain lions, and bobcats. San Bernardino County Animal Care reinforces this on its wildlife page with the warning 'Never feed wildlife - it is against the law,' and advises residents not to leave accessible food sources outside, including garbage bags and pet-food bowls, because human and pet food harm wildlife and habituate predators such as coyotes that prey on small dogs and cats. The ordinance contains narrow exceptions: it does not apply where the person providing food is the lawful owner of the predator under a valid certificate or permit from the California Department of Fish and Game, or where a person provides food for a trapped, injured, or unweaned predator between the time animal control is notified and the time the animal is picked up. Intentional or even inadvertent feeding (such as leaving pet food out) that attracts these predators can therefore be a violation.
Leaving food out for, or feeding, the listed predators violates County Code 32.1301 and is enforced by Animal Care, which can issue citations and order abatement of the attractant. Repeat violations escalate under the county's standard citation schedule.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
San Bernardino County, CA
Motor-vehicle noise on roads in unincorporated San Bernardino County is governed mainly by the California Vehicle Code, which the state controls: every vehic...
San Bernardino County, CA
Curb colors in unincorporated San Bernardino County follow California Vehicle Code Section 21458, which defines red (no stopping), yellow (freight/passenger ...
San Bernardino County, CA
San Bernardino County Development Code Section 83.11.090 requires off-street loading spaces for institutional, commercial, industrial and special uses. Each ...
San Bernardino County, CA
Unincorporated San Bernardino County does not have a single dedicated 'oversized vehicle' street ordinance. Large and heavy vehicles are instead controlled b...
San Bernardino County, CA
The County Development Code dictates both permitted and prohibited fence materials in the unincorporated area. Required separation and right-of-way walls mus...
San Bernardino County, CA
Backyard composting is allowed and encouraged in unincorporated San Bernardino County. Under California's SB 1383, residents in the mandatory-collection area...
See how San Bernardino County's wildlife feeding rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.