Santa Cruz County Code Title 6 contains no general ordinance prohibiting the feeding of wildlife such as deer in the unincorporated county. The only feeding-with-conditions rule is for feral cat colonies (Code 6.10.040). California law separately makes it unlawful to feed big-game mammals like deer (Cal. Code of Regs. Title 14, 251.3).
Based on a review of Santa Cruz County Code Title 6 (Animals), the County does not have a general ordinance that prohibits or regulates feeding wildlife - there is no countywide 'do not feed the deer' or 'do not feed wild animals' provision in the animal-control title. The one feeding rule that exists in Title 6 is narrow: Code 6.10.040 conditions the feeding of feral cat colonies on registration and a sterilization/vaccination program, which addresses community cats rather than wild animals. Where local rules are silent, state law controls. Under California Code of Regulations, Title 14, section 251.3, it is unlawful to knowingly feed big-game mammals (which include deer), and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife discourages feeding wildlife generally because it habituates animals, spreads disease, and increases conflicts. Feeding that attracts predators or creates a public nuisance can also draw enforcement under nuisance principles. So while a resident of the unincorporated county will not find a specific County wildlife-feeding ordinance, intentionally feeding deer and other big game is already prohibited by state regulation, and feeding practices that create nuisances or attract problem wildlife should be avoided. For mountain lion, bear, or other wildlife conflicts, residents are typically directed to CDFW rather than County Animal Services.
There is no County wildlife-feeding ordinance to cite. Knowingly feeding deer or other big-game mammals violates state regulation (Cal. Code Regs. tit. 14, 251.3) and is enforced by CDFW. Feeding that creates a nuisance or attracts dangerous wildlife may be addressed under nuisance authority.
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