Erie's local wildlife-feeding enforcement runs through Article 505 nuisance provisions of the Codified Ordinances and property-maintenance rules against accumulations attracting vermin. Statewide rules add specific bans: 58 Pa. Code Section 137.33 prohibits feeding bears and elk anywhere in Pennsylvania, and 58 Pa. Code Section 137.34 prohibits feeding wild deer within designated Disease Management Areas. As of 2025 Erie County is not within a DMA, so general deer feeding in Erie is not prohibited solely by 137.34 β bird-feeder rules still apply, and a DMA designation could change this.
Erie does not have a single comprehensive wildlife-feeding ordinance. Local enforcement runs through Article 505 of the Codified Ordinances at https://codelibrary.amlegal.com/codes/erie/, which addresses nuisance animals and conditions, read together with property-maintenance rules against accumulations of food that attract vermin. Two state-level frameworks layer on top. First, 58 Pa. Code Section 137.33 at https://www.pacodeandbulletin.gov/Display/pacode?file=/secure/pacode/data/058/chapter137/s137.33.html&d=reduce (issued by the Pennsylvania Game Commission under 34 Pa.C.S. Section 103) makes it unlawful to intentionally lay or place food, fruit, hay, grain, chemical, salt, or other minerals anywhere in Pennsylvania for the purpose of feeding bears or elk, or in any manner that may cause bears or elk to congregate or habituate an area. Second, 58 Pa. Code Section 137.34 prohibits feeding wild, free-ranging cervids (deer) within designated Disease Management Areas to limit Chronic Wasting Disease spread. CWD DMAs are mapped by the Pennsylvania Game Commission at https://www.pgc.pa.gov/Wildlife/Wildlife-RelatedDiseases/Pages/CWD.aspx and are amended after each detection β owners should verify their address against the current DMA map before placing feeders for deer. The Pennsylvania Game Commission Wildlife Conservation Officers in the Northwest Region (Franklin, 814-432-3187) enforce both 137.33 and 137.34. Songbird feeders are not prohibited but should be maintained to prevent spilled seed from attracting rats β under-maintained feeders that produce vermin can attract Article 505 nuisance citations.
Article 505 nuisance citations in Erie typically run $100 to $1,000 per occurrence with daily continuing-violation penalties and abatement orders. State bear/elk feeding violations under 58 Pa. Code Section 137.33 are enforced by PGC with fines starting at $200 plus removal of feed and a written notice prohibiting future feeding. If Erie County is added to a CWD DMA, deer-feeding violations under Section 137.34 become similar summary offenses with PGC fines. Feeding that draws bears into populated Erie neighborhoods can also trigger a written notice from the Commission prohibiting further activity at that location.
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