Kings County's animal code does not publish a specific anti-wildlife-feeding ordinance, but feeding wild animals can create a nuisance, and California law restricts handling of wildlife. Feeding or sheltering a stray dog or cat for 30+ days makes you its legal harborer under the County Code.
Kings County's Chapter 4 (Animals and Fowl) focuses on domestic animals, fowl and livestock, and does not appear to set out a dedicated ordinance banning the feeding of wild animals such as coyotes or other wildlife in the unincorporated area. However, several rules are relevant. First, the County Code provides that a person 'harbors' a dog or cat when they feed or shelter the animal for a period of 30 days or more — so anyone who regularly feeds a stray dog or community cat can become legally responsible for that animal's licensing, vaccination and spay/neuter obligations. Second, feeding wildlife can attract animals that create a nuisance, and the County's general nuisance and noisy-animal provisions (Sec. 4-79) may be applied where an animal disturbs the neighborhood. Third, California state law governs wildlife: it is generally illegal to keep, harass or feed certain wild animals in ways that habituate them, and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife discourages and may penalize intentional feeding of predators like coyotes and bears that creates a public-safety hazard. In a rural, agricultural county, attracting wildlife can also threaten livestock. Residents who encounter sick, injured or nuisance wildlife should contact Kings County Animal Services or CDFW rather than feeding or attempting to capture the animal.
Feeding or sheltering a stray dog or cat for 30 or more days makes you the legal harborer, responsible for licensing, vaccination and spay/neuter. Feeding wildlife that creates a nuisance or public-safety hazard can draw abatement under the County nuisance provisions and may violate state wildlife rules enforced by CDFW.
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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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 wildlife feeding rules stack up against other locations.
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