Breed Restrictions: Anza vs Palm Springs
How do breed restrictions rules compare between Anza, CA and Palm Springs, CA?
Anza has fewer restrictions than Palm Springs.
Anza, CA
Riverside County
Unincorporated Riverside County does not impose breed-specific legislation. California Food & Agricultural Code Β§31683 bars any local law that declares a dog dangerous based solely on breed. Riverside County Ordinance 630 regulates potentially dangerous and vicious dogs by behavior, not breed. Mandatory spay/neuter can apply only to individual dogs declared dangerous.
View full Anza rules βPalm Springs, CA
Riverside County
Palm Springs does not impose breed-specific legislation. California Food and Agriculture Code Β§31683 prohibits cities from enacting breed-specific bans, though it allows breed-specific spay/neuter and breeding requirements. Palm Springs Municipal Code Chapter 10.80 and state law (CA Food & Ag Β§31601β31683) regulate 'dangerous' and 'vicious' dogs based on behavior, not breed.
View full Palm Springs rules βKey Facts Comparison
| Fact | Anza | Palm Springs |
|---|---|---|
| - | - |
Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.
Anza FAQ
Palm Springs FAQ
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