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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Bloomington vs Minneapolis

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Bloomington, MN and Minneapolis, MN?

Bloomington and Minneapolis have similar restriction levels.

Bloomington, MN

Hennepin County

Heavy Restrictions

Hennepin County Public Health and HCSO investigate animal hoarding under Minnesota cruelty statutes 343.21 and city pet-limit ordinances. Cases often involve seizure, criminal charges, and required mental-health evaluations for owners.

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Minneapolis, MN

Hennepin County

Heavy Restrictions

Minneapolis treats animal hoarding as cruelty and unsanitary keeping of animals under Title 5 and Minnesota Statute Chapter 343. Animal Care and Control may seize animals, condemn premises with Hennepin County Public Health, and pursue criminal charges.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactBloomingtonMinneapolis
Cruelty lawMinn. Stat. 343.21-
Pet limitThree to five per home-
ReportsThrough 311-
Intake partnerAnimal Humane Society-
City authority-Title 5, Animal Care Control
State authority-Minn. Stat. Ch. 343
Health overlay-Hennepin County Public Health
Possible outcome-Animal forfeiture

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Bloomington FAQ

How do I report suspected animal hoarding?

Call 311 in Minneapolis or your city's non-emergency line. Hennepin County Public Health and HCSO coordinate with Animal Humane Society for welfare checks and seizures.

Can hoarders get their pets back?

Often no. Courts can permanently restrict animal possession under Minnesota Statute 343.21 after cruelty convictions, especially when conditions involve severe neglect or repeated violations.

Minneapolis FAQ

How do I report suspected hoarding?

Call Minneapolis 311 or Animal Care and Control; sanitation concerns can be routed to Regulatory Services housing inspectors and Hennepin County Public Health for joint assessment.

Is hoarding a felony in Minnesota?

Most cases are charged as misdemeanors or gross misdemeanors under Minn. Stat. 343.21, but severe or repeat cruelty involving torture or death can rise to felony level.

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