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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Carson vs Lancaster

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Carson, CA and Lancaster, CA?

Carson and Lancaster have similar restriction levels.

Carson, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Carson has no city-specific hoarding ordinance. LA County Code §10.20 (administered by LA County Animal Care & Control in Carson) caps the number of dogs over four months old at three (3) per single-family residence without a kennel license; possessing four or more requires a kennel permit and CUP. Hoarding-grade neglect — unsanitary conditions, lack of food/water/vet care — is prosecutable as cruelty under California Penal Code §597 and §597.1.

View full Carson rules →

Lancaster, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

LA County Title 10.20.220 caps three dogs and five cats at unincorporated single-family lots without a kennel permit. DACC and the Sheriff investigate hoarding cases as cruelty under California Penal Code §597, with seizure and prosecution.

View full Lancaster rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactCarsonLancaster
Dog cap (no kennel license)3 dogs over 4 months per residence (LA County Code §10.20)-
Kennel permit threshold4+ dogs over 4 months — requires kennel license + CUP-
Cat cap (nuisance threshold)~5 cats per household (Title 10 enforcement guidance)-
Cruelty statuteCal. Penal Code §597 (food/water/shelter duty)California Penal Code §597
Seizure authorityCal. Penal Code §597.1 (animal-control officers can seize in cruelty cases)-
Penalty rangeUp to $20,000 fine + felony state prison for cruelty-
EnforcementLA County DACC + Carson Code Enforcement + LA County Sheriff-
Dog limit (unincorporated)-Three dogs per residence
Cat limit (unincorporated)-Five cats per residence
Code section-LACO Title 10.20.220
Lead agency-DACC and Sheriff

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Carson FAQ

How many dogs or cats can I keep in Carson?

LA County Code §10.20 (applied in Carson) limits a single residence to three (3) dogs over four months without a kennel license. Four or more requires a kennel permit, which is not generally available on R-1 residential lots. Cats are nuisance-based — typically about five (5) is the threshold before enforcement.

What happens if Animal Control investigates a hoarding complaint?

LA County Animal Care & Control officers can inspect, document conditions, issue cruelty citations under Cal. Penal Code §597, and seize animals under §597.1 if conditions threaten animal health. Owners are billed impound and veterinary costs and may be barred from future animal ownership by court order.

Is there a hoarding-specific law in California?

No. California prosecutes hoarding under existing animal-cruelty statutes (Cal. Penal Code §597, §597.1) — failure to provide proper food, water, shelter, or veterinary care. LA County DACC partners with the Department of Mental Health on hoarding cases since underlying disorders are often involved.

Lancaster FAQ

Who investigates animal hoarding in LA County?

DACC handles unincorporated areas and 45 contract cities, partnering with Sheriff and the District Attorney. Cruelty under Penal Code §597 can mean seizure, criminal charges, and court-ordered ownership bans.

How many pets can I have in unincorporated LA County?

LACO Title 10.20.220 allows three dogs over four months and five cats per single-family residence. Anything more requires a kennel or cattery permit from DACC.

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