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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Wildlife Feeding

Wildlife Feeding: Jurupa Valley vs Palm Springs

How do wildlife feeding rules compare between Jurupa Valley, CA and Palm Springs, CA?

Jurupa Valley has fewer restrictions than Palm Springs.

Jurupa Valley, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Jurupa Valley's hillside neighborhoods (Jurupa Hills, Pedley Hills, Rubidoux bluff) abut the Santa Ana River corridor and open chaparral that supports coyote, bobcat, raccoon, skunk, mule deer, and occasional mountain lion activity. California 14 CCR §251.3 prohibits intentional feeding of big-game mammals (deer, bear, elk, etc.) statewide. Locally, Jurupa Valley Title 10 Animals and Title 8 nuisance provisions treat food sources that habituate wildlife as a public-safety nuisance.

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Palm Springs, CA

Riverside County

Heavy Restrictions

Palm Springs prohibits feeding coyotes, bobcats, mountain lions, bighorn sheep, and other wildlife descending from the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa Mountains. Palm Springs Municipal Code Chapter 10.80 and California Fish and Game Code §§251.1 and 4181 make intentional feeding of large wildlife unlawful. Violations carry fines and the critical safety risk of habituated predators in residential neighborhoods.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactJurupa ValleyPalm Springs
State big-game feeding ban14 CCR §251.3 — intentional feeding of deer, bear, mountain sheep, etc. prohibited-
Local nuisance backstopJurupa Valley Title 10 Animals / Title 8 nuisance — attractive nuisance / vector control-
Local wildlifeCoyote, bobcat, mule deer, mountain lion activity along Santa Ana River corridor and Jurupa Hills-
Mountain lionsSpecially Protected Mammal — Cal. Fish & Game Code §4800 (Prop 117)-
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Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Jurupa Valley FAQ

Is it legal to feed deer in Jurupa Valley?

No. California 14 CCR §251.3 prohibits intentional feeding of deer and other big-game mammals statewide, with no Jurupa Valley exception. Citations are issued by CDFW wardens.

Can I feed coyotes that come through my yard?

Strongly discouraged and likely a Jurupa Valley Title 10/Title 8 nuisance violation. CDFW warns that coyote feeding produces habituation and aggression, and Jurupa Valley code enforcement can order the food source removed.

What do I do about a coyote or mountain lion in my neighborhood?

Secure trash and pet food, do not feed wildlife, and report aggressive behavior to Riverside County Department of Animal Services (951-358-7387). For mountain lions specifically, report to CDFW — these animals cannot be killed except under a CDFW depredation permit under Cal. Fish & Game Code §4800.

Palm Springs FAQ

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