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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Coyote Management

Coyote Management: Palo Alto vs San Jose

How do coyote management rules compare between Palo Alto, CA and San Jose, CA?

Palo Alto and San Jose have similar restriction levels.

Palo Alto, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

Santa Clara County and partner cities follow a coexistence model led by SCC Vector Control and CDFW: hazing, attractant removal, and lethal control only for sick or aggressive animals. Title C and city codes ban intentional feeding of coyotes and other wildlife.

View full Palo Alto rules β†’

San Jose, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

San Jose Animal Care and Services follows a hazing-first coyote response under guidance from California Department of Fish and Wildlife. Residents are urged to scare coyotes away, secure trash and pet food, and never feed wildlife. Lethal removal is reserved for documented public safety threats.

View full San Jose rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactPalo AltoSan Jose
ApproachCoexistence and hazing-
Lead agencySCC Vector Control plus CDFWSJ Animal Care and Services
County codeTitle C wildlife feeding ban-
Lethal controlCDFW permit only-
Hazing toolsNoise, eye contact, objects-
State authority-CDFW
Primary tool-Hazing first response
Feeding rule-Prohibited as nuisance
Lethal removal-CDFW depredation permit only

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Palo Alto FAQ

What should I do if a coyote enters my yard?

Use hazing: shout, wave arms, bang pots, throw small objects from a distance. Secure pet food, trash, and fallen fruit. Keep small pets indoors at dawn and dusk. Report aggressive coyotes to CDFW.

Is it illegal to feed coyotes in Santa Clara County?

Yes. SCC Title C and most city codes prohibit intentional wildlife feeding, including leaving pet food outdoors. Violations bring escalating administrative citations and possible nuisance abatement orders.

San Jose FAQ

What should I do if I see a coyote?

Haze it. Stand tall, yell, wave your arms, shake noisemakers, or throw small objects in its direction. Never run or turn your back. Report aggressive coyotes to San Jose Animal Care and Services.

Can coyotes be trapped or shot?

Generally no. Coyotes are protected nongame mammals and trapping by residents is restricted by state law. Lethal removal requires a CDFW depredation permit and is reserved for documented public safety threats.

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