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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Puyallup vs Tacoma

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Puyallup, WA and Tacoma, WA?

Puyallup and Tacoma have similar restriction levels.

Puyallup, WA

Pierce County

Heavy Restrictions

Washington RCW 16.52 criminalizes animal cruelty and neglect statewide, providing the legal foundation for animal hoarding prosecutions when owners fail to provide necessary food, water, shelter, and veterinary care to multiple animals.

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Tacoma, WA

Pierce County

Heavy Restrictions

Tacoma treats animal hoarding as a public health and welfare emergency, allowing the Humane Society and Tacoma-Pierce County Health to enter, inspect, remove animals, and pursue criminal cruelty charges in serious cases.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactPuyallupTacoma
StatuteRCW 16.52.207-
Second DegreeMisdemeanor-
First DegreeClass C felony-
Seizure AuthorityRCW 16.52.085-
Approach-Public health emergency
Lead-Humane Society and TPCHD
Criminal-Possible cruelty charges
Future ban-Years without pets
Reports-Welcome from neighbors

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Puyallup FAQ

Is animal hoarding a specific crime in Washington?

Washington has no standalone hoarding statute, but RCW 16.52.207 prosecutes hoarding situations as animal cruelty in the second degree when owners fail to provide necessary care to multiple animals.

Can authorities take animals from a hoarder before trial?

Yes. RCW 16.52.085 authorizes warrant-based seizure of neglected animals, and RCW 16.52.200 allows courts to require owners to post bond covering ongoing care costs pending case resolution.

Tacoma FAQ

How do I report a suspected hoarding case in Tacoma?

Call the Humane Society for Tacoma and Pierce County non-emergency line. Provide an address, animal types, and condition details. You can request anonymity, and all reports are screened by investigators.

Can hoarding cases lead to losing other pets too?

Yes. Courts can order forfeiture of all animals in the home, restitution for shelter care costs, and probation conditions that ban or limit pet ownership for several years.

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