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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Wildlife Feeding

Safety Harbor vs St. Petersburg

How do wildlife feeding rules compare between Safety Harbor, FL and St. Petersburg, FL?

Safety Harbor and St. Petersburg have similar restriction levels.

Safety Harbor, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Feeding alligators, bears, sandhill cranes, foxes, raccoons, and pelicans is prohibited under Florida law. Pinellas County Code further bans food placements that attract nuisance wildlife to Safety Harbor properties.

View full Safety Harbor rules →

St. Petersburg, FL

Pinellas County

Some Restrictions

Feeding wildlife that creates a public nuisance is prohibited in St. Petersburg, and Florida FAC 68A-4.001 bans feeding pelicans, sandhill cranes, bears, raccoons, foxes, and coyotes statewide.

View full St. Petersburg rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactSafety HarborSt. Petersburg
Bird feedersGenerally allowed-
Alligators or bearsFeeding prohibited-
Sandhill cranesFeeding prohibited-
Trash managementMust be secured-
FWC penaltyMisdemeanor, up to $500-
State rule-FAC 68A-4.001
First fine-$100
Banned species feeding-Pelicans, cranes, bears
Local backstop-Chapter 4 nuisance
Enforcement-FWC and city

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Safety Harbor FAQ

Can I feed ducks at Safety Harbor parks?

Park rules generally discourage feeding waterfowl, and feeding bread harms birds. Listed species like sandhill cranes are protected and cannot be fed under any circumstances.

Is leaving pet food outside considered wildlife feeding?

It can be. If unsecured pet food attracts raccoons, foxes, or other wildlife, it may violate Pinellas County nuisance rules even without intent to feed wild animals.

St. Petersburg FAQ

Can I feed ducks at a St. Petersburg pond?

Casual duck feeding is not specifically banned, but if it attracts rats, raccoons, or creates a nuisance, you can be cited under city Chapter 4 nuisance rules. Feeding pelicans is barred by FAC 68A-4.001.

Is it illegal to feed raccoons in St. Petersburg?

Yes. Florida Administrative Code 68A-4.001 prohibits placing food in a manner that attracts raccoons, foxes, coyotes, or bears, with civil penalties starting at $100 per offense.

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