CC SR 20170919 04 - Coyote Issues ReportRANCHO PALOS VERDES CITY COUNCIL MEETING DATE: 09/19/2017
AGENDA REPORT AGENDA HEADING: Regular Business
AGENDA DESCRIPTION:
Consideration and possible action to receive and file a report on Peninsula -wide
measures to address coyote issues.
RECOMMENDED COUNCIL ACTION:
(1) Receive and file a report on measures that Peninsula cities are implementing to
address coyote issues and how they relate to the City's measures.
FISCAL IMPACT: None
Amount Budgeted: N/A
Additional Appropriation: N/A
Account Number(s): N/A
ORIGINATED BY: Julie Peterson, Code Enforcement Officer j-
REVIEWED BY: Ara Mihranian, AICP, Director of Community Development;
APPROVED BY: Doug Willmore, City Manage(.-"/�:/--_
BACKGROUND AND DISCUSSION:
Coyotes have been a part of the City since well before its development and
incorporation. Historically throughout the South Bay, the City has been on the forefront
in engaging its residents in educational campaigns about what to do when encountering
coyotes, and what measures to take to keep coyotes out of neighborhoods. In 2013, the
City took the lead by implementing the first Coyote Management Plan in the South Bay,
which is available to the public on the City's website http://www.rpvca.gov/335/Coyotes).
The goal of the Plan is to encourage and "support coexistence with urban coyotes using
education, behavior modification and development of a tiered response to aggressive
coyote behavior." The City also has available on its website brochures and information
on living with urban coyotes made available from the Humane Society, as well as
methods to deter coyotes from entering property.
Over the past few years, there has been a significant increase in the reporting of coyote
sightings, not only in Rancho Palos Verdes, but in the surrounding Peninsula cities. In
response, Councilwoman Brooks requested a report to the City Council on the
measures that the other three Peninsula cities have in place to address coyotes as they
relate to the City of Rancho Palos Verdes' efforts.
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Coyote Facts
Basic facts about coyotes include:
• Coyotes are native to California and are found throughout the State.
• Coyotes can be a valuable species in wildlife areas, as they are natural predators
of mice, rats, squirrels, gophers, feral cats, and other small animals, thereby
helping to control rodent populations.
• Coyotes are naturally curious and will watch you just out of curiosity.
• Coyotes are adaptable and can survive on whatever food is available. They are
opportunistic feeders.
• Urban coyotes are not necessarily nocturnal, and it is not unusual to see them
during daylight hours.
• Coyotes have the ability to adjust their litter sizes based on the abundance of
food and population density in their area. Coyotes will also repopulate their litter
when reduced.
Peninsula Cities
The recent coyote issues are being addressed by all four cities on the Peninsula.
Recognizing that coyotes are less a local and more of a regional issue, the Peninsula
cities have been participating in the South Bay Cities Council of Governments
(SBCCOG) task force meetings on this regional issue. These task force meetings have
provided an opportunity for the City to collaborate with other South Bay cities and to
exchange information on effective measures to address coyote issues. The cities of
Rancho Palos Verdes, Rolling Hills Estates and Palos Verdes Estates have also been
working together to implement measures on a Peninsula -wide basis. The following table
summarizes coyote measures taken by all four Peninsula cities, and some of the
measures are described in greater detail below the table:
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Rolling Hills
Palos Verdes
Rancho Palos
Measures
Rolling Hills
Estates
Estates
Verdes
Website
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
http://ci.rolling-
www.rolling-
Information
hills.org
www.pvestates.org
www.rpvca.gov
hills-estates.ca.us
Coyote
Management Plan
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
List -Serve
News Blasts
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Web -based Coyote
Tracking
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Application
LA County Dept.
LA County Dept. of
Animal Pest
LA County Dept.
Coyote Services
of Agriculture
Agriculture
Management
of Agriculture
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Coyote Management Plan
All four Peninsula cities agree that education is a key component in coyote
management. Rancho Palos Verdes was the first city to prepare and implement a
Coyote Management Plan, followed by the cities of Rolling Hills Estates and Palos
Verdes Estates (referred to as Coyote Management Strategies). Education involves
public outreach to raise awareness on coyote attractants and deterrents, such as the
following:
• Don't leave pet food outside.
• Don't leave small pets or children outside unattended.
• If you compost, use enclosed bins and never compost meat or fish scraps.
• Install motion -sensitive lighting around the house.
• Make sure your fences are 6 feet high with no gaps at ground level — coyotes are
good diggers.
• Put bird feeders away at night to avoid attracting rodents and other coyote prey.
• Remove fallen fruit from the ground.
• Remove sources of water.
• Talk to your neighbors to make sure they're following the same procedures.
• Trim ground -level shrubbery to reduce hiding places.
Hazing is another method that makes use of deterrents to move a coyote out of an area
or discourage an undesirable behavior or activity. Hazing can help maintain a coyote's
fear of humans and deter them from neighborhoods. Using a variety of different hazing
tools is important as coyotes can habituate to individual items, sounds and actions. The
simplest method of hazing involves being loud and large: stand tall, wave your arms and
yell at the coyote, approaching it if necessary, until it runs away. If a coyote has not
been hazed before it may not immediately run away when you yell at it. If this happens,
you may need to walk towards the coyote and increase the intensity of your hazing. It is
3
Rolling Hills
Palos Verdes
Rancho Palos
Measures
Estates
Rolling Hills
Estates
Verdes
Who to Report
LA County
City Manager's
PVE Police
RPV Code
Aggressive Coyote
Agriculture
Sightings to
Commission
Office
Department
Enforcement
City Sponsored
Trapping
No
Yes
No
No
Private Trapping
Permitted
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Prohibition against
Yes
Yes
Feeding Coyotes
RHEMC 6.05.010
No
No
RPVMC 6.04.020
Penalty Fines for
$100/$200/$500
N/A
N/A
$100/$200/$500
Feeding Coyotes
Participation in the
Wildlife Watch
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Program
Coyote Management Plan
All four Peninsula cities agree that education is a key component in coyote
management. Rancho Palos Verdes was the first city to prepare and implement a
Coyote Management Plan, followed by the cities of Rolling Hills Estates and Palos
Verdes Estates (referred to as Coyote Management Strategies). Education involves
public outreach to raise awareness on coyote attractants and deterrents, such as the
following:
• Don't leave pet food outside.
• Don't leave small pets or children outside unattended.
• If you compost, use enclosed bins and never compost meat or fish scraps.
• Install motion -sensitive lighting around the house.
• Make sure your fences are 6 feet high with no gaps at ground level — coyotes are
good diggers.
• Put bird feeders away at night to avoid attracting rodents and other coyote prey.
• Remove fallen fruit from the ground.
• Remove sources of water.
• Talk to your neighbors to make sure they're following the same procedures.
• Trim ground -level shrubbery to reduce hiding places.
Hazing is another method that makes use of deterrents to move a coyote out of an area
or discourage an undesirable behavior or activity. Hazing can help maintain a coyote's
fear of humans and deter them from neighborhoods. Using a variety of different hazing
tools is important as coyotes can habituate to individual items, sounds and actions. The
simplest method of hazing involves being loud and large: stand tall, wave your arms and
yell at the coyote, approaching it if necessary, until it runs away. If a coyote has not
been hazed before it may not immediately run away when you yell at it. If this happens,
you may need to walk towards the coyote and increase the intensity of your hazing. It is
3
important to continue to haze the coyote until it completely leaves the area. You may
need to use different tactics such as noise makers, stomping your feet or spraying the
coyote with a hose to get it to leave. In addition, carrying hazing tools while walking
your dog, such as a whistle, squirt guns, or sticks or rocks that can be thrown towards
the coyote as a deterrent.
Coyote Tracking Application
Over the past several months, the City's Information Technology Staff have been
developing a web -based coyote tracking application, and are pleased to announce its
availability to the public for use on mobile and desktop devices (view the application at
http://coyotesightings.rpvca.gov). The application benefits all the Peninsula cities, and
although its development was led by the City's Staff, it was a collaborative effort with the
cities of Rolling Hills Estates and Palos Verdes Estates, whose residents and staff will
utilize this program as well.
The purpose of this application is to provide information on coyote population and
sighting trends. Residents will be asked to report a coyote sighting and describe the
coyote's behavior or incident on this application. The reported information will be
documented and forwarded to City Staff. Additionally, a map of the Peninsula that is
available on the website will identify the location of the reported coyote and its activity.
Staff will be introducing this application at tonight's City Council meeting.
Coyote Services
Los Angeles County Agricultural Commissioner/Weights and Measures (Agricultural
Commissioner) has contracts with the cities of Rancho Palos Verdes, Rolling Hills, and
Rolling Hills Estates for coyote -related services. The City of Palos Verdes Estates does
not have a contract with the County, and contracts with a private company, Animal Pesi
Management. The City of Rolling Hills contracts with Animal Pest Management for
added services not provided by the County's contract. It is important to note that the
California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) does not handle coyote complaints
made by residents or jurisdictions, nor does Los Angeles County Animal Control.
CDFW refers calls back to the City or the Agricultural Commissioner, and Animal
Control will only respond if the coyote appears sick or is dead.
In Rancho Palos Verdes, when a resident has a concern about a coyote, they are asked
to call the Code Enforcement Division. Code Enforcement Staff will assess the situation
and determine if the problem is one that can be handled by the use of preventative
measures, or if the situation needs to be escalated to the Agricultural Commissioner for
further review. Many times, informing a resident about what they can do to secure their
yard to deter coyotes is all that is needed. However, in some instances, Staff may
determine that a visit from the Agricultural Commissioner is warranted. In those cases,
an Agricultural Commissioner officer will visit the property to assess what can be done
to deter coyote activity.
El
Coyote Trapping or Relocation
Based on limited reports to the City's Code Enforcement Division thus far, the
Agricultural Commissioner has not found it necessary to trap any coyotes in Rancho
Palos Verdes due to aggressive behavior. In the event an aggressive coyote is
observed, pursuant to County procedure, the coyote will be trapped and shot at the site.
This is because the California Code of Regulations, Title 14, Division 1, Subdivision 2,
Chapter 5, Subsection 465.5(g)(1) Section 465.5 requires that all furbearing and
nongame mammals that are legal to trap must be immediately killed or released. As for
relocating coyotes that have been trapped, this is not permitted per the California Code
of Regulations Title 14, Division 1, Subdivision 3, Chapter 3 Subsection 679(f)(4), which
states that no person, facility or organization can accept, possess or relocate nuisance
wildlife. The Code further states that any healthy wildlife trapped in towns or cities or
removed from under buildings or otherwise taken or trapped shall be immediately
released in the area where trapped or disposed of as directed or authorized by CDFW.
The private trapping of coyotes by residents on private property is legally permitted in all
four Peninsula cities. The cities of Rancho Palos Verdes, Rolling Hills Estates and Palos
Verdes Estates have not proactively sponsored the trapping of coyotes. Rolling Hills has
approached trapping differently than the other three Peninsula cities. Because the City
is entirely comprised of private property, a resident can call the City and request that
their property be considered for "coyote control". The resident fills out an authorization
and a staff member from the Agricultural Commissioner's office will investigate. This
year, the County has trapped coyotes on approximately 15 to 20 properties in Rolling
Hills, and the County's cost for this service is approximately $95 per hour. It estimated
that the time spent at an individual property is approximately 3-4 hours.
Cities that consider a coyote trapping program must comply with the requirements of the
California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). City Staff recently learned at the
September 6t" SBCCOG Coyote Task Force meeting that People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals (PETA) sued the City of Arcadia for allegedly not complying with
the requirements of CEQA, and claimed the City's decision to implement a project to
trap and kill coyotes was a discretionary decision subject to mandatory CEQA review.
The City Council eventually voted to rescind the appropriation for a professional
services contract related to coyote trapping. In order to implement a coyote trapping
program in Rancho Palos Verdes, a CEQA determination involving either a Mitigated
Negative Declaration or an Environmental Impact Report, including mitigation
measures, would have to be adopted by the City Council at a duly -noticed public
hearing.
Participation in the Wildlife Watch Proaram
Wildlife Watch is a CDFW-administered program that is similar to a Neighborhood
Watch program in that enlists the participation of citizens to bring neighbors together
and helps train them to recognize and distinguish wildlife sightings, wildlife threats to
public safety, and natural versus unnatural wildlife behavior. It also helps with the
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implementation of basic wildlife conflict prevention techniques, such as hazing. This
program requires the participation of an entire neighborhood to keep coyotes out of
neighborhoods. Staff from the cities of Rancho Palos Verdes, Rolling Hills Estates and
Palos Verdes Estates have participated in an "agency counseling" training session
facilitated by CDFW to ensure that consistent information is being disseminated to the
public throughout the Peninsula. In Rancho Palos Verdes, a public workshop was held
on February 2, 2017, and approximately 25 residents from the Peninsula attended. A
similar workshop was held in the City of Rolling Hills Estates at around the same time.
In response to interest expressed at the workshop, CDFW Staff attended meetings in
the Portuguese Bend and Miraleste Hills neighborhoods to introduce the Wildlife Watch
program. At this time, none of these or other neighborhoods have yet implemented the
program. The Wildlife Watch program has been successful in Culver City, Irvine, and
many other neighborhoods in Southern California in reducing their coyote population.
CONCLUSION:
With the semi -rural topography that the City provides, coyote sightings are not
uncommon throughout the City. Informing residents about typical coyote behavior and
what can be done to deter coyotes from entering yards and neighborhoods is an
important step in coyote management. Residents are encouraged to report coyote
sightings and incidents on the City's tracking applications, and to report aggressive
coyote behavior to the City's Code Enforcement Division for further investigation.
ALTERNATIVES:
In addition to the Staff recommendation, the following alternative action is available for
the City Council's consideration:
Direct Staff to develop additional measures to address the City's coyote
issues for the City Council's future consideration.
Al
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