Newport Beach examining duck-feeding law
- Share via
June Casagrande
BALBOA ISLAND -- Responding to residents’ complaints that the scores
of ducks flocking around one Grand Canal home have created a smelly
nuisance, city officials have drafted a law to restrict feeding and
breeding waterfowl in the city.
“I’ve had probably 20 complaints about the duck issue on Grand Canal.
It’s a problem that’s been ongoing for years,” said City Councilman
Steven Bromberg, whose district includes Balboa Island.
At Bromberg’s request, city staff have written a preliminary ordinance
to prohibit all but “de minimus” feeding of ducks. The legalese allows
the city to control situations such as the one on Grand Canal without
being overly restrictive.
The law, if approved, would allow kids with a slice of bread to feed
ducks but would prohibit incubating and “long-term, ongoing habitation,
like setting out a bin of day-old bread for duck food,” Assistant City
Manager Dave Kiff explained.
The Harbor Quality Committee will look at the proposed ordinance at
its meeting today.
The owner of the home, who the Daily Pilot has decided not to
identify, could not be reached for comment.
Bromberg emphasized that the proposed law is still in rough-draft
form.
Odor is just one of the problems caused by the ducks that loiter on
the private dock and in other places in the city, officials say.
“When humans feed the animals, they think they’re doing good, but it
basically also destroys the natural behavior of those animals. They lose
their fear of humans, it trains new generations of animals to not survive
in the wild, to be dependent on humans,” said Mervin Hee, regional patrol
chief for the Department of Fish and Game.
One problem, experts say, is that migratory patterns are upset when
humans feed ducks and other waterfowl.
Feeding ducks can also create health risks to humans and animals by
raising water bacteria levels high enough to prompt water safety warnings
or even close swimming areas, Kiff explained. The bacteria found in one
duck dropping is thousands of times higher than the quantity that, when
found in a water sample, is required to close a beach.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.