Bears - Lock the Lid

Bears-Trash

Why the Ordinance?

City Council found that there were an increasing number of bear and other wildlife encounters in urban areas of the city. This growth was primarily due to inadequate security of residential and commercial waste placed outside for collection.  When wildlife has access to trash, they are drawn closer to homes and businesses which creates potentially dangerous situations between the animals and people. 

The ordinance requires all trash containers to be certified as bear resistant by the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee and dumpsters or dumpster enclosures to be bear resistant.  Trash haulers are required to provide bear resistant receptacles to their customers

The city asks for your compliance with these laws to help keep wildlife where they belong - in the wild.

Ordinance

City of Steamboat Springs, Colorado Ordinance No. 2899: an ordinance amending Chapter 19 of the Steamboat Springs Revised Municipal Code regarding solid waste, commercial recycling, and wildlife-resistant containers; providing an effective date and repealing all conflicting ordinances.

Common Violations

Your property is in violation of Steamboat Springs regulations. This notice is a warning only. A repeat violation will be subject to a Municipal Court summons.

Sec. 19-101
Bear resistant container, dumpster, or enclosure required.

Sec. 19-102
Container, dumpsters, and dumpster enclosure not secured.

Sec. 19-103(a)
Wildlife attractant not properly secured.

Sec. 19-103(b)
Curbside placement/pickup outside scheduled service day.

Sec. 19-104
Accumulation of wildlife attractant refuse on property.

Sec. 19-105
Feeding of wildlife.

Bear Resistant Containers & Dumpsters

Any refuse container, regardless of size, left outside a house, garage, or other enclosed building that is an attractant to bears or other wildlife must be stored in a bear resistant container, a bear resistant dumpster, or a bear resistant enclosure.  Any and all containers must have the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee certification.

Aerial view of a large bear walking through the bushes in summer
Colorado-Parks-and-Wildlife-logo11

Keep Bears Wild

  • Don’t feed bears, and don’t put out food for other wildlife that attracts bears.
  • Be responsible about trash and bird feeders.
  • Burn food off barbeque grills and clean after each use.
  • Keep all bear-accessible windows and doors closed and locked, including home, garage and vehicle doors.
  • Don’t leave food, trash, coolers, air fresheners or anything that smells in your vehicle.
  • If a bear comes near your home, do your best to chase it away. Yell, blow a whistle, clap your hands and make other loud noises -- never approach or corner a bear.
Small bear witting in the snowy bushes