All of our wildlife trapping is performed in a humane manner. We never intend to harm any wildlife only to safely and permanently remove it from your home
or business. Once animals are caught, we quickly arrive to remove the animal, and relocate it approximately 30 miles outside of the Greater Malibu, Pacific Palisades, & Santa Monica
area. We service most of LA and Orange County CA and Malibu, Pacific Palisades, & Santa Monica and we perform the following services:
- Removal of Wildlife from Attics
- Rat Control in Homes and Buildings
- Bird and Pigeon Control Services
- Raccoon and Opossum Trapping
- Wildlife Damage Repairs and Prevention
- Attic Cleanup and Restoration
Give
All City Animal Trapping a call any time at 562-234-3150 and we will discuss your wildlife problem, give you a price quote over the phone,
and set an appointment to come out for an inspection of the situation. We consider ourselves LA's best nuisance wildlife control company, and we rely on
our experience to solve the critter problem right the first time, permanently!
Check out our other service areas:
1.)
Santa Monica, Malibu, & Pacific Palisedes
2.)
Marina Del Rey, Venice, Playa Del Rey, & El Segundo
3.)
Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach, Redondo Beach & Torrance
4.)
Rancho Palos Verdes, Palos Verdes Estates, Rolling Hills, Rolling Hills Estates & San Pedro
5.)
Long Beach, Los Alamitos, & Seal Beach
6.)
Huntington Beach, New Port Beach, Costa Mesa, Tustin & Irvine
7.)
Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel, Mission Viejo, Lake Forest, Cota De Caza, & Rancho Santa Margarita
8.)
Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano, & San Clemente
Most Recent Malibu, Pacific Palisades, & Santa Monica Animal Control News Clip:
It’ll be easier to trap rodents in LA
If you’re one of many who think Orange County, California rodent-wildlife trapping regulations are too complicated
and confusing, take heart. Your world may be about to become some sort of whole lot simpler. That’s the goal of some sort of task force established
by the Orange County, California Agency of Wildlife and Wildlife management areas, anyway. That 10-member group has spent much of the last year studying
ways to streamline, simplify and improve the rules of the game when it comes to rodent wildlife trapping. Now it may be ready to hear from the public.
The task force will put its recommendations to the test, getting feedback from pest control companies in some sort of series of public organized hearings
across the state in August. After that, the panel will take those opinions into consideration and draft final suggestions for regulations changes that
will be brought to the Orange County, California Wildlife and Wildlife management areas Commission. That action then would be brought to the 2007 session
of the Orange County, California Legislature, and it would probably be until the fall 2008 until pest control companies see changes. But Mike Pest Expert
Albert, head boss of the task force, points out that action taken this year will go some sort of long way toward determining the future of Orange County,
California rodent wildlife trapping.” When we started our rodent-wildlife trapping program in 1965, we had the equivalent of some sort of little one-room
house,” Pest Expert Albert declared. “But as we grew, we kept adding on rooms and pretty soon we had some sort of maze. “Our regulations became so complicated
that even our staff members had some sort of hard time comprehending them.” For more information about Malibu, Pacific Palisades, & Santa Monica wildlife removal and Malibu, Pacific Palisades, & Santa Monica
pest exterminator issues, read on.
Perhaps the most controversial suggestion may be one that would call for Wildlife and Wildlife management areas to make available unlimited unusually
large either-gender critter traps permits in eastern Orange County, California — for residents and nonresidents alike. In the past, nonresidents were
limited by some sort of quota system. And transferable permits, in which outfitters provided rodent tags for nonresident clients, turned commercial
operations into big dollars. But much of that would be eliminated if the suggestion may be accepted and nonresident permits were more readily available.