Oxnard Conversion Therapy Rules for Providers

Civil Rights and Equity California 3 Minutes Read · published February 10, 2026 Flag of California

In Oxnard, California, providers who offer or advertise so-called "conversion therapy" should understand how city practice and state licensing interact. This guide explains what is publicly documented about municipal authority, who enforces rules affecting providers, typical complaint and reporting steps, and what to expect from enforcement pathways. It summarizes available official contact points and practical actions for providers, patients, and complainants while noting where Oxnard-specific ordinance text or administrative fines are not published on city pages. For definitive legal obligations, consult licensing boards and the City Attorney's office [1].

If you need to report a possible violation, preserve dates, communications, and any advertising or records.

Penalties & Enforcement

The City of Oxnard does not publish a separate city ordinance on conversion therapy for providers on its public pages; monetary fines and specific administrative penalty amounts are not specified on the cited page. Enforcement for licensed mental-health and medical professionals is primarily performed through state licensing boards under California law, while city-level action, if any, is ordinarily handled by the City Attorney or appropriate city departments. For city questions or to request information about local enforcement, contact the City Attorney's office [1].

  • Common violation: performing or advertising conversion therapy on minors — enforcement pathway typically through state licensing boards.
  • Common violation: false advertising or consumer-protection issues — may trigger civil complaints or consumer protection referrals.
  • Non-monetary sanctions: professional discipline, license suspension or revocation (handled by state boards; city code does not list these remedies).
  • Fines or administrative penalties: not specified on the cited page for Oxnard; see state licensing rules for professional discipline amounts and procedures.
Oxnard's publicly available pages do not set explicit fine amounts for conversion therapy violations.

Applications & Forms

No Oxnard-specific application, permit, or form for reporting or authorizing conversion-therapy-related activity is published on city ordinance pages; if you wish to file a complaint about a licensed provider, use the relevant California licensing board complaint form (see Resources).

  • City forms for ordinance violations: none specified on the cited city page.
  • To request local information or records, contact the City Attorney's office [1].

Key Takeaways

  • Oxnard does not publish a city-level conversion therapy fine schedule; state law and licensing boards govern professional discipline.
  • Document incidents and follow state licensing complaint procedures for therapists and medical providers.
  • Contact the City Attorney for local policy questions and records requests.

FAQ

Does Oxnard have a city ordinance banning conversion therapy?
Oxnard's publicly available municipal pages do not show a specific ordinance text banning conversion therapy for providers; see the City Attorney contact for local inquiries [1].
How do I report a provider in Oxnard?
Gather documentation and file a complaint with the relevant California licensing board for the provider's profession; you may also contact the City Attorney for guidance on local reporting options.
Are there civil penalties or fines from the city?
Monetary fines or city administrative penalties for conversion therapy are not specified on the cited Oxnard page; professional discipline is typically handled at the state level.
Use the provider's license number when filing a state licensing complaint whenever possible.

How-To

  1. Confirm the provider's license type and number through California licensing board lookup tools.
  2. Collect evidence: dates, communications, receipts, advertising, and witness statements.
  3. File a complaint with the applicable California licensing board using its official complaint form.
  4. Contact the City Attorney's office for local policy questions or public-records requests [1].
  5. If needed, consult private counsel about civil remedies or to seek injunctive relief.
Filing with a licensing board starts a formal investigative process that can take months.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of Oxnard - City Attorney