Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
🌍 Environmental Rules/Erosion Control

Erosion Control: Carson vs Santa Clarita

How do erosion control rules compare between Carson, CA and Santa Clarita, CA?

Carson and Santa Clarita have similar restriction levels.

Carson, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Carson does not have a standalone erosion-control chapter; erosion and sediment control are enforced through the city's adoption of California Building Code Appendix J (Grading) under its Building Code, the city's Storm Water and Urban Runoff Pollution Control Ordinance (CMC Art. 4 Ch. 8), and the state Construction General Permit. Carson's mostly flat terrain limits hillside-style erosion exposure, but construction sites must still implement Best Management Practices to prevent sediment from entering the MS4 and the Dominguez Channel.

View full Carson rules β†’

Santa Clarita, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Hillside development in Santa Clarita requires erosion control measures per SCMC 17.51. The city regulates grading to minimize adverse hillside impacts.

View full Santa Clarita rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactCarsonSanta Clarita
Local citationCarson Building Code (CMC Art. 8) adopting CBC Appendix J (Grading)-
Stormwater overlayCarson Municipal Code Art. 4 Ch. 8 (Storm Water and Urban Runoff Pollution Control)-
State permit thresholdβ‰₯1 acre disturbed area β†’ Construction General Permit (Order 2022-0057-DWQ) + SWPPP-
BMP basicsSilt fence, fiber rolls, stabilized entrance, inlet protection, hydroseed, concrete washout containment-
TopographyMostly flat South Bay coastal plain β€” wind erosion + channel-edge sediment are key risks-
Hillside Code-SCMC 17.51 (hillside development)
NPDES-Stormwater compliance required
SWPPP-Required for sites over 1 acre
Grading Permit-Erosion plan required

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Carson FAQ

Does my small backyard project need erosion controls?

Yes, even projects under 1 acre must keep sediment and construction debris out of the storm drain under CMC Art. 4 Ch. 8. Practical measures include placing soil piles away from streets, covering stockpiles, sweeping (not hosing) sidewalks, and using fiber rolls along curbs during grading.

What triggers a SWPPP in Carson?

Disturbing 1 acre or more (cumulatively, including phased projects) triggers the state Construction General Permit, requiring electronic Notice of Intent in SMARTS and a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan prepared by a Qualified SWPPP Developer (QSD).

Is Carson considered a hillside community for grading purposes?

No. Carson is on flat South Bay coastal plain at roughly 20-50 feet elevation; CBC Appendix J's hillside-specific provisions rarely apply, but grading-permit requirements still apply to any project moving more than 50 cubic yards of earth or creating slopes that affect drainage.

Santa Clarita FAQ

Do I need erosion control for a small project?

Most jurisdictions require erosion control for any ground disturbance over 500 to 1,000 square feet. Check Santa Clarita grading permit requirements.

Who inspects erosion controls?

Santa Clarita building or public works department inspects during active construction. Federal EPA NPDES permits may also apply for sites over one acre.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool