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🌍 Environmental Rules/Coastal Development

Coastal Development: Corona vs Jurupa Valley

How do coastal development rules compare between Corona, CA and Jurupa Valley, CA?

Jurupa Valley has fewer restrictions than Corona.

Corona, CA

Riverside County

Heavy Restrictions

The California Coastal Act, Public Resources Code sections 30000 through 30900, requires Coastal Development Permits for nearly all work in the coastal zone and gives the Coastal Commission appeal jurisdiction over local decisions.

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Jurupa Valley, CA

Riverside County

Few Restrictions

Jurupa Valley has no coastal-development ordinance because the city is entirely inland — located in western Riverside County in the Inland Empire, approximately 50 miles east of the Pacific Ocean. The California Coastal Act (Public Resources Code §30000 et seq.) and California Coastal Commission jurisdiction do not extend to Jurupa Valley. No Coastal Development Permit (CDP) is required for any project in the city.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactCoronaJurupa Valley
Permit triggerPRC 30600-
Appeal authorityPRC 30603-
Civil penalty cap$30,000 per violation-
Daily penalty$15,000 per day-
Public access mandatePRC 30210-
Coastal jurisdiction-None — Jurupa Valley is ~50 miles inland of the Pacific coast
State statute-California Coastal Act PRC §30000 et seq. (not applicable here)
Applicable environmental regulator-Santa Ana RWQCB, South Coast AQMD, CEQA (PRC §21000)
Watershed-Santa Ana River watershed (inland)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Corona FAQ

Does the Coastal Act override local zoning?

Yes. In the coastal zone, Coastal Act policies take precedence and the Coastal Commission can override local approvals on appeal. Local Coastal Programs must be certified by the Commission to delegate primary permit authority.

What activities need a Coastal Development Permit?

Public Resources Code 30106 broadly defines development to include construction, grading, vegetation removal, subdivision, and changes in water access or land use. Most coastal zone activity requires a CDP.

Jurupa Valley FAQ

Do I need a Coastal Development Permit in Jurupa Valley?

No. Jurupa Valley is an inland Inland Empire city — the California Coastal Act and Coastal Commission have no jurisdiction here. Your project is subject to the standard city building, grading, and stormwater permits instead.

What state environmental review applies to my project?

CEQA (California Environmental Quality Act, PRC §21000 et seq.) applies to discretionary city approvals. Construction stormwater, AQMD dust/air, and Santa Ana RWQCB water-quality rules also apply.

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