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🌳 Tree Protection/Tree Removal Permits

Tree Removal Permits: El Monte vs South Gate

How do tree removal permits rules compare between El Monte, CA and South Gate, CA?

El Monte and South Gate have similar restriction levels.

El Monte, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

El Monte requires a tree removal permit from the Economic Development Department (City Arborist) before removing, relocating, severely pruning, or destroying any Protected Tree, including public trees, Heritage Trees, and Native Trees.

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South Gate, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

South Gate Municipal Code Chapter 5.33 (Tree Preservation and Protection) requires a permit from the Director of Public Works before any person may plant, remove, relocate, damage, excessively prune, cut, or encroach into the protected zone of any 'public tree.' A 'public tree' is broadly defined as any plant normally reaching mature heights of 15 feet or more with one-half or more of its trunk or branches on or above public property — which covers all street/parkway trees lining South Gate's ~15,900 parkway-tree urban forest. Private-property trees are not generally regulated by Chapter 5.33 absent a planning condition.

View full South Gate rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactEl MonteSouth Gate
Permit requiredYes — from Economic Development Department / City Arborist-
Code sectionEMMC Chapter 14.03 (Ord. No. 2791, 3-20-2012)-
Permit validity90 days, extendable on request 14 days before expiration-
Routine pruningNo permit if ANSI A300 compliant-
After-the-fact penaltyPermit fee doubled-
Code Section-SGMC Chapter 5.33 — Tree Preservation and Protection
Permit Issuer-Director of Public Works
Applies To-Public trees (street/parkway trees; trees with 1/2+ of trunk on public land)
Pruning Standard-Western Chapter ISA standards required
Insurance-Public liability and property damage insurance required for contractors
Urban Forest Size-~17,500 public trees citywide; ~15,900 along streets

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

El Monte FAQ

Do I need a permit to remove a tree on my private property in El Monte?

Yes, if the tree is a Protected Tree — meaning a public/street tree, a California Native species at or above 8 inches diameter at breast height, or a Heritage Tree (single trunk 36-inch circumference, multi-trunk 75-inch combined circumference, or 35 feet tall). Removal without a permit is a misdemeanor under EMMC §14.03.120.

How long does an El Monte tree removal permit last?

Ninety (90) days from issuance. You must request an extension at least 14 days before it expires per EMMC §14.03.080(D).

What if I cut down a Protected Tree without a permit?

You face up to $1,000 in criminal fines and/or 6 months in jail (EMMC §14.03.120(A)), plus a civil penalty up to $5,000 per tree, doubled permit fees, and may still be required to obtain a retroactive permit and replant at 2:1.

South Gate FAQ

Do I need a permit to remove a tree in my own back yard in South Gate?

Chapter 5.33 regulates 'public trees' — trees with one-half or more of the trunk or branches on or above public property (street parkways, parks, civic facilities). A tree fully on your private property is generally outside Chapter 5.33, but if it overhangs the parkway, was required by a planning/landscape condition of approval, or is a parkway tree in front of your house, you must get a permit from the Public Works Director first.

Can I trim the parkway tree in front of my house?

Not without a permit. SGMC 5.33 prohibits any person other than city staff from pruning, cutting, or encroaching into the protected zone of a public tree without first obtaining a permit from the Director of Public Works. Even minor 'excessive pruning' triggers the civil penalty (full tree restitution value plus install cost).

What if the tree is damaging my sidewalk or sewer line?

Contact South Gate Public Works (323) 563-9500. The city maintains a tree-service schedule for its ~17,500-tree urban forest and can inspect and authorize remediation. Do not remove or root-prune unilaterally — that triggers the Chapter 5.33 civil penalty and possible misdemeanor charge.

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