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🌳 Tree Protection/Heritage & Protected Trees

Heritage & Protected Trees: Lancaster vs Los Angeles

How do heritage & protected trees rules compare between Lancaster, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Lancaster and Los Angeles have similar restriction levels.

Lancaster, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Lancaster designates heritage or landmark trees based on size, age, or species. Removal or damage to heritage trees carries significant penalties.

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Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Heavy Restrictions

Los Angeles protects four native species – Oak (Quercus), Western Sycamore, Southern California Black Walnut, and California Bay – with a trunk circumference of four feet or more (roughly 15 inches DBH). Removal, relocation, or damage requires a Board of Public Works permit, an arborist report, and 4:1 replacement.

View full Los Angeles rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactLancasterLos Angeles
DesignationSize, species, or historical-
Typical Size24+ inch trunk diameter-
RemovalCouncil approval required-
TopicHeritage Trees-
DBH threshold-4-foot trunk circumference (~15 inch DBH)
Protected species-Native oak, sycamore, black walnut, bay
Permit-Board of Public Works approval required
Replacement-4:1 ratio with 24-inch box stock
Arborist report-Certified arborist report mandatory

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lancaster FAQ

How is a heritage tree designated?

Based on trunk size (typically 24+ inches), species rarity, age, or historical significance. Residents may nominate trees.

Can I ever remove a heritage tree?

Only with special approval, typically from city council or tree commission. Granted mainly for safety hazards.

Los Angeles FAQ

Can I cut a big oak on my own LA property?

No. If the oak is a native Quercus species with a trunk 4 feet around or larger, you need a Board of Public Works permit and arborist report before any removal or major pruning.

What counts as a heritage tree in LA?

LA uses "protected tree" rather than heritage. The four protected natives (oak, sycamore, walnut, bay) at 4-foot circumference qualify. Non-native species are not protected at the city level.

What if I damage roots during construction?

Encroachment into the 5-foot protected zone around the dripline – including grading, trenching, or hardscape – triggers permit review and may require monitoring by a certified arborist.

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