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🌳 Tree Protection/Heritage & Protected Trees

Heritage & Protected Trees: Livermore vs Oakland

How do heritage & protected trees rules compare between Livermore, CA and Oakland, CA?

Livermore has fewer restrictions than Oakland.

Livermore, CA

Alameda County

Some Restrictions

California provides statewide protections for native oak woodlands and heritage trees through CEQA review, Public Resources Code, and Forest Practice Rules that apply uniformly.

View full Livermore rules β†’

Oakland, CA

Alameda County

Heavy Restrictions

Oakland provides enhanced protection for heritage and significant trees under the Protected Tree Ordinance. Coast live oaks receive species-level protection regardless of size threshold. Large specimen trees on development sites have additional safeguards.

View full Oakland rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLivermoreOakland
CEQA oak rulePRC 21083.4-
Conservation ActPRC 4799.06-4799.12-
Forest Practice ActPRC 4511 et seq.-
Civil penaltyUp to $10,000/day-
Heritage Species-Coast live oak (primary)
Protection Threshold-4 inches DBH for coast live oaks
Development-Must design around protected trees
Construction-Fencing at drip line required
Oak Woodlands-Enhanced attention in hills

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Livermore FAQ

Does California require permits to cut a backyard oak?

Not at the state level for individual residential trees. CEQA oak review applies to discretionary development projects, not routine private removals, though many cities require permits.

What counts as oak woodland under PRC 21083.4?

An oak stand with greater than 10% canopy cover that includes one or more native oak species, as defined by the statute.

Oakland FAQ

What makes a tree a heritage tree in Oakland?

Coast live oaks receive species-level protection at 4 inches DBH. Other large, old, or historically significant trees may receive additional protections during project review.

Must I protect trees during construction?

Yes. Protected trees must have temporary fencing at the drip line during construction. Root cutting, compaction, and grade changes within the protection zone are prohibited.

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