Heritage & Protected Trees: Long Beach vs South Gate
How do heritage & protected trees rules compare between Long Beach, CA and South Gate, CA?
South Gate has fewer restrictions than Long Beach.
Long Beach, CA
Los Angeles County
Long Beach protects heritage and street trees under LBMC Ch. 14.28. Removing protected trees without a permit is illegal with heavy fines or jail. In the Coastal Zone, tree removal requires a Coastal Zone permit and 2:1 replacement ratio.
View full Long Beach rules →South Gate, CA
Los Angeles County
South Gate does not have a dedicated 'heritage tree' or 'landmark tree' designation in its Municipal Code — unlike Sacramento (Ch. 12.56), Pasadena, or Pacifica which formally protect oaks, sycamores, or trees of historic interest by species and size. Instead, South Gate's Chapter 5.33 treats ALL 'public trees' (any plant reaching 15 ft mature height with half or more of its trunk on public land) as protected — effectively conferring heritage-grade protection on every one of the city's ~15,900 parkway trees regardless of species or age. There is no separate private-property heritage tree registry.
View full South Gate rules →Key Facts Comparison
| Fact | Long Beach | South Gate |
|---|---|---|
| Code | LBMC Ch. 14.28 | - |
| Penalty | Heavy fines or jail | - |
| Coastal Zone | 2:1 replacement ratio | - |
| Protected | Street trees and heritage trees | - |
| Dedicated Heritage Tree Code | - | None — uniform protection via SGMC 5.33 |
| Protected Specimens | - | All public trees ≥15 ft mature height |
| Replacement Discretion | - | Director of Public Works sets size, species, condition |
| Valuation Method | - | WCISA Trunk Formula Method (industry standard) |
| State Framework | - | PRC §4799.06–4799.12 California Urban Forestry Act |
Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.
Long Beach 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.
South Gate FAQ
Does South Gate have a 'heritage tree' or 'landmark tree' list?
No — South Gate's Municipal Code (Chapter 5.33) does not designate individual heritage trees by species or size the way Sacramento or Pasadena do. Instead, every public tree (any plant reaching 15 ft mature height with half or more of its trunk on public land) is protected uniformly. A mature signature parkway oak gets the same Chapter 5.33 permit-and-restitution protection as a recently planted street tree.
Is the large old tree in front of my house a 'heritage tree'?
If it is in the parkway strip (between sidewalk and curb), it is a public tree protected by SGMC 5.33 — you cannot prune or remove it without a Public Works permit, and its valuation upon unauthorized removal will be calculated under the WCISA Trunk Formula Method, which produces very high restitution figures for mature specimens.
Can I get a special designation for an old tree on my private property?
South Gate has no private-property heritage tree registry. State law (PRC §4799.06+) authorizes but does not require cities to adopt one. Contact Public Works (323) 563-9500 if you want to inquire about voluntary preservation or species inclusion in the Street Tree Master Plan.
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