Mariposa County is entirely unincorporated, and its parks (e.g., Mariposa Park, Coulterville Park, Hornitos Park, Darrah Park, Midpines Park, Red Cloud Park, Woodland Park) are managed by the County Public Works Parks & Recreation Division. No published county-code park-curfew ordinance was located; posted hours and use rules are set administratively by Parks & Recreation.
Mariposa County's Public Works Parks and Recreation Division manages county park and recreation facilities, including Mariposa Park, Coulterville Park, Hornitos Park, Darrah Park, Midpines Park, Red Cloud Park, Woodland Park, and the Arts Park, plus several halls and pools. We did not locate a specific Mariposa County Code chapter establishing park hours or a park curfew published online; the County Code is hosted at mariposa.municipalcodeonline.com but no park-curfew section surfaced in available sources. In practice, county park hours, overnight-use limits, and conduct rules are established and posted administratively by the Parks & Recreation Division rather than by a stand-alone codified curfew, and individual parks may post their own signed hours. Visitors should follow posted signage at each park and contact Parks & Recreation at (209) 966-2498 to confirm hours, reservation rules, and any overnight or after-hours restrictions before a visit. Note that nearby Yosemite National Park and other federal/state lands have their own separate hours and regulations. California also has no single statewide local-park curfew; juvenile-curfew rules, where they exist, are adopted locally and enforced by the Sheriff. Because the County has no incorporated cities, there are no separate city park curfews to consider.
After-hours use or violations of posted park rules are enforced by the Mariposa County Sheriff's Office and Parks & Recreation staff. Penalties depend on the specific posted rule or any applicable county ordinance; contact Parks & Recreation or the Sheriff's Office for current enforcement details.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Composting in Mariposa County is shaped by California's organics-recycling law SB 1383, which requires diverting organic waste from landfills. Backyard home ...
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Mariposa County has no ordinance specifically permitting or banning artificial turf. Synthetic lawns are generally allowed on private property and are not pr...
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Mariposa County encourages native and drought-tolerant landscaping rather than restricting it. General Plan Implementation Measure 11-4a(4) directs the Count...
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Mariposa County has no ordinance prohibiting rainwater harvesting, and California law broadly allows residential rooftop rainwater capture. The County's Gene...
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Mariposa County Code Chapter 17.36 requires all landscaping to comply with California's Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (CCR Title 23, Section 2.7)...
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Because all of Mariposa County is a State Responsibility Area, weed and brush abatement is driven by California's defensible-space law (PRC 4291) requiring 1...
See how Mariposa County's park curfew rules stack up against other locations.
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