Trinity County government does not operate a county-wide park system with posted curfew hours; most recreation land is federal (Shasta-Trinity National Forest and Trinity Alps). The main developed park, Lee Fong Park in Weaverville, is run by the Weaverville/Douglas City Parks and Recreation District, a special district, which operates it during daytime hours (about 7 or 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.).
Because all of Trinity County is unincorporated and sparsely populated, there is no countywide county-run parks department setting standard open-and-close hours, and no Trinity County juvenile-curfew ordinance was located in the county code. The bulk of public recreation land in the county is federally managed - the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, the Trinity Alps Wilderness, and the Trinity Lake/Lewiston Lake area - where U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Reclamation rules, not a county curfew, govern use. The principal developed community park, Lee Fong Park off Main Street in Weaverville, is owned and managed by the Weaverville/Douglas City Parks and Recreation District, a special district that is separate from Trinity County government. The district's facility schedule lists operating hours of roughly 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Monday and 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday, and its Lee Fong Park ordinance sets the park's rules; events serving alcohol require an ABC application signed by the Trinity County Sheriff's Office. Day-use hours like these effectively serve as the park's curfew. California Welfare and Institutions Code section 625.5 authorizes counties and cities to adopt juvenile curfew ordinances, and the Trinity County Sheriff's Office provides law enforcement countywide, but no published county-wide minors' curfew ordinance was found. Visitors should confirm specific park hours and any posted rules directly with the recreation district or the managing federal agency.
Because Trinity County itself does not post park curfew hours, enforcement falls to the managing agency: the Weaverville/Douglas City Parks and Recreation District enforces Lee Fong Park's rules and day-use hours, and federal land managers (U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Reclamation) enforce hours and rules on national forest and reservoir lands. Being in a closed facility after hours can lead to trespass or rule-violation enforcement by the responsible agency.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Trinity County has no ordinance banning backyard composting; home composting of yard and food scraps is allowed. California's SB 1383 organic-waste recycling...
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Trinity County has no ordinance prohibiting or specially regulating artificial turf. Synthetic lawns are allowed on residential property, subject only to gen...
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Trinity County does not mandate native-plant landscaping for ordinary homes. However, the county cannabis-cultivation rules (Code Ch. 17.43G) require biologi...
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Trinity County has no ordinance restricting rooftop rainwater harvesting. Capturing rainwater in barrels and cisterns for outdoor, non-potable use is allowed...
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Trinity County has no countywide lawn-watering day/time schedule. Outdoor water use is shaped by the county Water Quality Control Ordinance (Code Ch. 8.60), ...
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Trinity County's Vegetation Management Ordinance (Code Ch. 8.68, Ord. No. 1300) declares excessive dry grass, brush, dead trees and other flammable vegetatio...
See how Trinity County's park curfew rules stack up against other locations.
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