100 local rules on file ยท Pop. 36 ยท Inyo County
Showing ordinances that apply to Darwin, CA
Darwin is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 36 in Inyo County, California. Because Darwin is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Inyo County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Inyo County may have different rules.
Unincorporated Inyo County has no countywide residential quiet-hours ordinance for private property. Defined quiet hours exist only in county parks and campgrounds under Inyo County Code Chapter 12.16: 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. daily, except Tecopa Hot Springs Park (8 p.m. to 8 a.m.). Nighttime noise elsewhere is addressed through nuisance enforcement and California Penal Code 415.
Inyo County has no dedicated ordinance setting allowed hours for residential construction noise in unincorporated areas. Building work is governed by permit and zoning rules (Title 18), not a noise-hours rule. Disruptive construction noise is addressed through general nuisance enforcement (Title 22) and California Penal Code 415. No specific start/stop times or decibel limits are set in the County Code.
Inyo County sets no numeric decibel limits for industrial noise but controls it qualitatively through zoning. Title 18 restricts uses that create objectionable noise, vibration, glare or odor, and intensive or industrial uses generally require a conditional use permit so the Planning Commission can impose noise conditions. The General Plan Noise Element guides land-use compatibility.
Inyo County does regulate barking dogs. Under County Code Chapter 8.20, in designated densely populated areas dogs must be leashed and must not habitually make loud noises or constitute a public nuisance. The zoning animal-maintenance rule (Code 18.78.310) also bars any owner from letting an animal obstruct neighbors' comfortable use of property by barking, howling or making other noises.
Inyo County cannot regulate aircraft-in-flight noise - it is preempted by the federal government (FAA), which controls airspace and aircraft operations. California addresses airport noise through the State Aeronautics Act and Title 21 of the Code of Regulations for permitted airports. The County's role is land-use planning around airports and airport operation, not setting in-flight noise limits.
Unincorporated Inyo County has no ordinance specifically regulating leaf blowers - no ban, no hour restrictions, and no decibel cap in the County Code. Leaf-blower noise that disturbs neighbors is handled under general nuisance enforcement (Title 22) or California Penal Code 415. California's statewide phase-out of new gas leaf blowers is a product-sales rule, not a county ordinance.
Unincorporated Inyo County has no standalone amplified-sound permit ordinance for private property, but County Code 12.16.110 prohibits disturbing the peace by loud or unusual noise in county parks. Off park property, amplified music that disturbs others is handled as a nuisance (Title 22) or under California Penal Code 415. Larger events on public land may require use permits.
Vehicle noise in unincorporated Inyo County is governed mainly by California state law, not a county ordinance. The Vehicle Code requires an adequate muffler (VEH 27150) and prohibits modified exhaust that amplifies noise (VEH 27151), with in-use highway limits in VEH 23130. The County's park code (12.16.110) also bars disturbing the peace with automobile horns and noise-making devices.
Unincorporated Inyo County sets no numeric decibel (dBA) noise limits in its Code. Noise is regulated qualitatively - as a loud or unusual noise disturbing the peace (park code 12.16.110) or as objectionable noise from a use (zoning Ch. 18.78). The decibel standards that apply locally come from California state law, chiefly vehicles and permitted airports.
Unincorporated Inyo County has no dedicated outdoor-music ordinance for private property. In county parks, County Code 12.16.110 bars disturbing the peace by loud or unusual noise, and quiet hours apply (10 p.m.-8 a.m., 8 p.m. at Tecopa Hot Springs). Outdoor music elsewhere is handled as a nuisance (Title 22) or under Penal Code 415; public-land events may need permits.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Inyo County ordinances.