San Bernardino County is entirely inland - Mojave Desert, Inland Empire, and the San Bernardino Mountains - with no coastline and no California Coastal Commission jurisdiction. The relevant program is the Floodplain Safety (FP) Overlay in Title 8, Section 82.14, plus the Floodplain Administrator duties in Section 86.04, requiring a permit before any development in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area or designated desert wash.
San Bernardino County has no Pacific shoreline, so the California Coastal Act and Coastal Commission permits do not apply. The inland equivalent is the Floodplain Safety (FP) Overlay in Title 8 (Development Code) Chapter 82.14, originally adopted by Ordinance 4046 (April 8, 2008) and amended by Ordinances 4251 and 4254 (effective August 7 and August 21, 2014). Section 82.14.050 sets development standards for projects within FP1 and FP2 Floodplain Safety Review Areas, requiring that fill and pad elevations be certified to meet or exceed the applicable Floodplain Safety elevation and that the cumulative effect of development not increase the base flood water-surface elevation at any point. In Zone A the lowest floor must be at least 2 feet above the natural highest adjacent ground; in Zone AE it must be at least 1 foot above the base flood elevation; in Zone AO it must be at least 1 foot above the mapped shallow-flood depth. Section 86.04.010 makes Public Works the Floodplain Administrator. Floodway encroachments require an engineered HEC-RAS no-rise certification by a registered civil engineer. Many alluvial fans and desert washes (Mojave River, Cajon Wash, Lytle Creek, Yucaipa Creek) are mapped SFHAs with active flood control easements.
Construction, grading, fill, manufactured-home placement, fences, or accessory structures in a FEMA SFHA without a Title 8 floodplain development permit can trigger NFIP non-compliance findings, Land Use Services stop-work orders, mandatory removal or elevation, civil penalties under the Development Code, and loss of federal flood insurance.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
San Bernardino County, CA
Motor-vehicle noise on roads in unincorporated San Bernardino County is governed mainly by the California Vehicle Code, which the state controls: every vehic...
San Bernardino County, CA
Curb colors in unincorporated San Bernardino County follow California Vehicle Code Section 21458, which defines red (no stopping), yellow (freight/passenger ...
San Bernardino County, CA
San Bernardino County Development Code Section 83.11.090 requires off-street loading spaces for institutional, commercial, industrial and special uses. Each ...
San Bernardino County, CA
Unincorporated San Bernardino County does not have a single dedicated 'oversized vehicle' street ordinance. Large and heavy vehicles are instead controlled b...
San Bernardino County, CA
The County Development Code dictates both permitted and prohibited fence materials in the unincorporated area. Required separation and right-of-way walls mus...
San Bernardino County, CA
Backyard composting is allowed and encouraged in unincorporated San Bernardino County. Under California's SB 1383, residents in the mandatory-collection area...
See how San Bernardino County's coastal development rules stack up against other locations.
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