Los Angeles County enforces shoreline management regulations for its extensive coastline and waterways in unincorporated areas. Development within the coastal zone requires compliance with the California Coastal Act and the county's Local Coastal Program. Projects near beaches, harbors, and coastal bluffs are subject to stringent setback, access, and environmental review requirements administered by the Department of Regional Planning.
Los Angeles County's shoreline management is governed by the California Coastal Act and the county's certified Local Coastal Program (LCP). Development within the Coastal Zone of unincorporated areas requires a Coastal Development Permit. The county's LCP establishes policies for protecting shoreline resources including beaches, wetlands, coastal bluffs, and marine habitats. Setback requirements vary by location but are designed to protect coastal access and prevent development from encroaching on dynamic shoreline areas. Blufftop development is subject to geotechnical review and setback standards based on erosion rates. The county also manages development along inland waterways including the Los Angeles River and its tributaries through stream protection ordinances and setback requirements. Projects near waterways may require compliance with the Clean Water Act, California Fish and Game Code, and the county's Low Impact Development standards. The Department of Regional Planning coordinates with the California Coastal Commission on permit appeals and policy consistency.
Violations of coastal development regulations may result in enforcement action by both Los Angeles County and the California Coastal Commission. Penalties can include fines, required restoration of affected areas, and removal of unpermitted development. The Coastal Commission has independent enforcement authority.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Carson, CA
California AB 1164 (Gov Code §53087.5) preempts cities from banning artificial turf on residential property and requires that synthetic turf be treated as a ...
Carson, CA
Carson has no ordinance mandating native plant species, but the Model Water Efficient Landscape Ordinance (MWELO, CCR Title 23 §§490–495) effectively favors ...
Carson, CA
California's Rainwater Capture Act of 2012 (Water Code §§10573–10574) authorizes residential and commercial property owners to install rooftop rainwater capt...
Carson, CA
Overgrown weeds, rubbish, and dry vegetation on Carson properties are abated under LA County Code Title 11 Ch. 11.36 (weed abatement) administered by LA Coun...
Carson, CA
Carson does not appear to have a published municipal-code prohibition on drone use in its city parks, but recreational operators must still comply with FAA r...
Carson, CA
Commercial drone work in Carson is governed by FAA 14 CFR Part 107 — operators must hold a Remote Pilot Certificate, register the drone, comply with Remote I...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Los Angeles County.
See how Carson's shoreline management rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.