Backyard composting is allowed and encouraged in unincorporated Santa Cruz County. Separately, California's SB 1383 requires organic-waste recycling: residents in the mandatory-collection area of the unincorporated County must subscribe to organics (Green Cart) service for food scraps and yard trimmings, which are composted at the Buena Vista Landfill. SB 1383 is a state mandate the County implements.
Home composting of yard trimmings and food scraps is permitted and promoted as a conservation practice; the County does not prohibit backyard compost bins for normal residential use. The significant regulation here is state-driven: California Senate Bill 1383 (effective January 1, 2022) requires every jurisdiction to provide and require organic-waste collection to cut methane from landfilled organics. In the unincorporated County, GreenWaste Recovery provides a source-separated organics stream (Green Cart) for food scraps and yard trimmings, and residents within the mandatory collection-service area are required to subscribe to collection that complies with SB 1383. Collected organics are composted at the County's Buena Vista Landfill. Residents must sort organic material into the correct containers; contamination of carts is discouraged. Households that compost or digest a substantial portion of their own organic waste at home may qualify for a state self-hauler/back-haul or waiver path, but the baseline rule is mandatory organics service. Yard debris generated from defensible-space and tree work can go to the green cart or be self-hauled to the landfill (oak material with sudden oak death should go to the landfill, not other properties, per County guidance).
SB 1383 compliance is enforced at the jurisdiction level; the County (through its hauler and Zero Waste program) can require corrective action for improperly sorted or non-subscribed organic waste, and the state can penalize jurisdictions. There is no penalty for legitimate backyard composting.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.36.010 defines the curb colors used in unincorporated Santa Cruz County: red means no stopping/standing/parking, green a 20-minute limit, yellow a 30-...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In unincorporated Santa Cruz County, SCCC 9.36.010 sets curb-color loading rules: yellow curbs are commercial loading zones limited to 30 minutes, white curb...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In county-owned off-street lots, SCCC 9.36.070(16) limits parking in spaces marked 'electric vehicle charging only' to a maximum of three hours. Statewide, C...
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.70.610(C) bars parking a vehicle more than six feet tall, including loaded sideboards or trailer contents, within 100 feet of any County-maintained ro...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Beyond height, fences in unincorporated Santa Cruz County must preserve sight distance at driveways and intersections, keep corner sight clearance triangles ...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Retaining walls in unincorporated Santa Cruz County fall under the same yard height rules as fences (SCCC 13.10.525) and are measured the same way. A buildin...
See how Santa Cruz County's composting rules stack up against other locations.
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