SB 1383 requires every California resident and business to separate food scraps and yard waste from trash, with universal collection or on-site composting.
Public Resources Code sections 42649.8-42649.87 and CalRecycle regulations under SB 1383 set a 75 percent reduction target for organic waste landfilling. Every jurisdiction must provide three-stream collection or approved alternatives, and residents must subscribe to organics service or self-haul or compost on site. Backyard composting remains permitted. Cities may not opt out, though they choose enforcement timing. Edible food generators must also donate surplus food to recovery organizations.
Civil penalties up to $10,000 per violation per day under Public Resources Code 42652.5; cities must adopt enforcement programs.
Tulare County, CA
Tulare County Ordinance Code Part 4, Chapter 7 (Control of Animals) defines an Animal Nuisance to include a chronic, continuous excessively loud or disturbin...
Tulare County, CA
Unincorporated Tulare County has no stand-alone quiet-hours ordinance with set decibel limits or numeric night-time cutoffs. Noise is regulated through the C...
Tulare County, CA
Unincorporated Tulare County regulates parking on public roads under Part 7, Chapter 19 (Regulations Concerning Streets and Highways) and California Vehicle ...
Tulare County, CA
Tulare County is one of California's leading agricultural counties, and the Tulare County Zoning Ordinance broadly permits chickens, roosters, cattle, sheep,...
Tulare County, CA
Tulare County Ordinance Code Part 4, Chapter 7 (Control of Animals) requires dogs in unincorporated Tulare County to be under the immediate physical control ...
Tulare County, CA
Tulare County Ordinance Code Part 4, Chapter 11 (Fire Hazardous Weeds and Rubbish) requires property owners to maintain weeds and grass at no more than 3 inc...
See how Tulare's composting rules stack up against other locations.
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