The City of Bellflower sets an explicit limit: under Bellflower Municipal Code Chapter 8.36 (Public Nuisances), lawns with grass in excess of six inches are a public nuisance. Dead, decayed, or overgrown vegetation that harbors vermin, creates a fire hazard, or diminishes neighboring property values is likewise prohibited. Enforcement is by the City, not Los Angeles County.
Bellflower is an incorporated city, so overgrown-grass rules come from the City of Bellflower's own municipal code, not from Los Angeles County's weed program (which covers only unincorporated areas). Unlike many cities that use only a vague 'nuisance' standard, Bellflower publishes a specific number. Municipal Code Section 8.36.030 enumerates conditions declared public nuisances, and subsection (A)(11) addresses overgrown vegetation that harbors rats, vermin, and insects, creates or promotes a fire hazard, or causes a detriment to neighboring properties or a diminution in property values. The code lists 'Lawns with grass in excess of six inches' and plant material not maintained in a neat, orderly, and healthy manner among those nuisance conditions, and it also flags 'Tree branches or other vegetation within five feet of the rooftop of a structure so as to facilitate rodent or animal access thereto.' Section 8.36.020 broadly defines a public nuisance as anything injurious or detrimental to health, safety, or welfare, or offensive to the senses. Code Enforcement, established to enforce the Bellflower Municipal Code's property-maintenance and residential standards, inspects and issues notices for grass and weed violations through the Chapter 8.36 nuisance-abatement process. Because Bellflower is a flat, fully urbanized city, the emphasis is on neighborhood appearance, vermin, and fire safety rather than wildland brush clearance.
Letting lawn grass exceed six inches, or allowing dead, overgrown, or rodent-harboring vegetation, is a public nuisance under Bellflower Municipal Code 8.36.030. Code Enforcement issues a notice to abate; if the owner does not comply, the City can abate the nuisance and recover its costs (including as a lien or special assessment) under the City's nuisance-abatement and cost-recovery provisions.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Bellflower's Juvenile Curfew (Chapter 9.20) makes it unlawful for any minor under 18 to loiter in public streets, sidewalks, parks, playgrounds, or other pub...
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Bellflower controls light trespass through its zoning glare-and-shielding provisions rather than a numeric light-trespass ordinance. Exterior lighting must b...
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Bellflower has no comprehensive dark-sky lighting ordinance. Instead, lighting is controlled through glare-and-shielding requirements written into individual...
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Bellflower requires a Yard Sale Permit (per BMC Section 17.16.020) before holding a garage or yard sale; no more than two permits are issued per parcel per y...
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Bellflower's Sign Regulations (Chapter 17.68) treat campaign signs as temporary election-season signs. They may be displayed no more than 45 days before and ...
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Bellflower has no separate tiny-house ordinance. A tiny home on a permanent foundation can qualify as an accessory dwelling unit under Chapter 17.17, while m...
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