Marin County Fire Code (Ord. 3775) § 325.5 requires every parcel to be kept free of weeds, dead trees, and other hazardous vegetation that constitute a fire hazard. The Fire Marshal can order tall grass and brush mowed, cleared, or removed.
There is no Marin County Code section that imposes a single uniform 'grass-must-be-X-inches-tall' rule countywide. Instead, the operative standard is Marin County Fire Code Ordinance No. 3775, § 325.5 (Abatement of Hazard) and § 325.5.1 (Weeds, dead trees and rubbish to be destroyed or removed), which makes it unlawful for any person with an ownership or possessory interest in a parcel to allow hazardous rubbish, weeds, trees, or other vegetation that constitutes a fire hazard. § 325.6 (General abatement requirements) and § 325.9 (Abatement procedures) authorize the County fire code official to order abatement of weeds, trees, and rubbish, including mailing notice to the property owner and abating the nuisance at the owner's expense if not addressed. In practice, fire agencies (Marin County Fire, Southern Marin Fire, Central Marin Fire, Ross Valley Fire) treat dry grass over 4 inches near structures as a fire hazard requiring mowing. State law (Public Resources Code § 4291) separately requires 100 ft of defensible space around structures in State Responsibility Areas, including removing dead/dying plant material.
Failure to abate after notice from the Fire Marshal triggers cost-recovery abatement: the Fire Department clears the parcel and bills the owner for clearing costs plus an administrative fee, which may be recorded as a lien against the property. Violations may also be charged as infractions or misdemeanors under the Marin County Fire Code and Title 1 of the County Code.
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