Tree removal permit rules in Santa Cruz County, CA β sometimes called heritage tree, protected tree, or street tree ordinances β list which trees require a permit before you can cut them down.
SCCC Chapter 16.34 (Significant Trees Protection) protects trees in the Coastal Zone of Santa Cruz County. Any tree at least 20 inches d.b.h. (about 5 ft circumference), or a sprout clump of five or more stems each over 12 inches d.b.h., or a group of five or more trees each over 12 inches d.b.h. on one parcel, is a 'significant tree' and may not be removed without a permit.
Santa Cruz County Code Chapter 16.34 (Significant Trees Protection) regulates tree removal in the County's Coastal Zone, which extends roughly five miles inland from the Pacific along the North Coast and inland along Highway 1 corridors. Within the Urban Services Line or Rural Services Line, a 'significant tree' is any tree at least 20 inches d.b.h. (diameter at breast height - about 5 feet circumference), any sprout clump of five or more stems each over 12 inches d.b.h., or any group of five or more trees on one parcel each over 12 inches d.b.h. No person may remove, cut down, trim more than one-third of the green foliage, poison, or otherwise kill a significant tree in the Coastal Zone without a Significant Tree Removal Approval under SCCC Chapter 18.10 (Level II permit). Acceptable grounds include necessity to protect health/safety/welfare, restoration of native vegetation per a County-approved plan, and removal that will not degrade scenic resources or trigger adverse environmental impacts. Outside the Coastal Zone, tree removal is regulated indirectly via riparian setbacks (Chapter 16.30), CEQA, and Habitat Protection (Chapter 16.32). Coastal redwoods, oaks, and bays are common protected species.
Unauthorized removal of a significant tree is a misdemeanor under SCCC Title 1 and can trigger restoration/replanting orders, Coastal Commission enforcement, and civil penalties. In the Coastal Zone, the California Coastal Commission has separate enforcement authority and can impose its own fines up to $15,000 per day under Cal. Public Resources Code 30820-30822.
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