Hospital helipads in Santa Clara County operate under California Department of Public Health licensing and FAA flight rules. SCC Title B governs ground noise but cannot restrict emergency arrivals. Stanford, Valley Medical, and Good Samaritan operate active helipads.
Hospital helipad noise in Santa Clara County is regulated through three layers. The California Department of Public Health licenses hospital helipads under Title 22 building standards. The FAA exempts emergency medical service flights from voluntary noise procedures because of patient transport priority. Santa Clara County Title B limits ground-related helipad noise such as fueling, maintenance, and rotor warm-up but cannot restrict emergency landings. Stanford Hospital, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center (VMC), Good Samaritan San Jose, El Camino Mountain View, and Kaiser Santa Clara operate active helipads serving LifeFlight, CALSTAR REACH, and county sheriff air ambulance. Cities including Palo Alto and Mountain View have approved helipad expansions through conditional use permits with sound-wall and limited-non-emergency-use conditions.
Title B ground violations are infractions with fines $100 to $500. Stanford and Valley Medical helipad CUPs include non-emergency-use restrictions. Violation of CUP conditions triggers code enforcement penalties up to $1,000 per day plus permit revocation.
See how Palo Alto's hospital helipad noise rules stack up against other locations.
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