Military jet noise from NAS Lemoore is the dominant aircraft-noise source in Kings County. It is governed by the Navy's AICUZ program and federal law, not the county code. The county manages compatibility through General Plan CNEL standards and agricultural zoning around the base.
Aircraft noise in Kings County is driven overwhelmingly by Naval Air Station Lemoore, the Navy's master jet base, whose Military Influence Area covers much of the northwest portion of the county. Military aircraft operations are not regulated by the Kings County Code or by the FAA; instead, the Navy manages noise through its Air Installations Compatible Use Zones (AICUZ) program under federal authority, and noise concerns about base operations are directed to the installation rather than to local code enforcement. What the county does control is land use around the base. Per the 2035 General Plan Noise Element, new residential development is prohibited where noise reaches 70 dB CNEL or more, and new homes near the 60 dB CNEL contour require noise insulation to a 45 dB CNEL interior, buyer disclosure of noise conditions, and avigation easements. Much of the land surrounding NAS Lemoore is zoned Exclusive Agriculture (40-acre minimum) specifically to reduce conflicts between jet operations and incompatible uses, and county land-use designations are coordinated to be compatible with the AICUZ. The County Planning Commission acts as the Airport Land Use Commission. So while residents cannot file a noise-ordinance citation over a passing jet, the county's planning rules shape where noise-sensitive development can occur.
There is no county citation for military aircraft noise; it is a federal/Navy matter handled through the AICUZ program and the installation's community channels. The county enforces the General Plan Noise Element compatibility standards (CNEL thresholds, insulation, easements, disclosures) when reviewing and permitting new development near NAS Lemoore through the Community Development Agency.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
kings-county-ca
Kings County implements California's SB 1383 organic-waste law through Code Chapter 13. Most homes and businesses must use the three-container (blue/green/gr...
kings-county-ca
Artificial turf is not banned in unincorporated Kings County, and there is no County synthetic-lawn ordinance. Small ground-level installs generally need no ...
kings-county-ca
Kings County does not mandate native plants and does not prohibit removing or replacing them on private land. For new permitted development, low-water and cl...
kings-county-ca
Rainwater harvesting is legal in California and not prohibited by Kings County. Simple rain barrels and small landscape-irrigation catchment need no County p...
kings-county-ca
Day-to-day outdoor watering limits in unincorporated Kings County are driven mainly by California state rules and your local water provider, not a County lan...
kings-county-ca
Unincorporated Kings County enforces a weed-abatement ordinance (Code Ch. 10, Art. II). It is unlawful to accumulate dry grass, weeds, brush, and other flamm...
See how Kings County's aircraft noise rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.