Aircraft noise is governed by the FAA, not Santa Cruz County; flight paths are set federally. No commercial airport lies within the unincorporated county, and the sole general-aviation field, Watsonville Municipal Airport, is in the City of Watsonville. The County addresses aircraft noise only through land-use compatibility planning around the 60-65 CNEL contours.
Aircraft operations and in-flight noise are regulated by the Federal Aviation Administration, which preempts local noise control. The County General Plan states flight paths 'are determined by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)' and uses California's CNEL descriptor for land-use compatibility; the state residential compatibility criterion is 65 dB CNEL. The County itself has no commercial airport in its unincorporated area, and the only general-aviation airport, Watsonville Municipal Airport, sits within the City of Watsonville at the boundary of the unincorporated area; the 65 CNEL contour is mostly within airport property but encroaches into some residential areas north and west. Because the County cannot regulate aircraft directly, its General Plan policies (Objective 9.5, Aircraft Noise) focus on land use: it discourages new residential and noise-sensitive development where existing or future aircraft noise exceeds 65 CNEL/Ldn, and requires development proposed within the 60 CNEL/Ldn contour to mitigate interior noise to 45 CNEL/Ldn or less and limit the maximum noise from a single overflight to 50 dB or less. Aircraft from airports in other counties also overfly Santa Cruz County, but at residential receptors those levels are below the state 65 dB CNEL standard. Detailed airport land-use compatibility policies are in the General Plan Land Use Element, Section 2.25.
The County cannot cite aircraft for noise; in-flight noise complaints go to the FAA and the airport operator (Watsonville Municipal Airport / its land-use compatibility process). The County's role is limited to land-use conditions on new development within the airport noise contours.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.36.010 defines the curb colors used in unincorporated Santa Cruz County: red means no stopping/standing/parking, green a 20-minute limit, yellow a 30-...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In unincorporated Santa Cruz County, SCCC 9.36.010 sets curb-color loading rules: yellow curbs are commercial loading zones limited to 30 minutes, white curb...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In county-owned off-street lots, SCCC 9.36.070(16) limits parking in spaces marked 'electric vehicle charging only' to a maximum of three hours. Statewide, C...
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.70.610(C) bars parking a vehicle more than six feet tall, including loaded sideboards or trailer contents, within 100 feet of any County-maintained ro...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Beyond height, fences in unincorporated Santa Cruz County must preserve sight distance at driveways and intersections, keep corner sight clearance triangles ...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Retaining walls in unincorporated Santa Cruz County fall under the same yard height rules as fences (SCCC 13.10.525) and are measured the same way. A buildin...
See how Santa Cruz County's aircraft noise rules stack up against other locations.
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