New commercial and industrial development in unincorporated Santa Cruz County must meet General Plan Table 9-3 stationary-source limits (50 dB Leq / 70 dB max by day; 45 dB Leq / 65 dB max at night) at the receiving property line. Quarry and mining noise is capped at 60 dB for 15 minutes per hour under Chapter 16.54.
Industrial and commercial noise is regulated through County land-use planning rather than a single fixed-decibel ordinance. The County General Plan Noise Element requires that for all new commercial and industrial development which would increase noise above normally acceptable levels, the best available control technologies be used, and 'in no case shall the noise levels exceed the standards of Table 9-3.' Table 9-3 caps stationary noise at the receiving property line: daytime (7 a.m.-10 p.m.) 50 dB hourly Leq and 70 dB maximum (65 dB impulsive); nighttime (10 p.m.-7 a.m.) 45 dB Leq and 65 dB maximum (60 dB impulsive). SCCC Chapter 13.15 (Noise Planning) implements these limits in the permitting process and adds equipment-specific rules: backup generators near homes must be attenuated to a 60 dB exterior maximum (13.15.050), and air-conditioning/mechanical units within 100 feet of sleeping areas may not exceed 60 dB (units installed before the chapter's effective date) or 55 dB (units installed after) at the neighboring property line (13.15.060). For extractive uses, the General Plan limits quarry and mining noise to a maximum 60 dB at the property boundary for a cumulative 15 minutes per hour, with special standards in SCCC Chapter 16.54 Mining Regulations. Heavy industry is minimal in the county since the CEMEX cement plant ceased cement production in 2010.
New industrial/commercial projects exceeding Table 9-3 face conditions of approval, required mitigation, or permit denial. Operating equipment (generators, A/C units) over the 13.15 limits, or quarry noise over the 60 dB cap, can trigger code-compliance enforcement and permit-condition penalties.
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