Industrial and commercial (stationary-source) noise in unincorporated Sonoma County is governed by the General Plan Noise Element's Table NE-2 performance standards, applied through zoning and use-permit review. New sources must not exceed daytime L50 of 50 dBA or nighttime L50 of 45 dBA at an adjacent noise-sensitive property line.
Industrial, manufacturing, quarry and other commercial operations are the 'non-transportation' (stationary) noise sources that Table NE-2 of the General Plan Noise Element is designed to control. Policy NE-1c states that 'the total noise level resulting from new sources shall not exceed the standards in Table NE-2 as measured at the exterior property line of any adjacent noise sensitive land use.' Those standards are a daytime (7 a.m.–10 p.m.) median (L50) of 50 dBA and a nighttime (10 p.m.–7 a.m.) L50 of 45 dBA, with higher allowances for shorter-duration peaks (up to L02 of 65 dBA day / 60 dBA night). The standards are reduced by 5 dBA for simple-tone noise, speech, music or recurring impulsive noises such as pile drivers, and by an additional 5 dBA where the proposed use would exceed the existing ambient level by 10 or more decibels. For discretionary projects involving a significant new noise source, the County may require an acoustical analysis prepared by a qualified consultant and reviewed by Permit Sonoma (Policy NE-1d), and may require ongoing noise monitoring (Policy NE-1m). These rules are implemented chiefly through the Chapter 26 zoning process — zoning designations, use permits and conditions of approval — rather than a separate citable noise ordinance. The General Plan separately notes aggregate (mining) operations are also subject to Aggregate Resources Management plan noise limits.
New or expanding industrial sources that would exceed Table NE-2 at an adjacent noise-sensitive property line can be denied, conditioned, or required to mitigate during zoning/use-permit review by Permit Sonoma. Acoustical analysis and noise monitoring may be required, and permit conditions are enforceable through code enforcement and permit action.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Sonoma County, CA
On County roads in unincorporated Sonoma County, loading and passenger-loading zones are established under Sonoma County Code Sec. 18-3.3 and marked by curb ...
Sonoma County, CA
Sonoma County Code Sec. 18-3.10 prohibits parking any 'oversized vehicle' on a County road or right-of-way for more than six consecutive hours, after which i...
Sonoma County, CA
Fences in unincorporated Sonoma County must meet zoning height limits by yard, sit at least 6 inches outside public rights-of-way and easements, and be measu...
Sonoma County, CA
Residential and K-district fences in unincorporated Sonoma County may use wood, naturalistic composite wood, stone or masonry, stucco/plaster, woven metal or...
Sonoma County, CA
Unincorporated Sonoma County does not set a specific numeric hoarding threshold; California Penal Code Section 597 governs animal cruelty and neglect. Keepin...
Sonoma County, CA
Unincorporated Sonoma County does not have a stand-alone ordinance banning the feeding of wildlife generally, but California regulations control. Title 14 Se...
See how Sonoma County's industrial noise rules stack up against other locations.
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