Showing ordinances that apply to Loma Mar, CA
Loma Mar is an unincorporated community (population 134) in San Mateo County, California. Because Loma Mar is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, San Mateo County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The dark sky rules rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Unincorporated San Mateo County regulates outdoor lighting through zoning standards requiring fully shielded (full-cutoff) fixtures, downward direction of light, and control of glare and light trespass onto neighboring properties. Title 24 Part 6 (California Energy Code ยง140.7) also caps outdoor lighting power density by zone. Coastal Zone and Scenic Road corridors impose additional lighting restrictions to protect nighttime views and sensitive habitat. Residential properties must not cast light onto neighboring dwellings.
Outdoor lighting standards in unincorporated San Mateo County combine zoning requirements (glare control and light trespass prohibitions in the zoning regulations), California Energy Code Title 24 Part 6 ยง140.7 (outdoor lighting power density caps by lighting zone), and LCP policies in the Coastal Zone (dark skies and habitat protection, especially in Pescadero/Aรฑo Nuevo where seabird disorientation is a concern). Key requirements: exterior lighting must use fully shielded (full-cutoff or FCU) fixtures that emit no light above the horizontal plane through the fixture; light must be directed downward; light trespass onto adjacent residential property measured at the property line should generally be less than 0.5 foot-candles (industry standard); LED color temperature should be 3000K or lower to reduce sky glow and impact on wildlife; motion-sensor security lighting is encouraged over continuous illumination. Commercial parking lot lighting must meet Title 24 power-density limits (LZ1-LZ4 zoning). In the Coastal Zone, lighting near seabird nesting areas (Pescadero Marsh, Aรฑo Nuevo) must be amber/red-shifted or shielded to prevent nocturnal disorientation of newly fledged seabirds. Streetlights in unincorporated areas are typically LED conversions at 3000K operated by the County or PG&E.
Non-compliant new fixture: code correction notice with 30-day deadline, then $100-$500 per ยง1.04. Commercial violation affecting neighbors: Planning enforcement plus potential conditional-use permit modification. Coastal Zone lighting violating ESHA protection: CDP violation $1,000-$15,000/day. Construction without Title 24 compliance: failed final inspection.
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