Sonoma County Code Chapter 18, Article IV declares abandoned, wrecked, dismantled, or inoperative vehicles on private or public property in the unincorporated area a public nuisance subject to abatement, under authority of California Vehicle Code Sec. 22660. Permit Sonoma Code Enforcement administers a free junk-vehicle removal program. Vehicles on public roads are handled by CHP and the Sheriff.
California Vehicle Code Sec. 22660 authorizes a county to adopt an ordinance establishing procedures for the abatement and removal, as public nuisances, of abandoned, wrecked, dismantled, or inoperative vehicles, and for recovery of administration and removal costs. Sonoma County exercises this authority through Chapter 18, Article IV of the County Code ('Abandoned, Wrecked, Dismantled or Inoperative Vehicles'), which covers such vehicles on private or public property in the unincorporated area. Permit Sonoma's Code Enforcement Division administers the abatement program and runs a voluntary, free junk-vehicle removal service: property owners and occupants in unincorporated areas can have non-operable passenger cars, pickups, SUVs, and vans towed away at no cost and without the usual DMV paperwork, provided the owner gives written permission and understands the vehicle will be dismantled (recreational-vehicle storage yards and auto repair shops are excluded). Requests are submitted through the County's SoCo Connect system. The County's jurisdiction is split by location: Permit Sonoma handles abandoned vehicles on private property, privately maintained roads, and County-owned property in unincorporated areas; abandoned vehicles on public streets and highways should be reported to the California Highway Patrol; and vehicles within any incorporated city are handled by that city's police department.
An abandoned, wrecked, dismantled, or inoperative vehicle on private or public property in the unincorporated area constitutes a public nuisance and may be abated and removed under Chapter 18, Article IV and Vehicle Code Sec. 22660, with the County able to recover its administration and removal costs from the responsible party.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Sonoma County, CA
Outdoor music, concerts and special events in unincorporated Sonoma County are regulated through the use-permit and special-event review process rather than ...
Sonoma County, CA
Sonoma County has no enforceable countywide decibel ordinance for everyday noise. The General Plan Noise Element Table NE-2 sets exterior performance standar...
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 abandoned vehicles rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.