Kings County's Code of Ordinances has no dedicated EV-charging parking ordinance. EV charging stations are permitted and reviewed through the County's building permit process under the California Building/Green Building standards, and state law (CVC 22511) governs reserved EV-charging parking spaces.
A search of the Kings County Code of Ordinances does not reveal a County-specific ordinance dedicated to electric-vehicle charging or to reserved EV-charging parking spaces. Installing an EV charger at a home or business in the unincorporated area is handled as an electrical/building permit through the Kings County Community Development Agency, which administers the County's adopted building codes (the California Building Standards Code, including the California Electrical Code and CALGreen). California has streamlined EV-charging-station permitting requirements that apply to counties, so the County reviews charger installations under those state-driven standards rather than a local parking ordinance. For the use of designated EV-charging parking stalls, the governing law is California Vehicle Code section 22511, which restricts parking in spaces designated for electric vehicle charging to vehicles that are connected for charging, and allows removal of vehicles that block those stalls. Because the County has not layered a local rule on top, residents and businesses should look to the building-permit process for installation and to CVC 22511 for the right to use and protect marked charging stalls. New developments' charging-space provision is also shaped by CALGreen requirements applied at plan check.
Installing a charger without the required electrical/building permit is a code violation handled by the Community Development Agency. Misusing a posted EV-charging stall (parking without charging) is enforceable under California Vehicle Code 22511, which can subject the vehicle to citation or removal. County code violations carry $100/$200/$500 administrative fines within a year (Code sec. 1A-3).
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Kings County implements California's SB 1383 organic-waste law through Code Chapter 13. Most homes and businesses must use the three-container (blue/green/gr...
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Artificial turf is not banned in unincorporated Kings County, and there is no County synthetic-lawn ordinance. Small ground-level installs generally need no ...
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Kings County does not mandate native plants and does not prohibit removing or replacing them on private land. For new permitted development, low-water and cl...
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Rainwater harvesting is legal in California and not prohibited by Kings County. Simple rain barrels and small landscape-irrigation catchment need no County p...
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Day-to-day outdoor watering limits in unincorporated Kings County are driven mainly by California state rules and your local water provider, not a County lan...
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Unincorporated Kings County enforces a weed-abatement ordinance (Code Ch. 10, Art. II). It is unlawful to accumulate dry grass, weeds, brush, and other flamm...
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