Owners of vacant lots in unincorporated San Bernardino County must abate fire hazards under County Code Sections 23.0301-23.0319: weeds and grasses kept below four inches, dead vegetation and combustible debris removed, and defensible space maintained. The County's seasonal Fire Hazard Abatement Program inspects vacant lots and bills owners who fail to clear them.
Under San Bernardino County Code Sections 23.0301 through 23.0319, every owner and person in control of land in the unincorporated area must abate fire hazards and hazardous trees from the land and from adjoining sidewalks, parkways, and easements. The County's Fire Hazard Abatement Program, run by Land Use Services Code Enforcement, requires weeds and grasses to be kept below four inches at all times and combustible debris and dead vegetation removed. County guidance states flammable vegetation within 30 feet of any structure (and 10 feet from a roadway or driveway) must be cleared, and the program references 100 feet of defensible space around structures. Seasonal inspections begin in spring and cover unincorporated areas plus vacant lots in and near certain cities. If an Abatement Notice and Order is issued, the owner generally has a 30-day grace period to clear the hazard. If the owner does not comply, the County can abate the hazard and bill the owner; published fees include a $100 administrative citation, a $100 appeal filing fee (refunded if the appeal succeeds), and County abatement labor billed at a maximum of $627.00 per hour plus a $76.00 administrative fee, with late, lien, and warrant fees if charges go unpaid. Vacant-lot blight (dumped trash and debris) is separately enforceable as a public nuisance.
Failure to clear weeds, brush, and debris after a 30-day Notice and Order to Abate allows the County to perform the work and bill the owner; unpaid charges accrue late fees and can become a lien on the property.
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