Unincorporated Santa Cruz County has no separate numeric 'vacant-lot' ordinance; vacant and unimproved parcels are kept up through the County's nuisance-abatement code (Ch. 1.14) and, in the State Responsibility Area, California defensible-space law (PRC 4291), which requires hazardous vegetation clearance around improved buildings.
Santa Cruz County does not publish a stand-alone vacant-lot maintenance ordinance with its own fixed standards for unincorporated areas. Instead, problems on vacant or unimproved parcels, such as accumulated debris, dumping, and overgrown vegetation, are addressed under the general nuisance-abatement framework of County Code Chapter 1.14. Any condition that violates the County Code may be declared a public nuisance and abated by the County; an enforcing officer can issue a written abatement order (generally 10 days, or 48 hours for an immediate threat), and abatement costs are recovered through the property tax bill. For fire-hazard vegetation, the controlling rules come largely from California state law rather than a unique county grass standard. Most of unincorporated Santa Cruz County lies within the State Responsibility Area (SRA), where California Public Resources Code Section 4291 requires owners of parcels with improved buildings to maintain 100 feet of defensible space, including cutting annual grasses to a maximum height of four inches. Truly vacant, unimproved lots without structures are not directly covered by PRC 4291's structure-based clearance, but the County and local fire agencies can still treat overgrown brush, weeds, and dead vegetation as a fire or public-health nuisance and order abatement. Owners should also keep vacant lots free of illegal dumping, which is separately prohibited and may be cited.
Debris, dumping, or hazardous vegetation on a vacant lot can be declared a nuisance under Chapter 1.14 and abated by the County at the owner's expense; near structures, PRC 4291 defensible-space violations carry separate state penalties.
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