Unincorporated Sutter County treats overgrown, dead or decayed trees, weeds and vegetation that pose a risk or create blight as a public nuisance (Chapter 1320). Separately, the County Fire Services Manager can order removal of dry grass, brush and weeds that create a fire hazard under the Fire Code.
Sutter County addresses weeds and overgrown vegetation in unincorporated areas through two mechanisms. First, the County Property Nuisance Code (Chapter 1320, Ord. 1684, 2021) Section 1320-90(A)(2) makes it a public nuisance to maintain 'premises on which overgrown, dead or decayed trees, weeds or other vegetation pose a risk of harm to the public, or constitute visual blight or reduce the aesthetic appearance of the neighborhood, or are offensive to the senses, or are detrimental to the use and enjoyment of nearby properties, or reduce nearby property values due to its visibility from the public right-of-way.' The same chapter also requires maintaining landscaping (adequate watering to prevent dead/dying lawns that create fire hazards) and keeping tree clearance of seven feet over sidewalks and 14 feet over streets (1320-90(A)(5)-(6)). Second, the County Fire Code (Section 600-250, Ord. 1703, 2023) authorizes the County Fire Services Manager to clear land or order the removal of 'dry grass, stubble, brush, rubbish, litter or other inflammable materials' that endanger public safety by creating a fire hazard, applying the weed-abatement procedure of Part 5, Division 12 of the California Health and Safety Code. Importantly, the County Code does not publish a single fixed maximum grass height for ordinary parcels; enforcement is based on the hazard/blight standard rather than a stated number of inches. (The '2 feet' figure in the fire code applies only to vegetation clearance for permitted agricultural field burning, not to general lawns.) Penalties follow the general nuisance process.
Property Nuisance Code: notice and order to abate overgrown/dead vegetation; misdemeanor and/or administrative citation, with County abatement and cost-lien if ignored (Chapter 1320). Fire Code (600-250): the Fire Services Manager may order clearing of fire-hazardous dry grass/brush under the California Health and Safety Code weed-abatement procedure.
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