California SB 1383 requires organic-waste recycling, and unincorporated Ventura County implements it through County Code (Division 4, Chapter 7, Article 3) and Ordinance 4590. All residents have curbside organics collection (green cart) for food and yard waste; food scraps such as meat, bones, dairy, and peels go in the organics cart, bagged and tied.
Organic-waste recycling is mandatory in unincorporated Ventura County, driven by California Senate Bill 1383, which took effect January 1, 2022, to cut methane emissions by diverting food scraps, yard trimmings, food-soiled paper, and other organics from landfills. The County implements SB 1383 locally through its Code of Ordinances (Division 4, Chapter 7, Article 3) and Ordinance No. 4590, approved December 7, 2021. All unincorporated-area residents have access to curbside organics collection in a green cart through the franchised haulers Athens Services and EJ Harrison & Sons, and residents can request free indoor kitchen food-scrap pails from their hauler. Per the County, all food waste may be placed in the residential organics cart - including meat and bones, fish, dairy, and peels and pits - and food should be placed in a paper or plastic bag and securely tied before going in the cart, with yard and food waste combined in the same green cart. Commercial generators (including multifamily complexes of five or more units) face additional duties under Section 4770-4: they must arrange organic-waste collection, provide proper containers and signage, and subscribe to a service level matching their volume, unless they self-haul and register or obtain an approved waiver (such as a physical-space-constraints or de minimis waiver). A two-tier edible-food-recovery mandate also applies to larger food businesses (Tier One from 2022, Tier Two from 2024). The County enforces these requirements through investigation of reported concerns.
Commercial generators that fail to subscribe to organics service, provide containers/signage, or meet edible-food-recovery duties can be cited under Sections 4770-4 through 4770-8. Residents are required to use the organics cart for food and yard waste under the County ordinance implementing SB 1383.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Ojai, CA
Ojai enforces strict decibel limits to protect the peaceful valley environment. Residential noise standards are among the more restrictive in Ventura County.
Ojai, CA
Ojai's noise ordinance prohibits racing engines, unnecessary idling for more than 10 minutes, and intentional tire screeching. CA Vehicle Code §27007 (95 dBA...
Ojai, CA
Ojai regulates noise under OMC Chapter 7-6, incorporating Ventura County noise standards. Residential nighttime noise must not exceed 45 dBA at the property ...
Ojai, CA
Amplified music in Ojai is governed by the general noise ordinance (OMC Chapter 7-6). Outdoor amplified music requires a special event permit if audible beyo...
Ojai, CA
Nuisance barking violates Ojai's noise ordinance (OMC Title 5, Chapter 11). Police may charge property owners for law enforcement costs after the first respo...
Ojai, CA
CVC §22651 limits vehicles to 72 hours on public streets. Ojai enforces parking through the Ventura County Sheriff's Department. The small downtown area has ...
See how Ojai's mandatory organics recycling rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.