An Oak Tree Removal Permit is required to remove protected valley or blue oaks above acreage-based thresholds in the inland rural unincorporated County, under Article IX of Chapter 35 (Deciduous Oak Tree Protection and Regeneration). Permitted removals trigger replacement planting at high ratios.
The County's Deciduous Oak Tree Protection and Regeneration ordinance (Article IX of Chapter 35, Ordinance No. 4490, effective April 15, 2003) requires an Oak Tree Removal Permit, issued by the Planning Commission (Sec. 35-912), once cumulative oak removals exceed set thresholds over a 30-year tracking period. "Protected" oaks are valley oaks (Quercus lobata) and blue oaks (Quercus douglasii) four inches or greater in diameter at breast height (Sec. 35-906). Thresholds are acreage-based and differ for agricultural versus non-agricultural removal: for non-agricultural removal, only 2 oaks may be removed exempt on lots under 50 acres, rising to 12 on lots over 899 acres; agricultural exemptions are higher (e.g., 8 oaks under 50 acres) but a permit is also triggered if 50% or more of all oaks are removed on lots under 100 acres (30% on larger lots). Exempt and not counted: oaks within 50 feet of an existing residence, naturally dead or uprooted oaks, and oaks posing an immediate safety threat (Sec. 35-907). Where a permit is required, Sec. 35-911 mandates an Oak Tree Management Plan and replacement at a 15:1 ratio, with replacement oaks nurtured for five years (the last two without supplemental watering) until ten survive per tree removed. The ordinance applies outside the coastal zone and urban boundaries in specified agricultural and resource-management zones; removals tied to a development permit are handled under Articles III/IV or the Grading Ordinance instead.
Removing protected oaks above the thresholds without the required permit is a violation of Article IX. A determination by the Agricultural Commissioner that a permit was required treats the unpermitted removal as arising under, and violating, the ordinance, subject to enforcement, legal proceedings and penalties under Sec. 35-920, plus the replacement-planting and monitoring obligations of Sec. 35-911.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Santa Maria, CA
Chapter 5-5 gives the Noise Control Officer one warning before a second verified complaint becomes a violation, and Santa Maria Code Enforcement (community s...
Santa Maria, CA
Aircraft noise is federally preempted by the FAA; Santa Maria Public Airport District runs a voluntary noise advisory program using California's 65 dB CNEL s...
Santa Maria, CA
Sound-amplifying equipment is regulated in residential zones under Chapter 5-5, and Chapter 6-6 (Party Disturbances) makes hosting a party with sound 'plainl...
Santa Maria, CA
Barking dogs in Santa Maria are treated as 'unmeasurable nuisance noise' under Chapter 5-5 and as a Good Neighbor Rules issue under Chapter 4-7, with persist...
Santa Maria, CA
Santa Maria limits residential-zone construction noise under Chapter 5-5, with a construction-noise permit required from the Noise Control Officer when work ...
Santa Maria, CA
Santa Maria Municipal Code Chapter 5-5 sets ambient base noise levels that drop at night in residential zones, with a violation found when the level exceeds ...
See how Santa Maria's tree removal permits rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.