The LA County Community Forest Management Plan and OurCounty Sustainability Plan target a 50 percent canopy increase in low-canopy unincorporated communities by 2045. DPW, Parks, and Public Health prioritize free plantings in Southeast LA and Antelope Valley equity zones.
LA County's Community Forest Management Plan, adopted alongside the 2019 OurCounty Sustainability Plan, sets equity-driven canopy goals. Heat Equity Zones — including Florence-Graham, Walnut Park, East LA, Willowbrook, Palmdale-adjacent unincorporated tracts, and Antelope Valley low-canopy pockets — are prioritized for free street and yard tree planting through partnerships among Public Works, Parks and Recreation, Public Health, TreePeople, and North East Trees. The plan targets a 50 percent canopy increase by 2045 in low-canopy areas (currently 5-12 percent canopy versus 30 percent county average). The county also funds 3-year establishment care, mulch, and watering during drought years, removing the cost barrier that typically suppresses canopy in renter-heavy and lower-income tracts.
The canopy initiative is a planning and grant program, not regulatory. No fines apply to residents. Property owners may decline a planted tree at the planning visit. Damage to county-funded trees during 3-year establishment voids program participation.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Lakewood, CA
Lakewood prohibits storing abandoned, inoperable, or unregistered vehicles on public streets or visible on private property. Vehicles may be tagged and towed...
Lakewood, CA
Lakewood regulates electric vehicle charging infrastructure for residential and commercial properties. Building codes may require EV-ready parking in new con...
Lakewood, CA
Lakewood regulates overnight parking on public streets. Many areas restrict parking between certain hours or require permits for overnight street parking.
Lakewood, CA
Lakewood requires pool barriers meeting safety codes to prevent drowning. Fences must be at least 4 to 5 feet tall with self-closing, self-latching gates.
Lakewood, CA
Lakewood requires permits for retaining walls above a certain height, typically 4 feet. Engineering review may be required for taller walls.
Lakewood, CA
Lakewood restricts or prohibits intentional feeding of wildlife including deer, coyotes, and bears. Feeding wildlife creates public safety hazards and nuisan...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Los Angeles County.
See how Lakewood's urban forest equity rules stack up against other locations.
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