These Humboldt County rules apply to projects in Fortuna, on top of any city-specific Fortuna requirements.
Cannabis requires environmental review
Humboldt runs a dedicated cannabis permitting program backed by a comprehensive programmatic environmental analysis; applicants who think of cannabis cultivation as routine agriculture typically discover the county's environmental requirements are far more extensive than expected.
Sensitive fish streams
The county's streams are among the most critical for salmon, steelhead, and other anadromous fish in California; projects near virtually any watercourse face heightened biological scrutiny well beyond standard riparian setbacks.
Fire zone in redwood country
Despite its wet coastal and forested character, nearly the entire county is mapped in a high or very high fire hazard zone — a fact that consistently surprises applicants who assume redwood country is fire-safe.
Multi-tribal consultation landscape
Humboldt has more federally recognized tribal entities than almost any other California county; consultation here is multi-party, substantive, and cannot be treated as a formality tacked on at the end of the environmental review.
Coastal Development Permit
Significant portions of the county's coastline fall under California Coastal Commission jurisdiction, requiring a Coastal Development Permit in addition to county approvals — with the commission reviewing independently on its own timeline.