California city profile
Bishop
Bishop is an incorporated city in
Inyo County.
Projects here follow Bishop's own zoning and building rules on top of the county-level environmental rules that apply across Inyo County.
The county rules most likely to catch a project applicant off guard are listed below.
4
county environmental rules that apply here
97
projects filed for environmental review in Bishop
76% routine · 12% mitigated · 1% full review
City of Bishop
most frequent lead agency
9 filings as lead
What catches people off guard in Inyo County
These Inyo County rules apply to projects in Bishop, on top of any city-specific Bishop requirements.
Owens Lake dust zone
Projects near Owens Lake sit adjacent to one of the largest airborne dust compliance programs in the country; even routine earthwork in that area can intersect with dust control requirements administered jointly by the local air district and a major water utility.
Federal land everywhere
More than nearly all of the county is federal land; private projects adjacent to national parks or Bureau of Land Management areas often require federal agency review that runs on its own timeline, separate from state environmental review.
Desert plant protections
The California Desert Native Plants Act covers the plant palette here — removing cacti, Joshua trees, or other desert species may require a permit even for routine grading or landscape clearing.
Water rights overlay
The Owens Valley's water history is long and legally complex; projects that involve wells, diversions, or any water use may need to navigate state and federal water rights constraints that don't apply in most other California counties.
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Source: Headlands Environmental —
environmental site screening for California. Rules summarized from publicly
available county codes and planning documents; project review counts
indexed from the State Clearinghouse. For authoritative requirements,
consult the Bishop planning department or
Inyo County directly.