Dark sky lighting rules
The county has a Dark Sky Ordinance that restricts exterior lighting on new development — it's not just a preference, it's a permit condition, and designs that don't address it upfront will be sent back for revision.
California county profile
Mono County is eastern Sierra recreation country where a mandatory Dark Sky Ordinance governs exterior lighting and state-protected Mono Lake creates a unique water use constraint — rules that don't come up anywhere else in California.
The county has a Dark Sky Ordinance that restricts exterior lighting on new development — it's not just a preference, it's a permit condition, and designs that don't address it upfront will be sent back for revision.
State water law specifically protects Mono Lake's water levels; projects that involve any groundwater diversion or water use near the lake may encounter constraints that don't apply anywhere else in California.
The Town of Mammoth Lakes is independently incorporated, so projects within town limits go through a completely different permitting process — applicants who confuse the town with unincorporated county land will end up at the wrong agency.
Despite its alpine character, portions of the county are mapped in the state fire hazard zone — defensible space and fire-resistant construction requirements apply to structures in those areas, even at elevation.
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Screen an addressSource: 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 Mono County directly.