California city profile
Citrus Heights
Citrus Heights is an incorporated city in
Sacramento County.
Projects here follow Citrus Heights's own zoning and building rules on top of the county-level environmental rules that apply across Sacramento County.
The county rules most likely to catch a project applicant off guard are listed below.
10
local environmental rules that apply here
65
projects filed for environmental review in Citrus Heights
78% routine · 12% mitigated · 2% full review
City of Citrus Heights
most frequent lead agency
10 filings as lead
Local ordinances that apply in Citrus Heights
These Sacramento County rules apply to projects in Citrus Heights.
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Fire Hazard / Defensible Space
Sacramento County
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Floodplain
Sacramento County
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Grading & Excavation
Sacramento County
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Noise
Sacramento County
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Scenic Corridors & Highways
Sacramento County
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Sensitive Habitat
Sacramento County
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Stormwater / LID
Sacramento County
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Tree Preservation
Sacramento County
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Wildfire
Sacramento County
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Williamson Act / Agricultural Preserve
Sacramento County
What catches people off guard in Sacramento County
These Sacramento County rules apply to projects in Citrus Heights, on top of any city-specific Citrus Heights requirements.
Flood rules exceed federal maps
Sacramento is one of the highest-flood-risk metros in the country, and the county's floodplain ordinance covers locally designated hazard areas beyond federal flood maps, with a freeboard standard that exceeds the federal minimum.
American River Parkway
The corridor along the American River is governed by its own plan with separate requirements, and a portion carries a federal Wild and Scenic designation that prohibits projects interfering with its recreational, water quality, or free-flowing character.
Delta Commission jurisdiction
The county's Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta portions fall under oversight from the Delta Protection Commission — an additional approval track on top of county permits for any land use change in the delta zone.
Heritage oak replacement
The county protects native oaks above a modest trunk diameter, and replacement is proportional to the removed tree's size — removing a large heritage oak can trigger a significant replanting obligation or an in-lieu payment into the county's tree fund.
South Sacramento habitat plan
The county's southern portions fall under a regional habitat conservation plan that was the first in the nation to bundle both federal wetland and endangered species permits into a single approval — projects there need to coordinate with the plan before ground disturbance.
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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 Citrus Heights planning department or
Sacramento County directly.