These San Diego County rules apply to projects in Escondido, on top of any city-specific Escondido requirements.
Resource Protection Ordinance
San Diego's ordinance directly prohibits or restricts development in wetlands, floodways, steep slopes, and sensitive habitat — meaning a project that touches these resources must make explicit legal findings to proceed, before environmental review even begins.
Steep slope limits automatic
The ordinance imposes direct limits on how much of a steep slope area can be disturbed, at a gradient threshold that applies across all unincorporated parcels — lots with significant grade changes have less developable area than a survey map alone would suggest.
Biological assessment required
There's no traditional tree permit based on trunk size, but any project in the habitat plan area must complete a biological assessment as part of compliance review — habitat can't be cleared simply because the county lacks a standalone tree ordinance.
Broad tribal consultation
With the highest concentration of tribal reservations of any county in the country, cultural resource review is material to virtually every discretionary project in unincorporated San Diego, and the number of tribes that may request consultation is among the highest in the state.
VMT screening under challenge
The county's traffic screening provisions were partly invalidated by a court in the past year, meaning some previously available shortcuts may no longer hold — projects that relied on certain screening categories should verify current status before finalizing environmental documents.