California city profile
Santa Rosa
Santa Rosa is an incorporated city in
Sonoma County.
Projects here follow Santa Rosa's own zoning and building rules on top of the county-level environmental rules that apply across Sonoma County.
The county rules most likely to catch a project applicant off guard are listed below.
11
local environmental rules that apply here
570
projects filed for environmental review in Santa Rosa
85% routine · 8% mitigated · 1% full review
City of Santa Rosa
most frequent lead agency
54 filings as lead
Local ordinances that apply in Santa Rosa
Santa Rosa has 3 of its own municipal ordinances,
applied on top of Sonoma County's environmental rules.
-
Riparian / Stream Setback
City of Santa Rosa
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Sensitive Habitat
City of Santa Rosa
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Tree Preservation
City of Santa Rosa
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Coastal Zone
Sonoma County
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Fire Hazard / Defensible Space
Sonoma County
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Grading & Excavation
Sonoma County
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Noise
Sonoma County
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Riparian Corridor
Sonoma County
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Scenic Corridors & Highways
Sonoma County
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Stormwater / LID
Sonoma County
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Williamson Act / Agricultural Preserve
Sonoma County
What catches people off guard in Sonoma County
These Sonoma County rules apply to projects in Santa Rosa, on top of any city-specific Santa Rosa requirements.
Layered tree protection regimes
The county enforces a general tree ordinance covering an unusually long list of native species, a separate valley oak habitat district, a heritage and landmark tree program for individually designated specimens, and a new oak woodland combining district recently adopted — the applicable rules depend on both species and location.
Wide riparian setbacks
The county's riparian corridor combining zone sets streamside setbacks that vary by stream designation, reaching widths that dwarf what most California counties require for major designated waterways — among the most protective riparian setback rules in the Bay Area.
Fire zone dramatic expansion
Very high fire hazard zones in the county expanded several-fold in recent years, moving many areas that previously had no designation into active fire hazard review territory — a change driven by the catastrophic fires that swept through the county in rapid succession.
Vineyard grading separate ordinance
Agricultural grading for vineyards and orchards is handled under a separate county chapter from standard residential grading, with different thresholds and review processes — confusing the two is a common mistake in wine country project applications.
Multiple federally recognized tribes
Sonoma has more federally recognized tribes than any other Bay Area county, and the primary contact tribe typically consults across a broad traditional territory — cultural resource review in Sonoma is more substantive and more likely to require formal consultation than most Bay Area 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 Santa Rosa planning department or
Sonoma County directly.