California county profile
Tulare County
Tulare County's valley floor holds some of California's most productive agricultural land under extensive Williamson Act protection, while the eastern foothills and Sequoia region carry significant fire hazard zones — and the San Joaquin Valley's nonattainment status makes air quality review more demanding than most of the state.
470K
residents
4
local environmental rules on the books
1.4K
projects filed for environmental review
79% routine · 13% mitigated · 1% full review
What catches people off guard in Tulare County
Strict valley air standards
The San Joaquin Valley is in federal nonattainment for air quality, and the district enforces some of the most demanding emission thresholds in California — projects generating significant construction or operational emissions face mitigation obligations that would not apply in most other counties.
Eastern foothill fire risk
The foothills and mountain terrain in eastern Tulare County — including areas near Sequoia National Park — are mapped in extensive fire hazard zones that are easy to overlook when a project is focused on the agricultural valley floor portion of the county.
Williamson Act coverage
A substantial share of the county's productive agricultural land operates under Williamson Act contracts that restrict non-agricultural use for long rolling terms — rural parcel buyers may find existing contract obligations limiting development options regardless of current farming activity.
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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 Tulare County directly.