California county profile

Ventura County

Ventura County has two growth constraints that don't exist in most California counties — a voter-approved open space boundary that prevents agricultural land from being rezoned without a countywide election, and air quality thresholds far lower than those used by the adjacent Los Angeles district.

843K residents
11 local environmental rules on the books
984 projects filed for environmental review 77% routine · 10% mitigated · 4% full review

What catches people off guard in Ventura County

SOAR voter growth boundary

Agricultural and open space land in the county cannot be rezoned for urban development without a countywide vote — a voter-protected boundary extended through mid-century. Projects that assume a simple General Plan amendment may find a ballot measure is the only path.

Very low tree threshold

The county protects oaks and sycamores at a remarkably low trunk circumference threshold — small trees that would be entirely unregulated in most California counties require a removal permit here, and unauthorized removal triggers a replacement penalty that is among the harshest in the state.

Ojai: stricter air rules

The Ojai Planning Area operates under separate air quality thresholds that are far stricter than the rest of the county and far below the Los Angeles district's standards — projects in or near Ojai that generate modest emissions can exceed significance thresholds that would pose no issue elsewhere.

Agricultural buffer required

Projects that bring residential development adjacent to active farming operations must provide substantial buffers and vegetative screening under the county's Right to Farm provisions — a requirement that applies even on small parcels and can significantly constrain building footprint.

Back-to-back major fires

Two catastrophic fires swept through the county in consecutive years, burning vast stretches of foothill and mountain terrain that now face post-fire hazard review and dramatically expanded fire hazard zone designations — projects in foothill or mountain terrain need current fire hazard mapping, not older versions.

Cities in Ventura County

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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 Ventura County directly.