Removal of hazardous vegetation conditions will help prevent wild fires.
1. Grass,
noxious weeds, trash, rubbish, and other flammable material need to be
cut and removed from vacant lots, yards, courtyards, parkways, and other locations. These types of vegetation, when dry, become a fire hazard and must be maintained throughout the year.
2. Trees and branches – Remove any portion of a tree that extends within 10 feet of the outlet of any roof, chimney, or stovepipe.
3. Native brush and chaparral near any improved property (structures) need to be
cleared or
thinned. All ground litter must be removed from vacant lots, yards, courtyards, parkways, and other locations. The diagrams below show how to properly prune a single native bush (see illustration below) and how to create a defensible space around a home (see illustration below) or other structure by simply removing the dead and dying brush and, in some cases, some living plants, thereby reducing the overall concentration of flammable material.


4. All cleared, thinned, or cut materials must be removed from the property to an approved county landfill site or green waste facility for proper disposal.
5. Methods of cleaning properties by the County include
discing and
hand labor.
6. Open burning is prohibited by regulations of the South Coast Air Quality Management District.