Skip to main content

County Program Helps Prevent Catastrophic Wildfires

The Weed Abatement Program requires property owners to remove excess vegetation and combustible debris. Inspection season begins March 1 in the cities of San José, Santa Clara and Campbell

SANTA CLARA COUNTY, CALIF. — Don’t let the snow in the mountains fool you! Fire season has begun in Santa Clara County.

Every year, beginning in March, property owners throughout the county must comply with regulations designed to prevent the spread of wildfires that threaten people, property and the environment. The rules take effect March 1 for three cities – San José, Santa Clara and Campbell – and later in the spring for the unincorporated county and other jurisdictions. The rules remain in place throughout fire season, which generally ends in October.

The regulations are enforced by the County of Santa Clara Weed Abatement Program, which requires property owners to reduce fire hazards created by excess vegetation and combustible debris. The little-known program is one of the most important ways the County protects against the devastating wildfires that have destroyed entire California communities in recent years.

“Even though the weather over the past week has been wet and frigid, the time for Santa Clara County property owners to help protect their community from wildfires begins now,” said Edgar Nolasco, Director of the County’s Consumer and Environmental Protection Agency, which oversees the Weed Abatement Program. “By removing fire hazards from your property, you can prevent grass fires from spreading into developed areas, where they threaten homes and families.”


Under the program, property owners must prevent grass and weeds from exceeding 6 inches in length, keep roadways clear of overgrown vegetation, and protect structures from combustible materials, among other requirements. The rules do not apply to ornamental vegetation like roses and hedges.

Keeping vegetation and other hazards in check creates buffer zones that can slow or stop the spread of fire. Eliminating fuel for wildfires is especially important for rural property owners who live on the “wildland-urban interface,” where human development ends and open space begins.

Santa Clara County is one of a handful of counties in California, including Orange and Los Angeles counties, with a standalone weed abatement program. In other areas, responsibility for weed abatement lies with the fire department.

Having a dedicated program ensures that weed abatement gets the attention it deserves. The County’s program is currently managed by a team of two employees who inspect more than 2,000 properties a year. The program is funded through fees incurred by people who fail to maintain their properties in a fire-safe manner.

The goal of the program, however, is voluntary compliance. Program staff would prefer to educate property owners than compel them to cut their grass or remove wood piles and other flammable debris.

“The most important thing is we want you to maintain your property in a fire-safe condition,” said Moe Kumre, manager of the program. “It protects you; it protects your neighbors; it protects your community. We don’t want to come out and cut anybody’s grass, but we will if that’s what it takes to keep our community safe.”

Properties that are not in compliance wind up in the Weed Abatement Program based upon visual inspections by program staff, who conduct their assessments from public rights of way. Once in the program, property owners must demonstrate that their properties meet minimum fire safety standards for three years. Property owners are responsible for the costs of all weed abatement work.

Inspection season phases in gradually throughout the county’s many jurisdictions:

  • March 1 – San José, Santa Clara and Campbell
  • April 1 – Unincorporated Santa Clara County and Milpitas
  • April 15 – Los Gatos and Monte Sereno
  • April 30 – Cupertino, Palo Alto and the Los Altos Hills County Fire District
  • May 1 – Morgan Hill
  • May 15 – Gilroy

Climate change has caused a spike in the number and severity of catastrophic wildfires, with California spending most of the past two decades in a state of drought. Seven of the 10 most destructive wildfires in California history, including the Tubbs Fire, which ravaged suburban neighborhoods in Santa Rosa, have occurred since 2015, according to Cal Fire.

This has been a very wet winter throughout California, which has built up the Sierra Nevada snowpack, filled Northern California reservoirs and improved Bay Area drought conditions. All that rain will also spur a lot of vegetation growth, however, creating extra fuel for wildfires during the dry months of summer and fall.  

To learn more about the Weed Abatement Program, property owners can visit the program’s webpage or read the program’s informational brochure. Anyone with questions about the requirements of the program and how it works is invited to call staff at (408) 282-3145.

ABOUT THE COUNTY OF SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA 

The County of Santa Clara government serves a diverse, multicultural population of 1.9 million residents in Santa Clara County, Calif., making it more populous than 14 states in the U.S. The County provides essential services to its residents, including public health protection, environmental stewardship, medical services through the County of Santa Clara Health System, child and adult protection services, homelessness prevention and solutions, roads, park services, libraries, emergency response to disasters, protection of minority communities and those under threat, access to a fair criminal justice system, and many other public benefits.

Visit the County of Santa Clara at: www.sccgov.org

Like us on Facebook: Facebook.com/County.of.Santa.Clara

Follow us on Twitter: Twitter.com/sccgov

Media contacts: 

Laurel Anderson/Aaron Kinney, Office of Communications and Public Affairs, (408) 299-5119, [email protected]

Posted: Feb. 28, 2023