Title 23 COASTAL ZONE LAND USE
Chapter 23.08 SPECIAL (S) USES
23.08.030 Home occupations.
An accessory use of a dwelling unit for gainful employment involving the
manufacture, provision, or sale of goods or services is subject to the standards
of this section.
(a) Permit Requirements. Zoning clearance, except for
garage sales (see Section 23.08.030(g)(l) following) which require no land use
permit, and are subject to business license clearance if required by the county
tax collector.
(b) Appearance, Visibility and Location. The standards of
this section determine what physical changes may occur in a dwelling unit to
accommodate a home occupation, and where on a residential site a home occupation
may be conducted.
(1) Changes to the Dwelling. The home occupation shall not
change the residential character of the outside appearance of the building,
either by the use of colors; materials; lighting; signs; or by the construction
of accessory structures or garages visible from off-site and not of the same
architectural character as the residence; or by the emission of noise, glare,
flashing lights, vibrations or odors not commonly experienced in residential
areas.
(2) Display of Products. The display of home occupation products for
sale, in a manner visible from the public street or adjoining properties is
prohibited.
(3) Outdoor Activities. On sites of less than one acre the use
shall be conducted entirely within a principal or accessory structure; except
instructional activities that must be performed outdoors, and in the case of
pottery or ceramics production, one relocatable kiln with a maximum interior
volume of thirty-six cubic feet may be located in a rear yard when all other
associated pottery or ceramics production activities (except pottery drying)
occur indoors. Outdoor storage of materials related to the home occupation is
allowed only on one acre or larger (except as otherwise provided by Section
23.08.024, where such storage is to be screened from view of any public road or
adjacent property.
(4) Use of Garage or Accessory Structure. The use of a
garage or accessory structure is allowed subject to the size limitations of
subsections (c) and (g) of Section 23.08.032 (Residential accessory
uses--Garages and workshops, respectively), except that the conduct of the home
occupation shall not preclude the use of the garage for vehicle parking on a
daily basis. On sites of less than one acre, if a garage is used for a home
occupation, the garage door shall not be left open in order to conduct the home
occupation business.
(c) Area Devoted to a Home Occupation. The home
occupation shall be incidental and subordinate to the principal use of the site
as a residence.
(d) Employees. No person other than members of the household
residing on the premises may be employed and working on the site.
(e) Hours
of Operation. Hours of operation are unrestricted except that home occupations
which generate sounds audible from off-site shall be limited to the hours from
seven a.m. to ten p.m., provided that such home occupation complies with the
standards of Section 23.06.040.
(f) Limits on the Kinds of Home Occupations
Allowable. Subject to the rest of this section, allowable home occupations
consist of:
(1) Office type or personal services (including personal
instruction such as music lessons, and counseling services) that do not include
the presence of more than one client vehicle at any time; and other services
(e.g. repair, maintenance, etc.) that are performed on the premises of a
client.
(2) Handcraft or artwork production, including but not limited to
pottery and ceramics, artistic glass or metalwork, electronic components,
woodcarving and woodworking (except for mass-production operations such as
cabinet shops), antique furniture restoration, painting and
photography.
(3) The personal sale of cosmetics, personal or household
products (except appliances), when such sales occur on the premises of the
purchaser, provided that wholesale sales may occur pursuant to subsection (g) of
this section.
(4) Offices for off-site businesses (e.g., contractors, etc.)
where the home site is used for phone answering and bookkeeping only, and there
is no on-site storage of materials or equipment related to the
business.
(5) Provided that no home occupation is to involve on-site use of
equipment requiring more than standard household electrical current at
one-hundred-ten or two-hundred-twenty volts or that produces noise (see Section
23.06.040 -- exterior noise standards), dust, odor or vibration detrimental to
occupants of adjoining dwellings.
(g) Sale of Products. On-site retail sales
of the products of a home occupation are prohibited, except:
(1) Garage
sales, or the sale of handcrafted items and artwork produced on-site are allowed
not more than twice per year, for a maximum of two days per sale;
(2) Home
distributors of cosmetics and personal or household products may supply other
approved home occupation proprietors; and
(3) The sale of animals in
conjunction with an animal keeping operation approved pursuant to Section
23.08.046, where such sales are also approved pursuant to Chapter 9.04 of this
code (animal regulations).
(h) Signing. One nonilluminated identification
sign with a maximum area of two square feet may be erected pursuant to Section
23.04.300. A commercial vehicle displaying any sign identifying the home
occupation and parked on or adjacent to the residential site visible from the
public street is included in determining the maximum allowable area of on-site
fixed signs.
(1) Parking and Traffic. Vehicles used and traffic generated by
a home occupation shall not exceed the type of vehicles or traffic volume
normally generated by a home in a residential neighborhood. All parking needs of
the home occupation shall be met off the street. For purposes of this section,
normal residential traffic volume means up to ten trips per day. This subsection
does not apply to garage or handcraft sales pursuant to subsection (g)(1). (Ord.
2881 §§ 30, 31, 1999; Ord. 2715 § 97, 1995; Ord. 2592 § 9
(part), 1992)
<< previous | next >>