Part C — Enforcement

Port Hueneme Zoning Code · 2026-07 edition · ingested 2026-07-06 · Port Hueneme

10175 - Compliance.

All departments, officials, or public employees vested with the duty or authority to issue permits or licenses where required by law, shall conform to the provisions of this Article. No such license or permit for uses, buildings, or purposes where the same would be in conflict with the provisions of this Article shall be issued. Any such license or permit, if issued in conflict with the provisions hereof, shall be null and void. Any uses contrary to the provisions of this Article are declared unlawful.

10176 - Certificate of compliance.

No premises shall be occupied or used and no building hereafter erected or altered shall be occupied or used until a certificate of compliance shall have been issued by the Building Inspector.

10177 - Judicial review of coastal development.

Any person, including an applicant for a permit or the California Coastal Commission, aggrieved by a decision or action of the City on a discretionary project affecting property within the Coastal Zone, which project is not otherwise appealable pursuant to the provisions of Section 10356(A), shall have a right to judicial review of such decision or action by filing a petition for writ of mandate in accordance with the provisions of Section 1094.5 of the California Code of Civil Procedure within sixty (60) days after the decision or action has become final. The Coastal Commission may intervene in any such proceeding upon a showing that the matter involves a question of the conformity of a discretionary project within the City's certified Local Coastal Program, which intervention may be initiated upon request of the City. Notice of any such action against the City shall be filed with the Coastal Commission within five (5) working days of the filing of such action. When an action is brought challenging the validity of the City's certified Local Coastal Program, a preliminary showing shall be made prior to proceeding on the merits as to why such action should not have been brought pursuant to the provisions of Section 30801 of the California Public Resources Code.