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Humboldt supervisors adopt employee‑housing zoning changes to align with state requirements

Humboldt County Board of Supervisors · January 13, 2026

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Summary

The Board adopted amendments to inland and coastal zoning to add employee‑housing standards (small- and large-scale definitions, minimum unit-size guidance) intended to align county rules with state Health & Safety Code provisions; the ordinance passed 5-0.

The Humboldt County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to adopt zoning amendments intended to implement state employee‑housing requirements and to provide clearer permitting paths for worker housing across agricultural and other employment-related settings.

Planning staff described the ordinance as an implementation measure from the county’s housing element and said it amends inland and coastal zoning to define small-scale employee housing (serving five to six employees, equivalent for permitting to single-family residential) and large-scale employee housing (group-quarter or multi-unit definitions; 36 beds or 12 single-family unit equivalents) with associated development standards.

Planning staff recommended a per-person living-size guideline of 350 square feet for a single occupant plus 175 square feet for each additional person as a point in the planning commission’s range. Staff told the board that agricultural employee housing that is equivalent to agricultural uses may be permitted by-right in agricultural zones and, under those circumstances, would not trigger additional CEQA review unless other thresholds (such as location in a floodplain or wetland) apply.

The board adopted the staff-recommended resolution and ordinance by roll-call vote, 5-0. Supervisors asked clarifying questions about fair‑housing nexus analysis and CEQA thresholds; planning staff said the state has actively promoted housing implementation and county staff would continue to review funding opportunities and state guidance.

What the board did: adopted the ordinance amending the zoning code and directed the clerk to publish the post-adoption summary. The clerk and planning department will publish required summaries and proceed with code updates and next steps.

Next steps: planning staff and clerk to publish the ordinance summary, update zoning code records and provide the board with implementation updates as projects that use the new sections appear.