16 results for “zoning violations”
16 results for “zoning violations”
Tulsa County adopted comprehensive zoning regulations by resolution on September 30, 2024 (CMF# 20241854). The 179-page document establishes zoning standards organized into 19 chapters covering agricultural, residential, office, commercial, and industrial zoning districts; allowed uses; parking and signage; procedures; and enforcement. The regulations address supplemental use requirements, accessory structures, temporary uses, nonconformities, violations and penalties, and measurement standards.
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At the December 14, 2022 regular meeting of Boston Township Trustees, the board awarded a three-year trash contract to Kimble following a comparison of bids and approved the appointment of Mike Anderson as zoning inspector at $925 per month, effective immediately. The police department reported plans to hire one additional full-time officer and one part-time officer, while the zoning report covered multiple ongoing matters including property violations, sign variance requests, and occupancy certificates. The meeting also included announcements thanking volunteers for the Christmas Bazaar and acknowledgments of community matters.
AI summary
This is a regular board meeting agenda for the Charter Township of Bangor scheduled for July 12, 2022, at 6:00 p.m. The consent agenda includes approval of June 14, 2022 meeting minutes, a $56.80 plumbing permit refund to Kleinschmidt, S & wife, $1,495.00 for installation of a Kussmaul Air Compressor from Front Line Services Inc., $1,324.44 for wardrobe from Norix Group Inc., $51,613.00 for MMRMA General Fund Contribution plus $5,000.00 Retention Fund Contribution, and a $75.00 refund to Shelly Hebert for a non-functional cooler at Township Hall. The agenda includes an engineering report, committee reports from zoning, planning, DPW, parks and recreation, and the green team, plus new business addressing amendments to Zoning Ordinance #300 regarding violations and penalties and regulations for commercial marihuana facilities.
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The Tulsa Zoning Code was adopted November 5, 2015, and became effective January 1, 2016, with amendments continuing through October 21, 2025. The code is organized as Title 42 of the Tulsa Revised Ordinances and comprises 90 chapters covering zoning districts (residential, mixed-use, commercial/industrial, overlay, special, and legacy), building types and use categories, supplemental regulations, parking, signs, landscaping, outdoor lighting, review procedures, administration, nonconformities, violations and enforcement, and measurements. The document spans 400 pages and establishes comprehensive zoning and property restriction standards for the City of Tulsa.
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The City Council of Mesa approved a site plan modification on March 18, 2019, for the expansion of an existing self-storage facility located in the 1600 block of South Alma School Road (east side) on 9.6± acres in zoning case ZON 18-00902. The project includes proposed additional storage area of 19,177 square feet and a proposed additional building area of 10,110 square feet, bringing the total proposed storage area to 111,191 square feet. The approval is conditioned upon compliance with the final site plan and landscape plan submitted, all requirements of prior case Z92-57, all City development codes and regulations, and Design Review requirements, with violations subject to penalties under Mesa Zoning Ordinance 11-79-1 to 11-79-6.
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This ordinance rezones approximately 0.155 acres in City Block 817130 from NO(A) Neighborhood Office District to TH-3(A) Townhouse District, with the property fronting approximately 104 feet along Calypso Street and 65 feet along Hampton Road. The City of Dallas City Council approved the rezoning on April 25, 2025, following required public hearings by the city plan commission and city council. Violations of the ordinance are punishable by a fine not exceeding $2,000, and no building permit or certificate of occupancy may be issued until full compliance with the Dallas Development Code and all applicable city ordinances is achieved. The ordinance becomes effective immediately upon passage and publication.
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This document contains sections of the Akron, Ohio municipal code establishing noise and peace ordinances. The code prohibits disturbing the peace through clamorous behavior, intoxication, fighting, and disorderly conduct (with violations classified as minor misdemeanors), and regulates noisy activities including advertising, machinery operation, and noise-producing instruments (misdemeanors of the fourth degree). Section 132.16 specifically restricts sound amplification devices, establishing that unreasonable noise from radios, phonographs, loudspeakers, and musical instruments is prima facie unlawful, with stricter limits in residential zones between 9:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. (where sound must not be audible beyond eighty feet from the property line) and in public rights-of-way (where sound must not be audible beyond one hundred feet).
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Ordinance No. 13,620 amends the Des Moines Municipal Code to enforce front yard parking restrictions by making violations subject to traffic regulations and parking tickets. The ordinance repeals and re-enacts Section 27-361.10 to prohibit parking between curb lines and lot lines, except where approved by the director of traffic and transportation, and incorporates front yard parking provisions from the Zoning Ordinance into the Traffic Regulations. Key restrictions include limiting front yard parking in residential districts to 25 percent of the front yard area, requiring hard-surface materials for parking expansions, and permitting temporary overflow parking only for designated events such as the Iowa State Fair and school athletic events.
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This 2018 Scranton City Council ordinance amends the 2014 Quality of Life and Violations Ticket Process to add new definitions, violations, and penalties to the Property Maintenance Rules and Regulations. The amendments introduce five new violations: unlawful occupancy of buildings without a Certificate of Occupancy, illegal parking non-conforming to zoning ordinances, nuisance animals that disturb the peace or damage property, unlicensed dogs, and dangerous or vicious animals. The ordinance was requested by the Director of Licensing, Inspections, and Permits to combat blight and preserve public health, safety, sanitation, and aesthetic conditions in the city.
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Ordinance No. 06-23 amends Chapter 196 of the Township of Bethlehem's Code of Codified Ordinances to revise regulations governing reports required for the sale, transfer, and rental of real property. The ordinance requires sellers and lessors of real property in the township to comply with the Act of July 27, 1955 (P.L. 288, No. 104), including obtaining a written report from the Code Enforcement Official prior to sale or lease. The required report must document the property's zoning district classification, the legality of its present use, and any uncorrected violations of housing, building, property maintenance, safety, or fire ordinances discovered during a property inspection by the Code Enforcement Officer. Sellers must deliver this report to purchasers at or before settlement, and lessors must deliver it to lessees at or before lease agreement execution and possession transfer. The ordinance repeals all previously inconsistent ordinances.
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Ordinance No. 33263 rezones approximately 0.992 acres of property in Dallas (Lots 6-11 in City Block C17240, bounded by Ivanhoe Lane, Ithaca Street, and Brundrette Street) from an IR Industrial/Research District to a D(A) Duplex District. The rezoning follows required public hearings and city plan commission approval, with an effective date immediately upon passage and publication. The ordinance includes standard provisions for building permits, compliance with Dallas Development Code, a penalty not to exceed $2,000 for violations, and severability and savings clauses.
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This document is a listing of active development cases for the City of Toledo as of September 2, 2025, showing various site plan reviews, special use permits, zone changes, and other planning applications in various stages of review. The cases range from minor administrative matters to more complex projects requiring Plan Commission approval, with several scheduled for September 11, 2025 hearings. Notable issues include stormwater and illegal use violations requiring resolution before certain projects can proceed, and several applications awaiting applicant submissions or revised plans.
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