113 local rules on file Β· Pop. 358 Β· Dutchess County
Showing ordinances that apply to Bard College, NY
Bard College is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 358 in Dutchess County, New York. Because Bard College is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Dutchess County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Dutchess County may have different rules.
Dutchess County is served by Hudson River surface water (Poughkeepsie and Hyde Park) and groundwater wells with generally ample supply. No permanent outdoor watering schedule countywide. Drought advisories issued by NYS DEC by region under 6 NYCRR Part 674. Poughkeepsie, Beacon, and Wappinger water districts can impose temporary restrictions during declared droughts.
No countywide Dutchess ban on artificial turf. Town zoning may limit impervious-surface coverage in residential districts (typically 20-40% max). Wetland and shoreline-buffer areas restrict non-vegetated surfaces under DEC Article 24. HOAs in planned communities near Poughkeepsie, Beacon, and Hyde Park may independently prohibit synthetic turf.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Dutchess County ordinances.
NY Agriculture and Markets Law 107(5) preempts breed-specific legislation statewide, so no Dutchess County town - including Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Hyde Park, and Rhinebeck - may ban a breed. Dangerous-dog rules under Ag & Markets 123 apply based on individual behavior, not breed. Homeowners insurance carriers may still restrict breeds independently of local law.
No countywide Dutchess pet-limit law. Most towns (Hyde Park, Wappinger, East Fishkill) cap dogs at 4-5 per household without a kennel license. Kennel licenses are issued by the town clerk under NY Ag & Markets Law 109. City of Poughkeepsie limits 3 dogs in residential zones. Cats are generally unregulated outside cruelty limits under AGM 353.
Dutchess County adopts NY Ag and Markets Law Article 7 through town dog-control laws. Most towns (Poughkeepsie, Hyde Park, East Fishkill, LaGrange) require dogs to be leashed or under direct control off the owner's property. County parks require leashes at all times.
Dutchess County has extensive agricultural land in the Hudson Valley with broad livestock rights on farm parcels. NY Agriculture & Markets Law protects farm operations. Suburban areas near Poughkeepsie have stricter animal limits.
NY Environmental Conservation Law Section 11-0505(5) prohibits feeding white-tailed deer and moose statewide. NYSDEC Forest Rangers and Environmental Conservation Police enforce in Dutchess County. Bear feeding (intentional or attracting through unsecured garbage) is prohibited under ECL 11-0505(3). Bird feeders are allowed but must be removed April 1 through December 1 in areas where bears are present (common in eastern and northern Dutchess: Pawling, Dover, Amenia, Millbrook).
Beekeeping is legal throughout Dutchess County. Keepers must register colonies annually with the NY State Department of Agriculture and Markets Apiary Program (required since December 23, 2021, under Ag Markets Law Article 15). Most rural towns have no local beekeeping rules; Poughkeepsie and Beacon require setbacks from property lines (typically 10-25 feet).
NY Agriculture and Markets Law Section 370 and NY Environmental Conservation Law Section 11-0512 prohibit possession of wild animals including big cats (lions, tigers, leopards), bears, wolves, primates, venomous reptiles, and crocodilians as pets. Dutchess County follows state law. Permits are available only for licensed facilities, accredited zoos, wildlife sanctuaries, and research institutions from NYSDEC.
Fence permit rules vary by Dutchess County municipality. Most towns require a building or zoning permit for fences over 6 ft or any fence in a front yard. Rural towns (Milan, Stanford, Pine Plains) often exempt fences under 6 ft. City of Poughkeepsie requires a permit for all fences; City of Beacon requires permits over 4 ft in front yard or 6 ft elsewhere. Fees typically $25-$100.
NYS Uniform Code Appendix G and 19 NYCRR Part 1225 require a 48-inch minimum barrier around all residential pools deeper than 24 inches, with self-closing, self-latching gates opening away from the pool. Applies countywide in Dutchess - Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Hyde Park, Rhinebeck, and all towns. Building permit and final inspection required for pool and barrier before filling.
Fence height rules are set by each Dutchess municipality, not the county. Typical limits: 4 feet front yard, 6 feet side and rear yard in residential zones; 8 feet in commercial/industrial zones. Agricultural zones often unrestricted.
NY Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law (RPAPL) Β§843 spite-fence doctrine applies countywide. Fences over 10 feet built to annoy a neighbor can be enjoined as a private nuisance in NY Supreme Court. Shared-fence cost-sharing is governed by common law and NY RPL Β§840, not mandatory statute. Most Dutchess town codes require the finished side to face the neighbor's property.
Most Dutchess County municipalities enforce a sight-triangle rule at corner lots: no fence, wall, or hedge over 30 inches within 25-30 feet of the intersection of street lines. Required by town zoning codes in Hyde Park, Wappinger, East Fishkill, and similar to meet AASHTO sight-distance standards. Enforced by town building departments and highway superintendents.
Most Dutchess County municipalities allow wood, vinyl, chain-link, composite, and ornamental metal fencing. Historic districts in Rhinebeck, Hyde Park, Poughkeepsie Academy Street, and Beacon restrict chain-link in front yards and typically require wood or traditional wrought-iron materials. No countywide materials rule; barbed and razor wire are prohibited in residential zones in all cities and most towns.
Amplified music in Dutchess County is regulated by local noise codes and NY ABC Law for licensed premises. Poughkeepsie and Beacon require special permits for outdoor concerts and amplified events. The plainly-audible-at-50-to-100-feet standard is common in Hyde Park, Rhinebeck, and Wappinger. Vassar, Marist, and Bard student-rental areas see heightened weekend enforcement.
NY Vehicle and Traffic Law Section 375(31) prohibits excessive vehicle noise and requires mufflers in working order. The SLEEP Act (effective April 2022) raised minimum fines for illegal exhaust modifications to $150-$1,000. NY State Police Troop K (Poughkeepsie), Dutchess Sheriff, and town police enforce on county roads. No county-specific decibel limit beyond the state 95 dBA stationary test.
Construction hours vary by municipality across Dutchess County. Poughkeepsie and Beacon typically allow work 7 AM-6 PM weekdays and 8 AM-5 PM Saturdays, no Sunday work without permit. Rural towns often allow 7 AM-8 PM with no weekend ban. No county-level construction-hours ordinance exists.
Aircraft noise in Dutchess County is preempted by federal law under 49 USC 40103 (FAA sole authority over navigable airspace). Dutchess County Airport (POU) in Wappingers Falls serves general aviation. Stewart International Airport (SWF) in Orange County affects southwestern Dutchess including parts of East Fishkill and Beacon. Complaints go to the airport operator or FAA, not Dutchess County government.
No countywide quiet-hours statute in Dutchess. Each town, city, and village (Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Fishkill, Hyde Park, Rhinebeck, Red Hook, Wappinger, etc.) sets its own nighttime noise limits, typically 10 PM to 7 AM weekdays and 11 PM to 8 AM weekends. NY Penal Law 240.20(2) unreasonable noise applies countywide as a violation-level offense.
Commercial noise in Dutchess County is governed by municipal zoning and noise codes. Industrial zones in Poughkeepsie, Beacon, and Wappinger set dBA limits at the property line, typically 65-70 dBA day and 55-60 dBA night. Rural Dutchess towns (Stanford, Washington, Pine Plains) rely on NY Penal Law 240.20. Mixed-use areas near Metro-North Hudson Line stations receive heightened site-plan review.
No Dutchess County countywide leaf-blower ordinance. A few villages including Rhinebeck and Millbrook restrict gas blowers during summer months or nighttime hours. Most Dutchess towns (Hyde Park, Wappinger, East Fishkill, Red Hook) follow general construction-hours noise rules. Poughkeepsie and Beacon enforce through their general noise codes without a gas-powered-only ban.
Dutchess County enforces NY Agriculture and Markets Law Article 7 through the SPCA and local dog control officers. Persistent barking is handled as a public nuisance under individual town dog-control laws. No county barking ordinance; each town appoints a dog control officer.
NYSDEC brush burn ban in effect statewide March 16 through May 14 annually under 6 NYCRR Part 215. Outside ban window, residential brush burning allowed only in towns under 20,000 population.
Small recreational cooking and warming fires are allowed in most Dutchess County towns outside the DEC March 16-May 14 burn-ban window. Fires must be under 3 feet across, 2 feet tall, continuously attended, with water or extinguisher on hand. NY 6 NYCRR Part 215 governs statewide; towns like Poughkeepsie and Beacon add local fire-code conditions.
NY Executive Law 378(5) and 19 NYCRR Part 1225 require hardwired interconnected smoke alarms in new construction throughout Dutchess County. Since April 2019 all replacement battery alarms in NY must be 10-year sealed lithium under General Business Law 399-ccc. Amanda Law (2016) adds CO alarm requirements. Enforced by town/city building and fire officials.
All consumer fireworks illegal statewide under NY Penal Law 270.00. Dutchess County has NOT opted in to sparkler sales under General Business Law Article 27-C, so sparklers are also banned here.
Dutchess County towns follow NY Uniform Fire Code (19 NYCRR Part 1225) and DEC 6 NYCRR Part 215. Recreational fires allowed in approved pits under 3 ft diameter, 25 ft from structures.
Dutchess County is not a designated high wildfire hazard region. NYS DEC tracks fire danger ratings seasonally through its wildfire prevention program. Hudson Highlands (Fishkill, Beacon) and eastern forested areas (Pawling, Dover) have higher risk during spring dry periods. No Wildland-Urban Interface code adopted countywide.
Dutchess County has no countywide defensible space mandate. NY DEC Forest Rangers recommend a 30 ft cleared zone around rural homes in forested areas. NY DEC Part 215 imposes a statewide residential brush-burning ban March 16 through May 14 (peak wildfire season). Town property maintenance codes (NYS Property Maintenance Code, adopted locally) enforce overgrown vegetation generally, and NY FCNYS fire code applies to commercial and multifamily.
NYS Uniform Code exempts sheds under 144 square feet from building permit, but most Dutchess towns still require a zoning permit for placement. Setbacks typically 5-10 feet from side and rear lot lines in Hyde Park, Wappinger, East Fishkill. Height caps 12-15 feet. Poughkeepsie city lots have tighter 5-foot setbacks; Hudson waterfront and wetland overlays add review.
Garage conversion to habitable space requires a building permit, certificate of occupancy amendment, and zoning approval in every Dutchess County municipality. Conversions must meet egress, insulation, ceiling height (7 ft minimum), and light/ventilation code under NYS Residential Code. Parking replacement may be required where off-street parking minimums apply.
NY adopted IRC Appendix Q for tiny houses effective 2020, allowing homes under 400 sq ft to meet modified building code. Local zoning still controls minimum dwelling size, and many Dutchess towns set 600-900 sq ft minimums. Tiny homes on wheels are regulated as RVs and cannot be used as permanent dwellings in residential zones.
No statewide NY ADU law. Dutchess County ADU rules set at town level. Many towns allow accessory apartments by special use permit in single-family zones with owner-occupancy requirement.
Carports in Dutchess County are treated as accessory structures under each town's zoning code. Most municipalities require a zoning/building permit, require the carport to meet accessory setback standards (typically 5-10 ft side/rear, in front yard only on large rural parcels), and count toward lot coverage. Fabric/temporary carports are regulated separately as temporary structures in some towns.
STR guests in Dutchess County must comply with each town's noise ordinance. Most towns set quiet hours 10 PM to 7 AM. Rhinebeck and Red Hook tie STR permit renewal directly to noise-complaint history. Beacon Chapter 157 and Poughkeepsie Chapter 14 apply regardless of rental status. Hudson Valley wedding-venue weekend parties are a common complaint driver.
Several Dutchess towns require STR operators to carry minimum $1,000,000 in liability insurance and name the town as additional insured. Airbnb's Host Protection program does not satisfy all town requirements - most demand an independent commercial policy. Proof required at permit application and renewal. Standard homeowners policies often exclude STR activity.
Dutchess County has no countywide STR permit. Rules are set by each municipality. City of Poughkeepsie requires registration, Rhinebeck (Town) requires a special use permit, Red Hook regulates STRs, and many rural towns have no STR ordinance.
STR operators must register with the Dutchess County Commissioner of Finance for the 4% county occupancy tax under Tax Law 1202-o, plus their town for a local STR permit where required. Starting March 25, 2025, Airbnb and VRBO also collect and remit state and local taxes under NY's 2024 STR law. Annual renewal typical; life-safety inspection common.
Typical Dutchess town STR codes cap occupancy at 2 persons per bedroom plus 2, not to exceed 10 guests. Rhinebeck, Red Hook, and Milan enforce strict occupancy limits as a condition of STR permits. Septic capacity through Dutchess County Department of Behavioral & Community Health may further limit occupancy in rural areas.
Some Dutchess towns cap un-hosted STR rentals at a set number of nights per year. Town of Rhinebeck limits un-hosted short-term rentals to approximately 60-90 nights per year; hosted rentals (owner on-site) face no annual night cap. Town of Red Hook and Town of Milan have similar tiered frameworks.
Dutchess County imposes a 4 percent hotel and motel occupancy tax on STR stays under 30 days, plus 8.125 percent state and local sales tax. Operators must register with the Dutchess County Commissioner of Finance.
STR parking is governed by town code. Most Dutchess towns require one off-street space per bedroom for STRs. On-street parking is restricted during snow emergencies (no parking when 2+ inches forecasted) in Poughkeepsie, Beacon, and most villages. Metro-North commuter lots (Beacon, Poughkeepsie, New Hamburg) are off-limits to overnight non-rider STR guests.
NY Executive Order 22, Executive Law Section 66-p (Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act), and NYSERDA's Charge Ready NY program support EV infrastructure in Dutchess County. The 2020 NYS Energy Conservation Construction Code requires EV-ready wiring in new residential construction. Dutchess County has 100-plus public charging stations including Vassar College, Bard College, Marist, and Metro-North park-and-ride lots.
RV and boat parking rules vary by municipality in Dutchess County. Most towns allow RVs on private driveways but prohibit on-street storage beyond 48-72 hours under NY VTL Β§1224. Hudson River marinas in Poughkeepsie, Rhinecliff, and Norrie Point handle seasonal boat storage from roughly April through November.
New driveway curb cuts in Dutchess County require a highway work permit from the town highway superintendent for town roads, from Dutchess County Department of Public Works for county routes, and from NYSDOT Region 8 for state highways (Route 9, Route 44, Route 55). NY Highway Law Section 136 governs access to town roads.
There is no countywide overnight parking ban in Dutchess County. Villages of Millbrook, Rhinebeck, Red Hook, and Wappingers Falls enforce winter overnight street bans (November through March or April) to allow snow plowing. The City of Poughkeepsie restricts overnight parking on many downtown streets year-round. Check individual municipal code before long-term street storage.
NY Vehicle and Traffic Law Section 1224 defines abandoned vehicles as those left on a highway more than 6 hours, or on private property more than 96 hours without landowner consent. Dutchess County Sheriff and local town/village police handle removal across Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Hyde Park and other municipalities. Owners are billed for towing and storage.
Street parking governed by individual town/village codes across Dutchess County. NY Vehicle and Traffic Law Section 1201 prohibits parking within 15 feet of hydrants and 30 feet of stop signs countywide.
Most Dutchess County municipalities restrict overnight parking of vehicles over 10,000 lbs GVWR in residential zones. Poughkeepsie, Beacon, and Fishkill enforce commercial vehicle limits on residential streets.
Above-ground pools over 24 inches deep in Dutchess County require a building permit and a compliant barrier. A pool wall at least 48 inches above grade with a removable or lockable ladder may itself satisfy the barrier requirement under NYS Residential Code Appendix G. Countywide - Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Hyde Park, Wappinger all enforce through town/city building departments.
NY Public Health Law and Ted Ross Law require anti-entrapment drain covers on all pools. Door alarms required where house serves as barrier. Pool alarms required on new residential pools under 2006 NY law.
NY State requires a barrier at least 48 inches high around all residential pools over 24 inches deep, with self-closing self-latching gates opening outward. House wall may serve as one side if doors have alarms.
Building permits required for all residential pools deeper than 24 inches under NY State Uniform Code and Dutchess town building codes. In-ground pools require site plan review and often Dutchess County Department of Health approval if on well or septic.
Hot tubs and spas over 24 inches deep are treated as pools under NYS Residential Code Appendix G and require a building permit, barrier, or locking safety cover compliant with ASTM F1346. Electrical permits are required for 240V units. Pool alarms required under NY Executive Law Β§387(14) for tubs meeting pool threshold installed after December 14, 2006.
Customer visits for home occupations are generally limited to preserve residential character in Dutchess County towns. Typical codes allow no more than 1-2 clients on premises at a time by appointment only, with adequate off-street parking. Regular commercial deliveries are prohibited; UPS/FedEx residential-scale deliveries are permitted.
Each Dutchess town sets home occupation standards. Typical rules: accessory to residential use, no more than 25 percent of floor area, no non-resident employees, no external evidence of the business.
Family and group family day care homes in unincorporated Dutchess County must hold NY OCFS licensure or registration under 18 NYCRR Part 417-418. Town zoning typically treats licensed day care as a permitted home occupation.
NY Home Processor exemption under 1 NYCRR Part 276 (Article 20-C) allows direct sale of low-risk baked goods, jams, and candies from home kitchens without commercial license. Must register exemption annually with NY Department of Agriculture and Markets.
Home occupations are allowed in residential zones throughout Dutchess County subject to each town's zoning code. Typical conditions: incidental to residential use, no exterior change, conducted by residents only, no inventory stored outdoors, limited to 25% of dwelling floor area. Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Hyde Park, and Rhinebeck each publish specific home-occupation standards.
Home occupation signage is tightly restricted in Dutchess County towns. Most codes allow one non-illuminated sign, 1-2 sq ft maximum, attached to the dwelling. Rhinebeck Village and Hyde Park historic districts prohibit home-occupation signs entirely. City of Poughkeepsie allows up to 2 sq ft with a sign permit.
NY Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019 (HSTPA) expanded tenant protections statewide. Dutchess County has not opted into ETPA (Emergency Tenant Protection Act) rent stabilization, but HSTPA statewide provisions apply including security deposit limits (1 month) and just-cause eviction rules in buildings with 6+ units.
Dutchess County has not opted into NY Good Cause Eviction law (HSTPA 2024). Standard RPAPL Article 7 eviction procedures apply countywide.
No countywide rental registry. City of Poughkeepsie and City of Beacon require rental unit registration and periodic inspections; most towns do not.
Food trucks in Dutchess County require a Dutchess County Department of Behavioral and Community Health (DBCH) mobile food service establishment permit under 10 NYCRR Subpart 14-4, plus local town/village vending permits. NYS Department of Agriculture and Markets Article 20-C licensing is also required for processors and bakers. Annual fees typically $200-$500.
Food-truck vending zones are designated by individual Dutchess County municipalities. City of Poughkeepsie, City of Beacon, and Village of Rhinebeck have specific mobile vending districts. Events at Walkway Over the Hudson State Historic Park and Dutchess County parks require separate vendor agreements with NYS OPRHP or Dutchess County Parks.
Light trespass addressed as private nuisance under NY common law. Town property maintenance codes may require shielding to prevent spillover onto adjacent properties. Enforcement typically complaint-driven through code enforcement officer.
Dutchess County has no countywide dark-sky ordinance. Towns of Rhinebeck, Stanford, Clinton, Pine Plains, Washington, Amenia, and Milan have adopted lighting standards requiring full-cutoff shielded fixtures and limiting lumens/color temperature in rural and historic districts. The International Dark-Sky Association recognizes parts of eastern Dutchess as dark-sky areas.
Trash containers must be stored out of public view between collection days, typically behind the front building line or in side/rear yards.
Vacant lots must be maintained free of refuse, with vegetation under 10-12 inches. Vacant buildings in Poughkeepsie require registration.
Property maintenance enforced under NY Property Maintenance Code (Part 1226) and municipal codes. Blight includes peeling paint, broken windows, overgrown vegetation, and accumulated debris.
Property owners must clear snow and ice from sidewalks abutting their property within 24 hours after snowfall ends. Fines $25-$250.
Most Dutchess County municipalities allow garage sales without permit but limit frequency to 2-4 sales per year and 3 consecutive days each.
Mandatory recycling under NY ECL Β§27-0719 and Dutchess County Local Law. Single-stream recycling accepted countywide via RRA.
Bulk items accepted at RRA transfer stations with tipping fees. Curbside bulk pickup varies: scheduled in Poughkeepsie and Beacon, by appointment or fee elsewhere.
Dutchess County Resource Recovery Agency (RRA) oversees solid waste. Curbside pickup is handled by municipalities or private haulers; no countywide collection.
Bins must be placed at curb no earlier than evening before pickup and removed by end of collection day. Specific hours set by municipality or hauler.
Dutchess County Supreme Court in Poughkeepsie hears HOA and condominium disputes. NY courts apply the Levandusky business judgment rule (75 N.Y.2d 530, 1990), deferring to board decisions made in good faith within authority. Many governing documents and offering plans require mediation or arbitration before litigation.
Covenants in Dutchess County HOAs and condos are enforced via injunctive action and money judgments in NY Supreme Court, Dutchess County (Poughkeepsie). Condos may file common-charge liens under NY Real Property Law Section 339-z. HOAs can fine owners only if the declaration expressly authorizes fines; fines generally do not become property liens without express authority.
Architectural review committees enforce covenants under NY Real Property Law Β§339 (condos) or recorded declarations (HOAs). Decisions must be reasonable and applied consistently or they may be challenged in NY Supreme Court under the business judgment rule (Levandusky v. One Fifth Ave. Apt., 75 NY2d 530). Solar installations are protected under NY RPL Β§335-b from unreasonable HOA denial.
Condominium boards in Dutchess County are governed by NY Real Property Law Article 9-B (RPL Β§339-d through Β§339-ii). HOAs and co-ops follow their governing documents plus Not-for-Profit Corporation Law (NPCL) or Business Corporation Law (BCL). Board meetings, notices, and owner record-inspection rights must follow the bylaws and statutory minimums.
Condominium common charges are statutory liens on the unit under NY RPL Β§339-z, with priority after the first mortgage and property taxes. HOAs collect assessments per their declaration with lien rights granted by governing documents. Late fees and interest are capped by governing documents; NY courts require reasonableness (Board of Mgrs. of Vil. View Condo v. Forman).
Residential height limits are typically 30-35 feet in Dutchess County towns. Historic districts in Rhinebeck Village, Hyde Park (Springwood/FDR area), and Millbrook impose stricter limits. Hudson River scenic viewshed protections apply under the NY Coastal Management Program (CMP) for parcels within the designated coastal boundary.
Lot coverage maximums in Dutchess County typically run 20-30 percent in residential zones, 40-60 percent in commercial/mixed-use, and 10-15 percent in Rural/Agricultural districts. Impervious surface limits are separate from building footprint in watershed and aquifer-protection overlay districts near the Hudson River and Wappinger Creek.
Setbacks vary by zoning district in each Dutchess County town. Typical residential requirements: 25-50 ft front, 10-20 ft side, 25-40 ft rear. Agricultural zones often require 75-100 ft road setbacks. Hudson River waterfront has additional Coastal Erosion Hazard Area (CEHA) and LWRP buffers under NY ECL Article 34.
No Solicitation signs must be respected. NY General Business Law Β§399-z governs telemarketing; in-person violation handled under local trespass codes.
Most Dutchess County municipalities require door-to-door solicitor permits with background check. Religious and political canvassing exempt per 1st Amendment.
NY requires lead-safe work practices in pre-1978 housing. Dutchess County Department of Behavioral & Community Health runs the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program and inspects child day care homes. NY Public Health Law 1370 and federal RRP Rule apply.
Pest control in occupied residential and commercial buildings falls under NY Property Maintenance Code Β§309. Commercial pesticide applicators must be certified by NYSDEC under 6 NYCRR Part 325. The Dutchess County Department of Behavioral & Community Health handles rat, rodent, and vector complaints. Landlords must maintain habitable conditions free of infestations under NY Warranty of Habitability.
Elevators in Dutchess County must be inspected annually under NY Labor Law 167 and 12 NYCRR Part 5. Certificates of Operation issued by local building departments (or state for certain buildings). ASME A17.1 safety code applies.
Scaffold safety follows NY Labor Law 240 (Scaffold Law) imposing absolute liability on owners and contractors for gravity-related injuries. NYS Industrial Code Rule 23 governs construction operations.
Dutchess County enforces NYSDEC SPDES MS4 permit requirements. Disturbances of 1+ acre require SWPPP filing under 6 NYCRR Part 750. Hudson River tributaries subject to enhanced phase II stormwater controls.
NYS Standards and Specifications for Erosion and Sediment Control apply to all construction in Dutchess County. The Dutchess County Soil & Water Conservation District (DCSWCD) reviews SWPPPs for projects disturbing over 1 acre. Silt fencing, stabilized construction entrances, and temporary seeding are required. Hudson River watershed projects face enhanced BMPs under the Hudson River Estuary Program.
Grading permits are required from town building departments for earthwork over typically 50 cubic yards. The NYS Stormwater Management Design Manual governs drainage. Slope stabilization is required on grades over 3:1. NYS DEC-regulated freshwater wetland buffers under ECL Article 24 add constraints. Hudson River tidal wetlands trigger additional permits under ECL Article 25.
Dutchess County participates in FEMA NFIP. Hudson River waterfront communities (Poughkeepsie, Beacon, Hyde Park, Rhinebeck, Red Hook, Tivoli) have Special Flood Hazard Areas. Base Flood Elevation plus 2 ft freeboard required under NYS Building Code Appendix G.
Dutchess County parks close at dusk unless posted otherwise. Trespassing after hours under NY Penal Law Β§140.05 (violation, up to 15 days).
No countywide juvenile curfew. Dutchess County and most municipalities have no formal curfew ordinance; NY relies on PINS (Person In Need of Supervision) proceedings.
MRTA allowed municipalities to opt out of retail dispensaries and consumption lounges by Dec 31, 2021. Dutchess municipalities split: many towns opted out, cities allow retail.
NY MRTA (Cannabis Law Β§222) permits adults 21+ to grow up to 3 mature and 3 immature plants per person, 6 mature/6 immature per household. Must be out of public view.
Recreational drones governed by FAA Part 107/Recreational Rules. FAA TRUST certification required; DEC regulates drones over state lands.
Commercial drone operations require FAA Part 107 Remote Pilot Certificate. NY Penal Law Β§250.45 restricts unlawful surveillance.
Garage sale signs allowed on private property with permission. Signs in public right-of-way or on utility poles prohibited and subject to removal.
Residential holiday displays generally exempt from sign regulations. Must not create traffic hazard or violate noise rules if audio components used.
Political signs protected by 1st Amendment (Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 2015). Municipalities may impose content-neutral size and duration limits.
NY Real Property Law Section 339-ee(2) limits condominium restrictions on solar collectors. NY does not have a comprehensive statewide solar rights act like California or Florida, but NY RPL Section 335-b voids certain restrictive covenants that unreasonably restrict solar. Dutchess County HOAs and condos must allow reasonable solar installations, though they can impose aesthetic and placement rules.
The NY State Unified Solar Permit streamlines residential solar up to 25 kW across Dutchess County. Most towns charge $0-$400 in permit fees with 2-4 week turnaround. NYSERDA NY-Sun program offers incentive blocks, and net metering is required under NY Public Service Law Section 66-j. Solar installations under 25 kW are exempt from NYS environmental review (SEQR Type II).