Haltom City requires property owners to keep premises free of rodents and vermin. Commercial pest control operators must hold Texas Department of Agriculture licenses under Occupations Code 1951.
Haltom City property maintenance provisions require owners and occupants to keep structures and yards free from rodent harborage, insect infestations, and other vermin that constitute a public nuisance. Typical rules prohibit accumulations of trash, junk, or overgrown vegetation that attract rats and mice; require screens on windows and doors during warm months to exclude flies and mosquitoes; and mandate prompt repair of holes in exterior walls, foundations, and rooflines that allow pest entry. Tenant and landlord responsibilities under Texas Property Code Chapter 92 place the duty to eliminate rodent and insect infestations on landlords when conditions exist at move-in or are caused by structural defects, while tenants are responsible for infestations caused by their own actions (feeding, unsanitary conditions). Commercial pest control applicators in Texas must hold a structural pest control license issued by the Texas Department of Agriculture under Occupations Code Chapter 1951, complete state-required continuing education, and use only EPA-registered pesticides. Licensed applicators must post notices in multi-family buildings at least 48 hours before treatment and use the least toxic effective method in schools and daycares under the school IPM program. Bed bug, cockroach, and termite treatments in Haltom City rental properties must follow TDA rules and the city's property maintenance code. Mosquito control is handled jointly by Tarrant County Public Health vector control and Haltom City Public Works, which may fog for mosquitoes during West Nile virus activity. Property owners must drain standing water in containers, pools, and birdbaths. Reporting a suspected rat infestation to Haltom City Code Enforcement triggers inspection and abatement orders. Do-it-yourself pesticide use by homeowners on their own property does not require a state license but must follow label directions.
Property owners who fail to abate rodent or insect infestations after notice from Haltom City Code Enforcement face citations up to 500 dollars per day and may have the city abate the nuisance and lien the property. Unlicensed commercial pest control work violates Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1951 and can result in TDA civil penalties up to 5,000 dollars per violation. Misuse of restricted-use pesticides can trigger EPA and TDA enforcement.
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Haltom City, TX
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