The most frequently investigated code violations in unincorporated King County include junk and debris accumulation, construction without permits, clearing or grading without permits, junk vehicles, illegal businesses in residential zones, dangerous buildings, and critical area/shoreline violations.
King County Code Enforcement investigates a wide range of violations in unincorporated areas. The most common include: (1) Junk and debris accumulation β storage of refuse, waste, and household junk visible from public areas or neighboring properties, in violation of KCC Title 21A (Zoning) and public nuisance provisions. (2) Construction without a permit β building additions, sheds, garages, and renovations without required King County building permits, particularly common in rural areas. (3) Clearing or grading without permits β unauthorized land clearing, tree removal, and earth grading that can affect drainage, slope stability, and critical habitats, a significant issue in King County's environmentally sensitive terrain. (4) Junk vehicles β storage of inoperable, abandoned, or unlicensed vehicles on residential properties. (5) Illegal businesses β operating commercial activities (auto repair, retail, manufacturing) in residential zones. (6) Dangerous or open-to-entry buildings β structures that pose safety risks due to deterioration or being left unsecured. (7) Illegally placed mobile homes or manufactured homes β placing mobile homes without proper permits and site preparations. (8) Critical area and shoreline violations β unauthorized development in wetlands, streams, steep slopes, or shoreline buffers, which are heavily regulated under KCC Title 21A and the Washington Shoreline Management Act. (9) Livestock infractions β keeping livestock (chickens, goats, horses) in zones or quantities not permitted by zoning code.
Penalties vary: unpermitted construction may result in stop-work orders and double permit fees; environmental violations carry penalties of $250β$5,000 per day; junk and nuisance violations face penalties starting at $100/day. Liens may be placed on non-compliant properties.
Redmond, WA
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Redmond, WA
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Redmond, WA
Redmond generally allows overnight residential street parking within the 72-hour continuous-parking limit. Downtown time zones, snow events, and posted no-pa...
Redmond, WA
Redmond restricts on-street RV and boat parking to 72 hours and regulates driveway storage under RMC Title 21. Many zones limit the number of recreational ve...
Redmond, WA
Redmond regulates driveway width, surfacing, and apron construction under RMC Title 21 and Public Works standards. Residential driveways are typically 10-24 ...
Redmond, WA
Standard residential fences up to 6 feet in side and rear yards and 4 feet in front yards do not require a building permit in Redmond. Permits are needed for...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in King County.
See how Redmond's common violations rules stack up against other locations.
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