Massachusetts does not have county-level code enforcement. Code violations are reported to individual city or town building departments, boards of health, or inspectional services within Middlesex County. The Massachusetts State Building Code (780 CMR) is enforced at the municipal level by local building inspectors and health agents.
Unlike many states, Massachusetts abolished county government functions in 1997 (except for sheriff departments), meaning there is no county-level code enforcement in Middlesex County. Code violations are handled by individual cities and towns within the county. Middlesex County contains 54 municipalities, including major cities like Cambridge, Lowell, Newton, Somerville, Framingham, Waltham, and Medford. Each municipality has its own Building Department (headed by a Building Commissioner or Inspector of Buildings), Board of Health, and potentially an Inspectional Services Department. To report a code violation, residents should contact their local municipality's building department or board of health. For building code violations (unpermitted construction, structural issues, zoning violations): contact the Building Inspector/Commissioner at your city or town hall. For health code violations (unsanitary conditions, pest infestations, mold, lead paint): contact the Board of Health or Health Department. For housing code violations (habitability issues in rental units): contact the local Board of Health, which enforces the State Sanitary Code (105 CMR 410). The Massachusetts Attorney General's office also handles certain housing complaints. Many Middlesex County municipalities offer online complaint portals through their websites or services like SeeClickFix. Emergency situations (structural collapse, gas leaks) should be reported to 911.
Enforcement actions are taken at the municipal level. Building code violations can result in fines, stop-work orders, and court-ordered compliance. Health code violations can lead to condemnation orders, fines, and tenant rent withholding rights under MGL Chapter 239 Β§8A.
Somerville, MA
Somerville restricts amplified music through its noise ordinance and entertainment licensing, with plainly-audible standards at property lines and stricter c...
Somerville, MA
Somerville limits construction noise to daytime and early-evening weekday hours with shorter Saturday windows and a full Sunday and holiday prohibition, refl...
Somerville, MA
Overnight street parking in Somerville requires a resident permit citywide. Snow emergencies trigger odd-even or posted-side bans.
Somerville, MA
Commercial vehicles over 2.5 tons cannot park overnight on Somerville residential streets. Loading zones are time-limited and signed by block.
Somerville, MA
Most Somerville streets are resident-permit zones. Non-residents are limited to 2 hours on posted blocks from 8 AM to 8 PM daily including weekends.
Somerville, MA
Somerville requires a building permit for most fence installations, with historic districts adding a Historic Preservation Commission review step for visible...
See how Somerville's how to report rules stack up against other locations.
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