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🌍 Environmental Rules/Grading & Drainage

Grading & Drainage: Webster vs Worcester

How do grading & drainage rules compare between Webster, MA and Worcester, MA?

Webster and Worcester have similar restriction levels.

Webster, MA

Worcester County

Some Restrictions

Worcester County MA regulates grading and drainage through local zoning, the MA State Building Code (780 CMR), and the Wetlands Protection Act (MGL c. 131, Β§40). Grading permits are typically required for excavation or fill exceeding 100 cubic yards. Drainage must not be redirected onto adjacent properties under common-law nuisance doctrine. Retaining walls over 4 feet in height require building permits and engineered plans under 780 CMR 1807.

View full Webster rules β†’

Worcester, MA

Worcester County

Some Restrictions

Worcester County MA regulates grading and drainage through local zoning, the MA State Building Code (780 CMR), and the Wetlands Protection Act (MGL c. 131, Β§40). Grading permits are typically required for excavation or fill exceeding 100 cubic yards. Drainage must not be redirected onto adjacent properties under common-law nuisance doctrine. Retaining walls over 4 feet in height require building permits and engineered plans under 780 CMR 1807.

View full Worcester rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactWebsterWorcester
Permit Threshold100 cubic yards typical100 cubic yards typical
Retaining WallEngineered over 4 ftEngineered over 4 ft
Foundation Drainage6 in fall in 10 ft (780 CMR 1804)6 in fall in 10 ft (780 CMR 1804)
Neighbor RuleTucker v. Badoian reasonable useTucker v. Badoian reasonable use
Code780 CMR 10th Edition780 CMR 10th Edition

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Webster FAQ

Do I need a permit to regrade my Worcester County yard?

If the work exceeds your town's threshold (usually 50-100 cubic yards), changes drainage, or is within 100 ft of a wetland, yes. Contact your town's building department and conservation commission.

My neighbor's new grading is flooding my yard. What can I do?

Massachusetts follows the reasonable-use rule (Tucker v. Badoian). You can document the change, send a written demand, and pursue a private nuisance claim. Report drainage changes to the building department if permits were required.

Worcester FAQ

Do I need a permit to regrade my Worcester County yard?

If the work exceeds your town's threshold (usually 50-100 cubic yards), changes drainage, or is within 100 ft of a wetland, yes. Contact your town's building department and conservation commission.

My neighbor's new grading is flooding my yard. What can I do?

Massachusetts follows the reasonable-use rule (Tucker v. Badoian). You can document the change, send a written demand, and pursue a private nuisance claim. Report drainage changes to the building department if permits were required.

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