Jackson County is not in a mapped wildfire hazard zone, but Mississippi Forestry Commission identifies pine-dominated areas as moderate wildfire risk. Firewise USA principles recommended: 30-foot lean/clean zone and 100-foot reduced fuel zone. MFC burn permits required during fire weather. Urban-wildland interface in Wade, Hurley, and Vancleave areas has highest risk. No fire-resistant construction mandates, but Gulf Coast hurricane codes provide some overlap.
Jackson County does not have mapped severe wildfire hazard zones like California's CAL FIRE zones, but the Mississippi Forestry Commission (MFC) recognizes wildfire risk in the county's extensive pine forests, particularly in the urban-wildland interface communities of Wade, Hurley, Vancleave, and rural areas bordering De Soto National Forest. The county experiences 50-150 wildland fires annually, most caused by escaped debris burns. MFC promotes Firewise USA principles recommending defensible space around structures: Zone 1 (0-30 feet) with lean/clean conditions - no combustibles against structures, lawn mowed, dead vegetation removed; Zone 2 (30-100 feet) with reduced fuels - spaced trees, removed ladder fuels, trimmed branches 6+ feet above ground; Zone 3 (100+ feet) with forest management principles. Unlike California or the western U.S., Jackson County does not mandate fire-resistant roofing or siding - but Gulf Coast hurricane construction requirements (impact-resistant roofing, fiber-cement siding alternatives) provide incidental wildfire resistance. MFC burn permits under MS Code Β§49-19-305 are required for outdoor burning during high fire weather conditions (typically October-March drought periods). The MFC maintains a Fire Weather Watch system with statewide burn bans during red flag conditions. Prescribed burning for forest health is legally protected under MS Code Β§49-19-301 'Prescribed Burning Act.' Post-Katrina and hurricane debris accumulation can elevate wildfire risk - vegetative debris piles should be removed or properly disposed. Homeowner insurance policies may require Firewise practices in rural areas.
Defensible space: voluntary, no direct fines. Illegal burning during bans: MFC fines $100-$1,500 under MS Code Β§49-19-305. Escape fire causing damage: criminal charges and civil liability for suppression costs. Insurance coverage may require compliance.
Moss Point, MS
Moss Point limits construction noise to daytime hours, typically 7 AM to 7 PM weekdays and 8 AM to 5 PM Saturdays, under local building and noise ordinances.
Moss Point, MS
Moss Point regulates amplified music and outdoor sound systems through local noise ordinances. Amplified sound is generally restricted during quiet hours fro...
Moss Point, MS
Moss Point addresses barking dogs as a public nuisance under local animal control ordinances. Continuous or excessive barking complaints are handled through ...
Moss Point, MS
Moss Point enforces quiet hours from 10 PM to 6 AM. Industrial operations along the Pascagoula River and Escatawpa River corridors have separate noise exempt...
Moss Point, MS
Moss Point regulates leaf blower use primarily through general noise ordinance hours. Mississippi municipalities generally allow gas and electric blowers dur...
Moss Point, MS
Moss Point regulates driveway construction and parking through local zoning and building codes. Vehicles must not block sidewalks or public right-of-way when...
See how Moss Point's wildfire zones rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.