Showing ordinances that apply to Paloma Creek South, TX
Paloma Creek South is an unincorporated community (population 9,539) in Denton County, Texas. Because Paloma Creek South is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Denton County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The wildfire zones rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Northern and western Denton County contains significant wildland-urban interface areas where grasslands and oak woodlands meet rural subdivisions. The Texas A&M Forest Service maps wildfire risk zones and supports defensible space planning through Community Wildfire Protection Plans.
Denton County spans from developed suburban areas near Lewisville and Flower Mound in the south to rural grasslands, post-oak woodlands, and Cross Timbers habitat in the north and west. The Cross Timbers ecological region creates elevated wildfire risk, especially during summer drought periods. The Texas A&M Forest Service designates wildland-urban interface zones where structures are intermixed with wildland fuels. Denton County participates in Community Wildfire Protection Plans (CWPPs) through Texas A&M Forest Service. Emergency Services Districts like Argyle ESD, Justin-Roanoke ESD, and Northlake-Trophy Club ESD enforce firewise practices in their territories. Property owners in high-risk areas are encouraged to maintain 30 feet of defensible space by clearing dead vegetation and keeping grass mowed. The county has no mandatory defensible space ordinance, but ESDs may require brush clearance as a condition of development approval.
No county-level wildfire zone penalties exist in unincorporated areas. ESDs may withhold development approvals if fire access roads or hydrant spacing do not meet standards. During burn bans, outdoor burning violations carry up to $500 fines.
See how Paloma Creek South's wildfire zones rules stack up against other locations.
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