Showing ordinances that apply to Woodbourne, PA
Woodbourne is an unincorporated community (population 3,710) in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Because Woodbourne is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Bucks County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The food truck permits rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Food trucks in Bucks County need PA Department of Agriculture food license plus municipal mobile vendor permit from each borough/township where they operate. Bucks County Department of Health plays limited role (PA has state-level food licensing). Annual license fees $82+, with additional municipal permit fees varying by township.
Food truck permitting in Bucks County involves state and municipal layers. At the state level, the PA Department of Agriculture Bureau of Food Safety licenses mobile food facilities under the PA Food Safety Act (3 Pa.C.S. ยง5701 et seq.) and 3 Pa. Code Chapter 46. License fee is $82 annually with required inspection. Unlike neighboring Philadelphia (which has a city health department), most of Pennsylvania including Bucks County uses PA Department of Agriculture as the primary food regulator โ the Bucks County Department of Health exists but does not operate a local food safety program. Operators must also comply with the FDA Food Code (PA adopts by reference). Requirements include: commissary agreement for food prep, water, and waste disposal; potable water supply; mechanical refrigeration; handwashing sink with hot water; fire suppression (Class K for cooking); and food handler certification (ServSafe or equivalent) for at least one manager. Municipally, each borough or township where the truck operates requires a separate mobile vendor permit โ fees range from $100-$500 annually. Common Bucks County operating venues with active food truck scenes: Doylestown Borough (State Street special events), Bristol Borough (waterfront), Newtown (State Street farmers market), New Hope (Main Street tourism), Bucks County Wine Trail events, and major festivals like the Bucks County Classic. Some municipalities require additional background checks, certificate of insurance ($1M+ general liability), and zoning approval. PA sales tax license required (6%).
Operating without PA DDA license: summary offense up to $1,000 per day. Municipal permit violations: $250-$1,000 plus potential impoundment. Health code violations (foodborne illness risk): immediate closure order by PA DDA inspector. Expired permits: $100-$500 per day of operation. Sales tax non-compliance: PA Department of Revenue enforcement.
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