100 local rules on file Β· Pop. 3,382 Β· Stark County
Showing ordinances that apply to Greentown, OH
Greentown is an unincorporated community with a population of approximately 3,382 in Stark County, Ohio. Because Greentown is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal government or city code. Instead, Stark County ordinances apply directly to residential and commercial properties here. The rules below are the county-level regulations that govern your area. Nearby incorporated cities in Stark County may have different rules.
Neither Stark County nor Canton sets specific numeric construction-hour limits. Construction noise is judged under Canton's general prohibition on unreasonably loud, disturbing noise. In unincorporated areas, townships may set construction hours through zoning resolutions under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 519.
Stark County has no general countywide noise or quiet-hours code. In Canton, amplified sound that crosses a residential property line is barred 8:00 p.m.β8:00 a.m., and any unreasonably loud noise disturbing the peace is prohibited anytime. Townships and other cities set their own rules.
Stark County has no standalone barking-dog noise code, but Canton lists animal noise as a prohibited nuisance: keeping any animal or bird whose frequent or long-continued noise disturbs neighbors violates Codified Ordinance 509.03. Complaints also go to the Stark County Dog Warden.
Stark County sets no amplified-sound code, but Canton declares noise-amplifying devices that disturb a neighborhood a nuisance. For noncommercial use, loudspeakers, PA systems and similar devices are banned 8:00 p.m.β8:00 a.m. when sound crosses a residential boundary; commercial amplified sound on public ways is barred anytime.
No Stark County or Canton ordinance singles out leaf blowers or sets a leaf-blower decibel cap. Their noise is governed by Canton's general prohibition on unreasonably loud, disturbing noise, and by any township zoning limits in unincorporated areas.
Canton bars vehicle sound systems 'plainly audible' 50 or more feet away, and prohibits loud exhaust discharged without an effective muffler. Stark County itself sets no separate motor-vehicle noise code; Ohio law (ORC 4513.22) also requires working mufflers statewide.
No. Neither Stark County nor the City of Canton uses a numeric decibel (dBA) threshold. Noise is judged by a nuisance standard ('unreasonably loud, disturbing'), and vehicle sound by a 'plainly audible at fifty feet' test rather than a meter reading.
Stark County has no outdoor-music code. In Canton, amplified outdoor music through loudspeakers or PA systems is prohibited 8:00 p.m.β8:00 a.m. when it disturbs across a residential boundary, and at any hour it may not disturb the neighborhood's peace and good order.
Stark County sets no industrial-noise code, and Ohio has no statewide community-noise dB standard. Industrial noise is controlled mainly by township or municipal zoning that separates industrial districts from homes, plus Canton's general nuisance-noise ordinance where the plant sits inside the city.
Aircraft noise is regulated by the federal government, not Stark County or Canton. The FAA controls flight operations and noise around Akron-Canton Airport (CAK); local ordinances cannot set aircraft noise limits. Complaints go to the airport's noise office and the FAA.
Stark County runs no countywide short-term-rental permit or zoning program. Approval depends on your jurisdiction: inside Canton you register the rental with the Chief Building Official, while unincorporated townships license and zone STRs under Ohio's township-zoning law (ORC Chapter 519).
Stark County levies a 6% lodging (bed) tax that hotels and motels collect from transient guests and remit quarterly to the County Auditor. Ohio also charges 5.75% state sales tax on lodging. Whether small STRs owe the county bed tax depends on the hotel definition.
There is no county STR registry. Inside the City of Canton, a short-term rental is a non-owner-occupied residential property and must be registered every year with the Chief Building Official under Codified Ordinance 1351.03, with an interior inspection for first-time registrations.
Stark County imposes no short-term-rental occupancy limit. Maximum occupancy instead comes from the property-maintenance and building codes your city or township enforces, such as Canton's adopted International Property Maintenance Code, which ties occupancy to room area and sleeping space.
Stark County sets no short-term-rental parking standard. Off-street parking requirements come from your municipality's or township's zoning code, and on-street parking follows Canton's traffic ordinances or township rules where the property sits.
Neither Ohio nor Stark County requires that a short-term rental be your primary residence. Any such limit would have to come from a city or township zoning resolution. Most Stark jurisdictions have not imposed a primary-residence rule, but some may restrict STRs to certain zoning districts.
Stark County places no limit on how many nights a year a short-term rental may operate, and Ohio sets no statewide night cap. Any annual-night or minimum-stay limit would be a local zoning choice by a specific city, village, or township.
Stark County has no general noise code for rentals. Guest noise is enforced through the noise and peace-disturbance ordinances of your city or village, such as Canton's ban on loud and disturbing noise, backed by the county Sheriff or local police in the townships.
Stark County does not require a host to be present during a short-term-rental stay, and Ohio sets no such statewide rule. Any host-presence or local-contact requirement would come from an individual city or township, and most Stark jurisdictions have not adopted one.
Stark County and Ohio do not require short-term-rental hosts to carry a specific insurance policy. A city or township could require proof of liability coverage as a zoning or registration condition, so check locally; regardless, hosts should verify their coverage independently of platform protection.
Stark County itself sets no RV/boat parking zoning; your township (ORC Ch. 519) or city sets it. In Canton, an RV, camper, boat or trailer may be stored in any zoning district only if it is licensed and in working repair.
Stark County sets no commercial-vehicle parking zoning; your township or city does. In Canton, no person may park or store a semi-tractor and/or trailer, or a tow truck, in any residential, CS, B-1 or B-2 district.
Stark County does not regulate on-street parking on municipal streets; your city or township and ORC do. In Canton, a parked vehicle's curb-side wheels must be parallel to and within twelve inches of the curb.
Ohio law defines an abandoned junk motor vehicle statewide. Under ORC 4513.63 it must be left 48+ hours, three years old or older, extensively damaged, apparently inoperable, and worth $1,500 or less. Canton adds a 72-hour private-property limit.
Stark County has no countywide overnight parking ban. Rules are set by your city or township. Canton has no blanket overnight ban, but a vehicle left on a public street 48 hours or more may be treated as abandoned.
Stark County sets no driveway parking rule; your city or township does. In Canton, no vehicle may stand or park in front of a public or private driveway, and RVs or trailers stored on-site must be licensed and in working order.
Stark County sets no rule reserving parking spaces for electric-vehicle charging. There is no countywide EV parking ordinance; installation follows the Ohio building and electrical codes, and any space reservation is set by the property owner, city or township.
Stark County sets no curb-marking rules; cities do. In Canton, no person may stop, stand or park where the curbing is painted yellow. Only the city marks curbs; residents may not paint public curbs themselves.
Stark County sets no oversized-vehicle parking zoning; townships and cities do. Canton bars parking or storing a semi-tractor and/or trailer, or a tow truck, in any residential, CS, B-1 or B-2 district, and requires stored trailers to be licensed and in repair.
Stark County does not set loading-zone rules; cities do. Canton City Code 351.03 bars stopping, standing or parking in numerous marked and restricted places, and off-street loading is required for many uses under Canton's zoning code.
Since 2022, Ohio lets residents discharge 1.4G consumer fireworks on private property on set statutory days (July 3-5, the surrounding weekends, New Year's, Memorial and Labor Day weekends, and more). But any township or city may restrict the dates/times or ban discharge entirely.
Stark County has no countywide fire-pit code; your city or township sets rules. In Canton, a recreational fire (cooking) needs a free permit, must be no larger than 2x2x2 feet, and must be out by 11 p.m.
Ohio EPA rules (OAC 3745-19) govern open burning statewide. Burning household trash, yard debris, or garbage is prohibited. Residential waste burning, where allowed, must sit at least 1,000 feet from any neighbor's inhabited building and burn no rubber, plastic, or building materials.
Backyard open fires follow Ohio EPA limits plus your city's rules. Canton allows only small cooking fires by permit, and in March, April, May, October, and November they cannot start before 6 p.m. Bonfires are capped at a three-foot-wide, two-foot-high fuel pile.
The Ohio Fire Code limits propane storage at multi-family buildings. LP-gas containers over 2.5 pounds water capacity may not be kept on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction. One- and two-family homes are exempt from this restriction.
Stark County and Ohio have no designated wildfire hazard severity zones, defensible-space maps, or ignition-resistant building mandates like fire-prone western states. Fire risk here is managed through open-burning limits, local fire codes, and nuisance-vegetation rules rather than wildfire zoning.
Ohio has no wildfire defensible-space or brush-clearance mandate. Overgrown weeds, brush, and high grass are handled as a nuisance by your township or city. Jackson Township, for example, mows lots left between 8 and 12 inches and bills the owner.
Smoke detectors are required by Ohio building/fire code, not a Stark County ordinance. Ohio Revised Code 3781.104 requires each dwelling unit to have approved smoke detectors installed just outside every sleeping room, audible in all bedrooms with doors closed.
Stark County has no countywide fence code. In the City of Canton, fences may reach 4 feet in the front yard, 6 feet in a side yard, and 8 feet in the rear yard. Unincorporated townships set their own limits under Ohio Chapter 519 zoning.
Ohio's line-fence law (ORC Chapter 971) governs shared boundary fences statewide: adjoining owners maintain a partition fence in equitable shares. In Canton you do not need a neighbor's permission to build a fence up to your own lot line.
There is no Stark County fence permit. The City of Canton regulates fences by zoning and requires a Zoning Permit when a fence is replaced or more than one-third rebuilt. Townships require a zoning certificate under Ohio Chapter 519.
Canton Ordinance 1134.02 sets how fences must be built: they may sit up to the lot line, must use weather-resistant materials, show the finished side out, stay clear of sight-lines, and be kept in good repair. The county sets no such rules.
Canton requires fences built from traditional, weather-resistant materials β wrought iron, chain link, pressure-treated lumber, cedar, redwood, PVC or vinyl. Materials must be uniform, approved building materials; scrap and temporary materials are not allowed.
Neither Stark County nor Canton's fence chapter sets a special retaining-wall height. Retaining walls follow the zoning wall rules and the Ohio Residential Code, which generally requires a building permit for walls retaining more than four feet of soil.
Canton bans barbed wire in residential areas, electrified fences in every district (except invisible pet fences), chicken wire (except garden enclosures), and scrap, pallets or cattle fencing. Snow fencing is allowed only Nov 1βMar 31.
Ohio law requires every dog to be physically confined or restrained on the owner's premises, or kept under a person's reasonable control when off it. The Stark County Dog Warden enforces this countywide; Canton adds its own leash rules.
Ohio requires every beekeeper to register their apiary with the Ohio Department of Agriculture each year under ORC 909.02. Stark County sets no separate hive rule; placement limits, if any, come from your township or city zoning.
Stark County itself does not zone for backyard livestock; your township (under ORC Chapter 519) or city sets the rules. In Canton, goats and horses must be housed set distances from any dwelling under Codified Ordinance 505.08.
Ohio's Dangerous Wild Animal Act (ORC Chapter 935) bans private ownership of big cats, bears, primates, and large constrictors without a state permit. In Canton, Codified Ordinance 505.13 presumes venomous snakes and apes to be dangerous animals.
Ohio law (ORC 951.02) bars owners from letting horses, cattle, sheep, goats, swine, or poultry run at large on public roads, unenclosed land, or a neighbor's property. Owners are liable for damage and can be cited by local authorities.
No. Ohio abolished breed-specific 'pit bull' designations in 2012. A dog is classified as nuisance, dangerous, or vicious under ORC 955.11 based on its behavior, not its breed. Stark County and Canton follow this behavior-based standard.
Ohio has no statewide cat licensing or leash law, and Stark County sets no cat-at-large rule. Cats do, however, count toward Canton's five-animal household limit under Codified Ordinance 505.14, and cruelty and rabies laws still apply.
Ohio has no statute using the word 'hoarding,' but ORC 959.13 and 959.131 make it illegal to confine animals without adequate food, water, and shelter. Canton's five-animal household cap (505.14) also limits accumulation; the Dog Warden and Humane Society investigate.
Stark County sets no countywide pet limit, but the county seat does: Canton Codified Ordinance 505.14 caps a household at a total of five dogs or cats, in any combination, over four months of age. Other cities and townships set their own limits.
Neither Stark County nor Canton has a general ordinance banning the feeding of deer or other wildlife. Wildlife is regulated by the Ohio Division of Wildlife, which discourages deer feeding, and local nuisance rules may apply if feeding attracts pests.
Stark County has no countywide grass-height rule; your township (ORC Ch. 519 zoning) or city sets it. In the county seat, Canton bans grass taller than eight inches; the city can cut it and bill you.
Ohio has no statewide homeowner watering ban, and Stark County sets none. Any outdoor-watering limits come only from your local water utility during a declared shortage. Canton imposes no routine day-of-week schedule.
Collecting rainwater is legal in Ohio and Stark County; no county rule restricts rain barrels. If a cistern is used as a home's drinking-water source, Ohio Department of Health private-water-system rules (OAC 3701-28) apply.
Stark County does not regulate synthetic lawns. Whether artificial turf is allowed in a front yard is decided by your city or township zoning code and by any HOA rules, not by the county.
Stark County sets no countywide weed code. Canton Ordinance 551.01 bans noxious weeds, using the state's official list in Ohio Administrative Code 901:5-37. The city may cut them after notice and assess the cost.
Stark County does not ban backyard composting; the Stark-Tuscarawas-Wayne Recycling District encourages it. Keep piles managed so they don't become a nuisance under city property-maintenance and health-nuisance rules.
Stark County sets no countywide trimming rule. In Canton, the abutting owner must keep branches over any street pruned to at least 20 feet, and 20 feet above sidewalks; the city may prune after 10 days' notice and bill you.
Stark County has no general tree-removal code for private yards. In Canton, owners must remove dead or hazardous trees; the city can order removal of diseased or dangerous trees within 30 days and, if ignored, remove them and charge you.
Stark County does not regulate native or pollinator plantings. They are allowed, but Canton's eight-inch grass-and-weed limit can still apply to unmanaged growth, so keep a maintained, intentional landscape rather than a neglected lot.
Ohio's statewide cottage food law lets you make non-hazardous foods like baked goods, jams, jellies, and candy at home with no license, registration, or inspection. Products must be labeled 'This Product is Home Produced' and sold within Ohio.
Home child care in Ohio is licensed by the state, not Stark County. A Type B family child care home cares for one to seven children at a time, with no more than three under age two, and needs a state license from the Ohio Department of Children and Youth.
The City of Canton requires a conditional use permit from the Board of Zoning Appeals to run a home occupation. Only resident family members may work in it, with a narrow exception allowing one employee for certain professionals like doctors or attorneys.
In the City of Canton, a home occupation may not change the building's outside appearance except for one non-illuminated sign no larger than four square feet. Townships set their own limits under ORC Chapter 519, so confirm locally.
Stark County does not zone; your city or township does. In the City of Canton, a home occupation is a conditional use needing a permit from the Board of Zoning Appeals, and the business must stay clearly incidental to residential use of the home.
Yes. Ohio has no countywide pool ordinance, but the Residential Code of Ohio requires a building permit and code-compliant barrier for residential pools. Apply through your city building department (Canton, Massillon) or the township/county building authority for unincorporated land.
Residential pools in Stark County must be enclosed by a barrier at least 48 inches high under the Residential Code of Ohio. Openings cannot pass a 4-inch sphere, and gates must be self-closing and self-latching.
Above-ground pools in Stark County still need a code-compliant barrier under the Residential Code of Ohio. If the pool wall serves as the barrier, the ladder or steps must be removable, lockable, or secured to block access when the pool is unattended.
Stark County has no separate hot-tub ordinance. Under the Residential Code of Ohio, a spa or hot tub fitted with a safety cover meeting ASTM F1346 does not need a full pool barrier. Without a compliant cover, the 48-inch barrier rules apply.
Under the Residential Code of Ohio, pool gates must open away from the pool and be self-closing with a self-latching device. Public pools in Stark County must meet Ohio Administrative Code 3701-31 barrier and lifeguard standards enforced by Stark County Public Health.
Stark County itself does not zone accessory dwelling units. In unincorporated townships, ADUs are governed by township zoning under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 519; in Canton and other cities, by the municipal zoning code. Ohio has no statewide ADU mandate.
Stark County has no countywide rule on garage conversions. In Canton, converting a garage to living space requires a building permit and must satisfy the zoning district's permitted uses, off-street parking, and the Ohio Residential Code. Townships enforce their own zoning under ORC Ch. 519.
In Canton, a shed is any accessory unit up to 200 square feet, and only one shed is allowed on a property with a principal structure. Detached accessory structures must sit 5 feet from side yard lines and 4 feet from the rear line.
Canton allows no more than one detached garage or carport per property, and no wall of a detached garage or carport may exceed 34 feet in length. Combined accessory coverage is capped at 10% of the lot area.
Stark County sets no tiny-home rule. A tiny house on a permanent foundation must meet the statewide Ohio Residential Code and local zoning (township under ORC Ch. 519, or city). A tiny house on wheels is generally treated as an RV and cannot serve as a permanent dwelling in residential
Charcoal, propane, and gas grills are exempt from Canton's recreational-fire permit. But the Ohio Fire Code bars operating charcoal or open-flame cooking devices on combustible balconies or within 10 feet of combustible construction at multi-family buildings; houses are exempt.
A backyard smoker counts as a clean-burning cooking apparatus like a grill, so Canton exempts it from the recreational-fire permit. At apartments, the same Ohio Fire Code balcony limits apply. Smoke that drifts onto neighbors can still be a local nuisance.
Stark County has no countywide setback code. In Canton's R-1 single-family district, buildings need a 30-foot front, 20-foot rear and 5-foot side yard. Detached accessory structures sit 5 feet from side lines and 4 feet from the rear line.
Stark County sets no countywide height limit. In Canton's single-family districts (R-1 through R-3), the maximum building height is about 35 feet; R-4 allows up to 45 feet. Townships set their own limits under Ohio Chapter 519 zoning.
Stark County has no countywide lot-coverage rule. Canton's single-family districts cap building/lot coverage around 40β50% with a required 20β25% landscaped area, and detached garages/carports are limited to 10% of lot area (max 1,000 sq ft).
Stark County runs no general vacant-lot code; cities and townships do. Canton requires vacant and foreclosed buildings to register (Chapter 1353). Statewide, a junk motor vehicle left on private property 48+ hours is an abandoned junk vehicle (ORC 4513.63).
Stark County sets no countywide grass-height rule; your city or township does. Canton bans grass over eight inches and noxious weeds on private land under Codified Ordinances Chapter 551, and the city can cut overgrown lots and bill the owner.
Canton provides each residence a 95-gallon standard cart. The lid must close completely or an additional container is required, and carts sit at the curb or pavement edge so trucks can lift them. Stark County itself sets no countywide container rule.
Stark County sets no garage-sale rule; municipalities do. Canton regulates garage sales in residential districts under Codified Ordinances Chapter 1142, which limits how many sales a residence may hold and their duration. Check your city or township for local limits.
Stark County runs no countywide blight code; the city or township enforces it. Canton adopts the International Property Maintenance Code (Chapter 1351) and abates public nuisances and neglected vacant structures under Chapter 1353.
Canton carts go on the road next to the curb or pavement edge so trucks can lift them, set out by 6:00 a.m. on collection day. Empty carts must be pulled back from the collection site before 8:00 a.m. the following day.
Canton residents may set out two large items per week (such as furniture) on their regular collection day at no extra charge. Bulky white goods like refrigerators, stoves, and water heaters may be placed at the curb no sooner than 24 hours before collection.
In Canton, residential waste must be at the curb no earlier than noon the day before pickup and no later than 6:00 a.m. on collection day. Waste set out after 6:00 a.m. may not be collected until the next week.
Canton's curbside program collects aluminum and bi-metal cans, glass, paper, and plastics numbered 1 and 2, rinsed and placed in the provided container. Stark, Tuscarawas, and Wayne counties are served by the joint Stark-Tuscarawas-Wayne recycling district.
Ohio law bans depositing litter on public property, on private property you don't own, or in state waters (ORC 3767.32). Canton adds local penalties: a $150 first-offense ticket, at least $500 for a second, and a $500-minimum cleanup charge that can become a property lien.
Canton's outdoor illumination code (Chapter 1185) requires exterior lighting to minimize sky illumination. Under Section 1185.02, all outdoor lighting must be directed to avoid glare into the sky, and fixtures must be shielded so the light source is not visible above five feet at the lot line.
Under Canton Codified Ordinance 1185.02, exterior lighting systems must be designed, installed, and maintained to minimize or substantially reduce light trespass beyond the property lot line and to reduce disability glare on or off the property.
Canton treats garage sale signs as temporary signs under Codified Ordinance 1187.11: permit-exempt, capped at 6 square feet for a small sign, displayed up to 30 consecutive days, on private property, and not illuminated. Signs in the public right-of-way can be removed.
Canton regulates political signs content-neutrally as temporary signs. Under Codified Ordinance 1187.11, temporary signs may be displayed up to 30 consecutive days, twice per year, are exempt from a permit, and a small temporary sign is capped at 6 square feet.
These unincorporated areas are also governed by Stark County ordinances.