Rhode Island provides almost no statewide statutory protections that override condominium-association restrictions on owner displays. There is no solar-access law limiting HOAs, and the Condominium Act contains no flag, flagpole, or political-sign protection. Associations retain broad authority unless their own documents say otherwise.
Rhode Island's Common Interest Ownership Act (Ch. 34-36.1) contains no section protecting solar energy systems, flags, or signs from association rules. The state's only solar statute, the Solar Easements Act (R.I. Gen. Laws § 34-40-2), merely lets "any property owner … grant a solar easement in the same manner and with the same effect as a conveyance of an interest in real property." It is voluntary between owners and does not bar an HOA from restricting solar panels. Unlike California or Florida, Rhode Island has no statute voiding HOA solar bans, no statutory flagpole right, and no political-sign protection. Display of the U.S. flag is shielded only by the federal Freedom to Display the American Flag Act of 2005, not by state law.
Because no statewide override exists, an association may restrict or prohibit solar panels, signs, and most displays through its recorded rules; remedies are the fines and enforcement in §§ 34-36.1-3.20 and 3.16.
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Providence, RI
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Providence, RI
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Providence, RI
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