Pennsylvania has no state solar-access law, so an HOA may restrict or even ban solar panels through its covenants; a 2021 bill to curb such restrictions did not pass. American-flag display is protected only by the federal Freedom to Display the American Flag Act of 2005 (4 U.S.C. Β§ 5), not by any Pennsylvania statute.
Pennsylvania has enacted no statute overriding HOA restrictions on residential solar collectors. As a result, covenants and architectural rules may limit or prohibit solar panels, and proposed legislation (Senate Bill 826 in 2021) to bar such bans was not enacted β so the protection here is honestly none at the state level. For flags, the controlling law is federal: the Freedom to Display the American Flag Act of 2005, 4 U.S.C. Β§ 5, bars a residential real estate management association from enforcing any policy preventing a member from displaying the U.S. flag on property they own or exclusively use, subject to reasonable time, place, and manner rules. That Act is federal, not Pennsylvania law, and courts note it has no express private enforcement mechanism.
No penalty on the homeowner. On solar, Pennsylvania imposes no override, so an HOA's covenant restrictions generally stand. On flags, an HOA policy banning U.S. flag display is unenforceable under federal law (4 U.S.C. Β§ 5), though reasonable time, place, and manner rules remain allowed.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Scranton, PA
Outdoor swimming pools in Scranton must be enclosed by a barrier at least 4 feet high with openings no wider than 2 inches and self-latching gates. The Penns...
Scranton, PA
Scranton's Zoning Ordinance regulates fence height, location, and visibility but does not prescribe a closed list of allowed residential materials. Wood, vin...
Scranton, PA
Scranton's Zoning Ordinance allows fences on the property line and does not require neighbor consent. Boundary and partition-fence disputes are resolved unde...
Scranton, PA
Scranton exempts most residential fences with a fair market value under $500 from a zoning permit, but a permit is still required in the Floodplain Overlay a...
Scranton, PA
Scranton's Code of Ordinances Chapter 169 (Animals) caps the total combined number of dogs and cats over three months of age at six (6) per residential lot o...
Scranton, PA
Scranton's local wildlife-feeding enforcement runs through Chapter 169 nuisance provisions of the Code of Ordinances and property-maintenance rules against a...
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