Showing ordinances that apply to Mount Ivy, NY
Mount Ivy is an unincorporated community (population 7,657) in Rockland County, New York. Because Mount Ivy is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Rockland County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The cottage food operations rules below are the ones that govern your area.
New York's Home Processor Exemption under Agriculture and Markets Law ยง251-z-6 allows home production of non-hazardous foods. NY State Department of Agriculture and Markets inspects and registers home processors. Annual sales up to $50,000 without full commercial kitchen.
New York regulates home food production under Agriculture and Markets Law ยง251-z-6 (Home Processor Exemption), administered by the NY Department of Agriculture and Markets Division of Food Safety and Inspection. Permitted products include baked goods (cookies, cakes, muffins), jams, jellies, fruit preserves, candies, dried herbs, granola, popcorn, and other shelf-stable foods. Potentially hazardous foods (meat, dairy-based, acidified canned goods, cream-filled baked goods) are excluded. Annual sales are capped at $50,000 without additional licensing. Home processors must register with NY Ag and Markets (free), pass a home kitchen inspection, and label products with name, address, ingredients, allergens, and net weight per 21 CFR Part 101 and NY regulations. Sales are permitted at farmers markets, directly from the home, online with in-state delivery, and to small retail outlets. Clarkstown, Ramapo, Orangetown, and Haverstraw allow home processing as a permitted home occupation under respective zoning codes, subject to no exterior signage, no employees, and no customer visits in residential zones. The Rockland Farm Alliance supports local food producers.
Unregistered home processing: NY Ag and Markets cease-and-desist. Producing prohibited hazardous foods: embargo and fines up to $1,000 per violation. Mislabeling or allergen omission: product seizure plus fines. Exceeding $50,000 cap: must obtain full Article 20-C food processing license. Zoning violations: town home-business enforcement, $100 to $1,000.
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