Showing ordinances that apply to Mount Charleston, NV
Mount Charleston is an unincorporated community (population 314) in Clark County, Nevada. Because Mount Charleston is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Clark County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The home occupation permits rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Unincorporated Clark County requires a home occupation permit plus a county business license to operate any business from a residence, reviewed against Title 30 standards.
Any person operating a business from a residence in unincorporated Clark County must obtain a home occupation permit through the Clark County Department of Business License and a concurrent county business license under Title 6 of the County Code. Application requires a completed home occupation questionnaire describing the nature of the business, hours of operation, number of employees, client visits, parking, deliveries, equipment, and storage. The Department of Comprehensive Planning reviews for compliance with Title 30 home occupation standards. If the property is in an HOA, written HOA approval may be required in some cases; regardless, HOA rules apply independently. Fees are modest (roughly 50 to 150 dollars depending on the business category) plus the general business license fee. Renewal is annual or biennial. The permit may be revoked for any Title 30 violation including outside evidence of business, prohibited use, excess traffic, or complaints. Separate state licensing may be required for professions like contractors (Nevada State Contractors Board), cosmetology, real estate, and any regulated occupation. Operating without a home occupation permit is a misdemeanor under Clark County Code and carries fines plus back license fees.
Operating without a home occupation permit or business license: misdemeanor citation under Clark County Code, administrative fines starting at 100 dollars, and back license fees. Continued non-compliance: cease-and-desist order, business license denial, and potential court injunction.
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