Maricopa County regulates certain plants under the Arizona Native Plant Law (ARS Β§3-904) and noxious weed regulations. Palo Verde, saguaro, and other protected native plants cannot be removed without permits. Several weed species are regulated by the Arizona Department of Agriculture.
Arizona regulates plants in two directions: protecting native species and controlling invasive ones. Under the Arizona Native Plant Law (ARS Β§3-901 through Β§3-916), it is illegal to destroy, mutilate, or remove protected native plants (including saguaro cactus, palo verde, ironwood, and mesquite) from any land without a permit from the Arizona Department of Agriculture. Property owners must obtain salvage permits before removing protected plants during construction. On the invasive side, the Arizona Department of Agriculture maintains a list of regulated and restricted noxious weeds including: Russian knapweed, yellow starthistle, camelthorn, giant salvinia, and water hyacinth. Buffelgrass (Pennisetum ciliare) is a major invasive concern in the Sonoran Desert, including Maricopa County, as it promotes wildfires in desert ecosystems. The county and Arizona Department of Forestry conduct buffelgrass removal programs.
Removing protected native plants without a permit: Class 1 misdemeanor, fines up to $100,000 for saguaros. Failing to control noxious weeds after notice: penalties under ARS Β§3-201.
Glendale, AZ
Glendale regulates amplified music under the general noise ordinance. Sound amplification permits available for events. ARS Β§13-2916 applies.
Glendale, AZ
Luke Air Force Base is located 7 miles west of downtown Glendale and is the largest fighter wing in the US Air Force, operating F-35A and F-16 aircraft. Mili...
Glendale, AZ
Smoke detector requirements in Glendale come from Arizona Revised Statutes Section 36-1637 (state law) and the International Residential Code as adopted unde...
Glendale, AZ
Glendale Fire adopts IFC Ch. 61. Residential: two 20-lb cylinders max outdoors; indoor storage prohibited. State Farm Stadium and Westgate events trigger spe...
Glendale, AZ
Glendale may protect native desert trees (palo verde, ironwood, saguaro). Street trees are city property. Proper pruning preserves shade in extreme heat.
Glendale, AZ
Glendale allows backyard composting; no permit required. City does not offer curbside organics. Yard-waste drop-off at Glendale's Transfer Station. Commercia...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Maricopa County.
See how Glendale's prohibited species rules stack up against other locations.
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