DC actively encourages native plant landscaping through the RiverSmart Homes program (DOEE) which subsidizes native garden installations, rain gardens, and tree plantings. There is no District mandate for native species, but DOEE publishes a recommended Native Plant List. HOAs cannot prohibit managed native gardens that comply with property maintenance standards.
DC promotes native plant landscaping as part of its Chesapeake Bay TMDL and MS4 stormwater compliance obligations. The Department of Energy and Environment's RiverSmart Homes program provides $1,200 to $6,000 in subsidies for residential installations of rain gardens, shade trees, rain barrels, permeable pavement, and native plant gardens. DOEE publishes a Native Plant Guide tailored to DC's Piedmont ecoregion and promotes alternatives to invasive species like English ivy, Japanese honeysuckle, and Bradford pear. There is no District-wide ordinance requiring native species in residential landscaping, but the Stormwater Management Guidebook requires native plants in certified best management practices and LEED-compliant developments. The Property Maintenance Code (DCMR 14-805) requires turf and plantings to be maintained β weeds and grass over 10 inches create violations β so intentionally unmaintained native meadows can trigger citations unless designed with clear pathways, mulched beds, and defined edges. HOAs cannot prohibit properly maintained native gardens under general common-law nuisance standards; DC has no specific Right to Garden statute.
Overgrown conditions over 10 inches: $150 civil infraction plus 14-day abatement notice. Invasive species removal: not mandated but may be required in stormwater plans. HOA disputes: resolved through condo/HOA governing documents with fair-application standards.
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