Worcester County MA encourages native plant landscaping through state and municipal water conservation efforts. MA has no statewide HOA xeriscaping preemption. MassDEP Water Management Act (MGL c. 21G) drives outdoor water restrictions that favor drought-tolerant plantings. The MA Invasive Plant Advisory Group (MIPAG) maintains a prohibited invasive species list under 333 CMR 10.00. Several Worcester County communities offer rain garden rebates.
Native plant landscaping in Worcester County benefits from MassDEP drought management policies and municipal climate action plans rather than a specific state mandate. The MA Water Management Act (MGL c. 21G) and MassDEP's model water use restrictions encourage drought-tolerant landscaping. MIPAG (Massachusetts Invasive Plant Advisory Group) and 333 CMR 10.00 (administered by Department of Agricultural Resources) maintain a Prohibited Plant List of 69+ invasive species that cannot be sold, propagated, or distributed — including Asiatic bittersweet, Japanese knotweed, purple loosestrife, burning bush, and Norway maple. Property owners are encouraged but generally not required to remove existing invasives, though some wetland mitigation orders require removal. Native alternatives promoted by UMass Extension, Grow Native Massachusetts, and Mass Audubon include little bluestem, serviceberry, red oak, winterberry, black-eyed Susan, goldenrod, and highbush blueberry. The City of Worcester Climate Action Plan promotes native/climate-resilient plantings in municipal projects. Central Mass Regional Stormwater Coalition offers rain garden education. HOA restrictions on lawn replacement are less common in Worcester County than in newer sunbelt developments, and MA has no statute directly preempting HOA turf requirements (unlike FL §720.3075). Worcester County towns in the Quabbin watershed promote native plantings under DCR watershed protection initiatives.
Selling/propagating prohibited invasive species (333 CMR 10.00): $100-$500 per violation by Dept of Agricultural Resources. HOA native-plant/turf disputes: governed by CC&Rs, no statutory override. Failure to remove invasives per wetlands mitigation order: Conservation Commission enforcement under MGL c. 131, §40.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Fitchburg, MA
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Fitchburg, MA
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Fitchburg, MA
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Fitchburg, MA
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Fitchburg, MA
Fitchburg Zoning Ordinance §181.3264 — commercial vehicles with more than 12,500 lb manufacturer's GVW may NOT be parked on residential premises except in an...
Fitchburg, MA
MGL c. 90, §22C — abandoned vehicles on public ways tagged after 72 hours, may be towed. Fitchburg Police enforce. Snow emergencies authorize immediate towin...
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