MA encourages native plant landscaping through MGL c. 132A (MA Environmental Policy Act) and MassDEP climate guidance. No state law forces or prohibits native landscaping at the residential level. Boston Climate Resiliency design guidelines promote native species for new development. HOAs and condos may regulate landscaping but cannot prohibit drought-tolerant or pollinator plantings that meet reasonable aesthetic standards.
Native plant landscaping in Suffolk County is encouraged but not mandated. No state law requires homeowners to plant natives or prohibits HOAs from aesthetic rules. MGL c. 132A and 301 CMR 11.00 (MEPA) require consideration of habitat for major projects. The MA Audubon Society, Native Plant Trust, and UMass Extension provide native plant lists for the coastal zone. Boston Climate Resilience Design Guidelines (2020) and BPDA Urban Forest Plan 2030 prioritize native species for public and private landscaping β new developments reviewed under Article 80 receive credit for incorporating natives. Boston Urban Forest Plan targets 35% canopy coverage, favoring native oaks, maples, and tupelos. Chelsea, Revere, and Winthrop encourage but do not require natives in local landscape ordinances. MGL c. 128, Β§10A (MA Pollinator Protection Act and related guidance) supports pollinator-friendly plantings. Invasive species regulations: the MA Prohibited Plant List (333 CMR 2.00) bans sale, distribution, and cultivation of over 140 species including Japanese knotweed, multiflora rose, Asiatic bittersweet, and purple loosestrife. Homeowners are expected to control invasives but generally not fined for passive presence. Lawn alternatives are not specifically protected from HOA restrictions in MA β unlike some states, MA has no 'xeriscape rights' law β but condo rules must be reasonable under MGL c. 183A. Rainscaping and meadow plantings qualify for rebates in the Boston Water and Sewer Commission rain garden program.
Prohibited invasives (333 CMR 2.00): cease and desist, up to $1,000 per violation. HOA violations of landscaping rules: association fines per CC&Rs. State/municipal: generally none for native plantings.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Revere, MA
Revere's noise ordinance prohibits construction before 7 AM (9 AM on Saturdays and holidays) and after 6 PM. No construction on Sundays. Confirmed by Revere ...
Revere, MA
Revere enforces noise complaints under Title 9 (Public Peace, Safety & Welfare) of its Code of Ordinances. No published single decibel limit; enforcement use...
Revere, MA
Barking dogs addressed under Revere Code Title 6 (Animals) and general nuisance provisions. Excessive barking complaints handled by Revere Animal Control. Do...
Revere, MA
Revere is adjacent to Boston Logan International Airport (directly across the harbor). Aircraft noise is governed by FAA regulations and Massport; the city h...
Revere, MA
Revere has a city-wide electronic residential parking permit program under Code Ch. 10.34. As of March 1, 2025, no physical sticker required β registration i...
Revere, MA
Commercial vehicles require a separate Commercial Vehicle Parking Permit to park overnight on public ways in Revere. Cost: $420/year. Vehicle must be under 1...
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