Water restrictions in Clarence, NY β also called the watering schedule, outdoor irrigation rules, or drought ordinance β set which days and hours you can run sprinklers or irrigation.
Most Erie County residents get water from the Erie County Water Authority (ECWA), drawn from Lake Erie and the Niagara River. In this humid climate there is no routine watering-day schedule. ECWA conservation guidance is voluntary; it can restrict outdoor use only during a declared drought or emergency.
The Erie County Water Authority, a public benefit corporation created in 1949, supplies water to over 500,000 people across roughly 36 municipalities, sourcing from Lake Erie and the Niagara River. Some communities run their own municipal systems. Because Western New York has ample surface-water supply and a humid climate, there is no standing lawn-watering-day rationing like arid Western states. ECWA's conservation page offers only voluntary guidance: watering lawns when needed during cool morning hours. Under its tariff, ECWA reserves the right to restrict water for secondary uses (lawn irrigation, car washing, pool filling) by resolution during a drought or emergency, but no such standing restriction applies normally. Confirm your provider and any active advisory with ECWA.
No routine penalties, since there is no standing watering schedule. If ECWA formally declares a drought or emergency and restricts secondary uses by resolution, enforcement follows its tariff; otherwise conservation is voluntary.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Erie County, NY
Animal hoarding in Erie County is investigated by the SPCA Serving Erie County and prosecuted as cruelty by the Erie County District Attorney's Animal Cruelt...
Erie County, NY
The Erie County Department of Health treats improper bird and wildlife feeding as a rodent attractant and public-health nuisance and investigates complaints ...
Erie County, NY
Erie County does not license cats, but New York law requires every cat to be rabies-vaccinated, and the county Health Department runs free rabies clinics for...
Erie County, NY
Erie County sets no numeric limit on household pets. Any cap on the number of dogs or cats comes from a town, city, or village ordinance, while state law req...
Erie County, NY
Erie County imposes no countywide livestock ordinance. Keeping cattle, horses, goats, pigs, or other farm animals is controlled by each town, city, or villag...
Clarence, NY
Clarence Town Code prohibits keeping chickens in the Residential Single-Family (R-SF) zone unless the parcel is at least 5 acres or is located in the Agricul...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Erie County.
See how Clarence's water restrictions rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.