Long Beach addresses barking dogs as a public nuisance under local animal control ordinances. Continuous or excessive barking complaints are handled through animal control services.
Long Beach regulates leaf blower use primarily through general noise ordinance hours. Mississippi municipalities generally allow gas and electric blowers during daytime hours.
Long Beach MS is a small Gulf Coast community between Gulfport and Pass Christian. University of Southern Mississippi Gulf Park campus and beach tourism create moderate seasonal activity in this residential community.
Long Beach regulates street parking through local traffic and parking ordinances. Time limits, overnight restrictions, and permit parking zones may apply in certain areas.
Long Beach regulates RV and boat parking in residential areas through local zoning ordinances. Vehicles must typically be stored in side or rear yards behind the front building line.
Long Beach restricts commercial vehicle parking in residential zones through local zoning ordinances. Weight and size limits typically apply to vehicles stored overnight in residential areas.
Long Beach regulates driveway construction and parking through local zoning and building codes. Vehicles must not block sidewalks or public right-of-way when parked in driveways.
Harrison County and cities prohibit abandoned or inoperable vehicles on streets and visible on private property. MS Code Β§63-23-1 et seq. governs abandoned vehicle removal. 72-hour street rule typical.
Harrison County and its cities generally allow overnight street parking in residential areas but restrict parking on certain commercial streets and during special events. Beach and downtown areas have enforced restrictions.
EV charger installation in Harrison County requires an electrical permit. Mississippi has no statewide EV-ready building code mandate. No state solar/EV access law limits HOA restrictions on chargers.
Long Beach enforces weed and vegetation control through property maintenance codes under MS Code Ann. Β§21-19-11. Overgrown weeds are treated as nuisances subject to abatement.
Long Beach enforces grass height limits through property maintenance codes. Maximum grass height is typically 12 inches before enforcement action under MS Code Ann. Β§21-19-11.
Harrison County requires permits to remove trees over 6-12 inch DBH in most municipalities. Live oaks are specially protected in Gulfport and Biloxi. Hurricane preparedness trimming is encouraged. Utility companies may trim under MS Code Ann. Β§77-3-33.
Harrison County generally has ample water from the Pascagoula/Biloxi aquifers. MDEQ may mandate drought restrictions rarely. Typical measures: odd/even watering, no 10 AM-4 PM irrigation. Gulf Coast humidity means restrictions are less common than inland MS.
Artificial turf generally permitted in Harrison County. No state or local ban. Gulfport and Biloxi require proper drainage due to Gulf Coast flood-prone soils. HOAs may restrict since MS has no turf preemption statute.
Harrison County has minimal tree removal restrictions on private property. Mississippi Right to Farm Β§95-3-29 and weak home-rule authority limit local tree ordinances. Coastal live oaks get voluntary protection in Gulfport and Biloxi.
Harrison County encourages native Gulf Coast plants through MSU Extension Coastal Research & Extension Center. No ordinance restricting native landscaping. MS Coastal Wetlands Protection Act Β§49-27 protects wetland vegetation.
Harrison County permits residential rainwater harvesting without restriction. Mississippi has no state law limiting rainwater collection, and the county encourages it for hurricane preparedness and irrigation.
Long Beach regulates beekeeping through local zoning and the Mississippi Bee and Honey Law under MS Code Ann. Β§69-39-1 et seq. Mississippi is generally permissive toward apiculture.
Long Beach regulates backyard chickens and livestock through local zoning ordinances. Mississippi municipalities balance agricultural tradition with residential zoning under MS Code Ann. Β§21-19-9.
Long Beach enforces leash laws and animal control through local ordinances under MS Code Ann. Β§21-19-9. Dogs must be on leash or under control when off owner's property.
Long Beach may enforce breed-specific or dangerous dog ordinances. Mississippi does not have a statewide breed ban but allows municipalities to adopt local breed restrictions.
Harrison County prohibits feeding alligators under MS Code Β§49-7-81 ($100-$500 fine). Deer feeding restricted during CWD zones per MDWFP. Gulfport and Biloxi prohibit feeding feral/stray animals that create nuisance conditions.
Mississippi prohibits private ownership of inherently dangerous wild animals under MS Code Β§49-8-5. Permits required for certain species. Harrison County cities ban large cats, primates, venomous reptiles.
Mississippi treats severe neglect and hoarding-style conditions as criminal cruelty under the Dog and Cat Pet Protection Law and broader cruelty statutes. The criminal code applies uniformly across all cities and counties.
Long Beach requires building permits for swimming pool installation. The Mississippi State Department of Health regulates public and semi-public pools under MS Code Ann. Β§41-26-1.
The William Lee Montjoy Pool Safety Act (Miss. Code Β§45-43-1 et seq.) sets statewide minimum pool barrier rules that Long Beach enforces in addition to local code. Outdoor residential pools deeper than 24 inches must be enclosed by a fence or wall at least four feet high with no gaps that pass a 4-inch sphere. Gates must be self-closing, self-latching, open outward from the pool, and have latches at least 60 inches above the ground or with locking hardware. State law expressly does not exempt pool yards from additional local ordinance requirements.
Long Beach enforces pool safety requirements including water quality, drain covers, and maintenance standards. The MS State Department of Health oversees public pool safety regulations.
Harrison County requires electrical permits for hot tub 240V installations. Gulfport and Biloxi apply MS Swimming Pool Law Β§41-101 barrier rules; locking safety covers (ASTM F1346) satisfy barrier requirements. Coastal wind loads apply to gazebos/enclosures.
Harrison County requires permits for above-ground pools over 24 inches deep or 5,000 gallons under IRC/MS building code. Gulfport and Biloxi require 48-inch barrier per MS State Swimming Pool Law Β§41-101. Coastal wind load standards apply.
Long Beach may require registration or permits for short-term rental properties. Mississippi law leaves STR regulation primarily to local municipalities under home rule authority.
Long Beach requires STR operators to collect and remit Mississippi sales tax and local tourism taxes. MS Code Ann. Β§27-65-23 governs accommodation tax collection.
Long Beach regulates short-term rentals through Section 131 of Zoning Ordinance #598, originally established by Ordinance #622 (effective October 27, 2016) and amended by Ordinance #660. Parking must be provided on site in a configuration consistent with the surrounding single-family residential character. Confirm exact space ratios and tandem-parking allowances with the Building Department at (228) 863-1554 before applying for an STR permit.
Long Beach caps short-term rental occupancy through Section 131 of Zoning Ordinance #598, established by Ordinance #622 (Oct. 27, 2016) and amended by Ordinance #660. Maximum overnight guest counts are set on the STR permit issued by the Building Department and tied to bedroom count, with Mississippi Building Code life-safety considerations applying. Confirm the exact per-bedroom multiplier with Zoning Enforcement at (228) 863-1554.
Long Beach applies standard noise ordinance rules to short-term rental properties. STR operators are responsible for ensuring guests comply with local quiet hours.
Biloxi and Gulfport may require STR operators to carry liability insurance. Minimum coverage commonly $500,000 to $1 million. Coastal properties face additional wind and flood insurance considerations.
Long Beach Zoning Ordinance defines a garage apartment as a dwelling unit erected above a private garage, regulated as an accessory use subordinate to the principal dwelling. Comprehensive Land Use Ordinance #676 (effective Aug 11, 2025) is the controlling instrument; it replaces the 2013 Unified Land Use Ordinance #598. Accessory structures must be on the same zoning lot as the principal building and be subordinate in area, extent and purpose. Mississippi has no statewide ADU preemption, so Long Beach permitting standards (setbacks, height, parking, owner-occupancy) govern.
Garage conversions in Long Beach require a building permit from the Building Department under Mississippi Building Code (IRC-based) and must comply with Zoning Ordinance #598 setbacks, lot coverage, and required off-street parking replacement. Coastal AE/VE flood zone properties face additional elevation and wind-load standards. Confirm details with Building Official Mike Gundlach at (228) 669-9855.
Long Beach regulates sheds and outbuildings through local building and zoning codes. Small sheds under 120 to 200 square feet may be exempt from permit requirements in many municipalities.
Harrison County applies IRC Appendix Q for foundation-built tiny homes. Tiny homes on wheels treated as RVs/manufactured housing under MS Code Β§75-49-1. Minimum dwelling size varies by zone. Post-Katrina cottage provisions may allow flexibility.
Harrison County, Gulfport, and Biloxi require building permits for carports. Setbacks 5 ft side/rear, 25 ft front typical. Coastal wind load 150+ mph per IRC. Flood zones require elevation or breakaway construction.
Long Beach may require permits for fence installation depending on height, location, and type. Permit requirements are established through local building and zoning codes.
Long Beach limits fence heights through local zoning ordinances. Front yard fences are typically limited to 4 feet and rear/side yard fences to 6 to 8 feet in residential zones.
Long Beach addresses boundary fences and neighbor disputes through local ordinances. Mississippi follows general common law principles for shared fences and property line placement.
Harrison County requires pool barriers per International Residential Code Appendix G. Minimum 48-inch fence with self-closing, self-latching gate. Code strictly enforced; inspection required at permit.
Harrison County permits wood, vinyl, chain link, aluminum, and ornamental metal fences. Hurricane-rated construction preferred due to Gulf Coast exposure. Barbed wire limited to agricultural/industrial zones. Vinyl and marine-grade aluminum favored for salt-air durability.
Harrison County requires building permits for retaining walls over 4 feet. Engineered drawings required for taller walls. Coastal soil conditions and drainage are critical design factors.
Long Beach follows Mississippi's permissive fireworks laws. MS Code Ann. Β§45-13-7 allows consumer fireworks sales and use with local municipalities setting time and place restrictions.
Long Beach requires property owners to maintain defensible space and clear excessive vegetation under local property maintenance codes and MS Forestry Commission guidelines.
Harrison County prohibits open burning within municipal limits of Gulfport, Biloxi, and other cities. Rural unincorporated areas allow yard waste burning with MS Forestry Commission permit. MDEQ bans trash, tire, and construction debris burning with fines up to $25,000/day.
Harrison County allows recreational fire pits with 25-foot setbacks from structures and property lines, max 3-foot diameter. Gulf Coast humidity reduces wildfire risk but MS Forestry Commission burn bans during drought override local permissions. Beachfront fires require Gulfport/Biloxi special permits.
Harrison County not typically classified as high wildfire risk; Gulf Coast humidity reduces fire danger. MS Forestry Commission issues burn bans during drought. DeSoto National Forest areas north of county may have WUI concerns. No defensible space mandates.
Mississippi regulates liquefied petroleum (LP) gas storage, installation, and dealers through the Mississippi Liquefied Compressed Gas Board under Title 75 Chapter 57, applying NFPA 58 standards uniformly statewide.
Long Beach permits home-based businesses in residential zones subject to local zoning restrictions. Home occupations must be clearly secondary to the residential use of the property.
Harrison County municipalities generally prohibit exterior signs for home-based businesses in residential zones. Where allowed, limited to 1-2 sq ft non-illuminated nameplate. Freestanding, illuminated, or vehicle-mounted advertising prohibited in residential neighborhoods.
Mississippi State Department of Health licenses home daycares under MS Code Β§43-20-1 et seq. Up to 5 unrelated children allowed without license; 6+ requires MSDH child care facility license. Gulfport/Biloxi require zoning compliance.
Harrison County limits home business customer visits to preserve residential character. Most home occupation permits cap visits at 2-4 clients/day. Retail traffic prohibited. Biloxi and Gulfport require conditional use permits for businesses expecting regular visitors.
Mississippi Cottage Food Law (MS Code Β§75-29-901) allows home-produced non-hazardous foods up to $35,000 annual revenue. Direct-to-consumer sales only. Labels must state 'Made in a cottage food operation not subject to Mississippi's food safety regulations.'
Long Beach enforces a juvenile curfew for minors under 17. Nighttime curfew hours typically run 11 PM to 6 AM on school nights with later weekend hours.
Harrison County and municipal parks close at posted hours, typically 10 PM. Beach access along US-90 is 24/7 but Jones Park (Gulfport), Biloxi Town Green, and waterfront parks have enforced closures. State parks under MS Code Β§55-3.
Long Beach is a Mississippi Gulf Coast NFIP community with extensive coastal flood exposure. Eight property-damaging floods have occurred in the last 20 years, including Hurricanes Georges (1998) and Katrina (2005). The current flood-control instrument is Flood Plain Ordinance #652 (effective Sept 7, 2020), which superseded Floodplain Management Ordinance #642 (2019) and earlier #565/#610. FEMA FIRM panels show V/VE zones along the Gulf and AE zones inland; elevation certificates are required for new construction since October 2005. Substantial improvement (>50% of pre-improvement value) triggers full elevation compliance.
Harrison County requires silt fencing and erosion BMPs on all land-disturbing activities over 0.5 acre. MDEQ Small Construction permits apply at 1 acre. Coastal sediment reaching the Gulf triggers federal Clean Water Act violations.
Harrison County enforces strict coastal development rules under MS Coastal Wetlands Protection Act Β§49-27. Mississippi DMR permits required for any work waterward of mean high water. Katrina rebuilding codes set elevated construction standards Gulf-wide.
Harrison County requires grading permits for excavation or fill over 50 cubic yards. Drainage must not redirect water onto neighbors under MS riparian and civil-law drainage rules. Retaining walls over 4 feet need engineering.
Harrison County enforces MS4 stormwater permit requirements. New construction over 1 acre needs stormwater management plans. Gulfport and Biloxi follow Mississippi DEQ NPDES Phase II rules with coastal-specific runoff controls.
Harrison County requires bins curbside on pickup day with lids closed, 3 feet apart, retrieved within 12-24 hours. Hurricane season (June-November) brings additional rules: secure bins before named storms to prevent projectiles. Stored out of view between pickups.
Harrison County municipalities offer scheduled bulk pickup for large items (furniture, appliances with refrigerant removed). Construction debris and hazardous materials excluded. Harrison County Transfer Station accepts bulk drop-offs. Illegal dumping $500-$5,000 under MS Code Β§17-17.
Harrison County recycling is primarily voluntary drop-off based. Gulfport and Biloxi offer limited curbside recycling for paper, cardboard, aluminum, and plastics #1-#2. Glass recycling very limited post-2018 market changes. Contaminated bins rejected. MDEQ promotes diversion from landfills.
Harrison County municipalities provide weekly curbside trash pickup via contracted haulers (Waste Pro, Waste Management). Bins out by 6-7 AM. Recycling schedules vary by city. Post-hurricane debris handled separately under FEMA/MEMA plans.
Solar panel installations in Harrison County require building and electrical permits. Coastal wind load requirements (140+ mph) apply. Roof-mounted systems must meet hurricane-resistant attachment standards.
Mississippi has no statewide solar access law limiting HOA restrictions. HOAs in Harrison County may regulate or effectively prohibit solar panels through CC&Rs. Review covenants before installation.
Harrison County permits medical cannabis dispensaries in designated commercial zones with 1,000-foot buffers from schools, churches, and daycares per MS Β§41-137-33. Gulfport and Biloxi both opted-in; D'Iberville opted out.
Harrison County prohibits all home cannabis cultivation. Mississippi Medical Cannabis Act (MS Code Β§41-137) allows only licensed dispensary purchases, not personal grows. Recreational cultivation is a felony under MS Β§41-29-139.
Harrison County has no general rental registration program. Short-term rentals in Biloxi and Gulfport require separate permits. Long-term residential rentals follow state housing law without local registration.
Harrison County has no rent control. Mississippi has no statewide preemption law, but no city has adopted rent control either. Landlords set market rates with 30-day notice for month-to-month increases.
Mississippi is a landlord-friendly state with no just-cause eviction requirement. Harrison County follows MS Code Title 89, Chapter 7 for evictions. Landlords may terminate month-to-month tenancies without cause on 30 days written notice.
Gulfport and Biloxi require solicitor permits with background checks. MS Code Β§97-23-51 regulates transient vendors statewide. Religious and political canvassing protected under First Amendment per Watchtower v. Stratton (2002).
Gulfport and Biloxi maintain no-solicitation registries. Posted 'No Soliciting' signs are enforceable. Protected canvassing (religious, political, nonprofit) exempt under constitutional law.
Harrison County has no countywide dark-sky ordinance, but Gulf Islands National Seashore adjacency drives shielded-fixture standards. Sea turtle nesting (May-October) requires lighting restrictions on beachfront properties.
Harrison County addresses light trespass through general nuisance ordinances rather than a dedicated code. Gulfport and Biloxi enforce 0.5 foot-candle limits at residential property lines. Coastal turtle-protection zones have stricter rules.
Gulfport and Biloxi require vacant lots mowed and trash-free under MS Code Β§21-19-11. Grass limit 10-12 inches typical. Coastal wetland vacant lots subject to MS Β§49-27 Coastal Wetlands Act for any alteration.
Harrison County property maintenance code requires garage sale items be removed from view after sale hours. Gulfport and Biloxi enforce blight rules against clutter. Signs must come down within 24 hours.
Gulfport and Biloxi enforce property maintenance under MS Code Β§21-19-11 (municipal cleanup authority). Notice required with 7-14 day compliance. Post-Katrina blight remains a major issue. Liens placed on non-compliant properties.
Harrison County does not require snow removal from sidewalks. Gulf Coast snowfall is rare (under 1 inch average annually). General sidewalk debris and vegetation clearing duties still apply year-round.
Gulfport and Biloxi require trash bins stored out of street view between collections. Waste Pro (Gulfport) and Waste Management (Biloxi) collect curbside. Bins at curb evening before, retrieved same day. Hurricane debris has separate rules.
Commercial operators need FAA Part 107 certification. Harrison County's dual airspace restrictions (Keesler AFB Class C, GPT Class D) make LAANC authorization essential for most of Gulfport and Biloxi. MS Β§97-29-61 applies to commercial operators.
Recreational drones governed by FAA rules under 14 CFR Part 107 and 49 USC Β§44809. Harrison County contains restricted airspace around Keesler AFB (Biloxi) and Gulfport-Biloxi International (GPT). Mississippi Code Β§97-29-61 criminalizes drone peeping.
Harrison County food trucks need Mississippi State Department of Health permits under Miss. Admin. Code Title 15 Part 3, plus municipal mobile vendor licenses from Gulfport or Biloxi. Commissary agreement and annual inspections required.
Gulfport and Biloxi restrict food trucks from operating within posted distances of restaurants and inside the Casino Gaming District. US-90 beachfront vending requires special coastal permits. No trucks in Hwy 90 right-of-way.
Gulf Coast live oaks, many over 100-500 years old, are heritage-protected. Biloxi's 'Katrina Trees' (hurricane-sculpted survivors) are culturally significant. Removal requires council approval. Damage during construction triggers stiff penalties.
Harrison County and municipalities require permits for significant tree removal. Live oaks on public property strictly protected. MS Right to Farm Act Β§95-3-29 exempts agricultural tree cutting. Post-Katrina and post-Zeta hazardous tree rules expedited.
Harrison County requires replacement when permitted removals occur. 2:1 or 3:1 ratios typical. Native species preferred: live oak, southern magnolia, bald cypress, longleaf pine. Post-Katrina reforestation programs influenced current standards.
Holiday decorations broadly permitted on residential property in Harrison County. No permits required for standard displays. Coastal wind loads require secure anchoring of inflatables.
Political signs allowed on private property in Harrison County with size limits under city zoning codes. Signs in public rights-of-way prohibited. Content-neutral rules required per Reed v. Town of Gilbert.
Garage sale signs allowed temporarily on private property in Harrison County cities. Signs on utility poles and public rights-of-way prohibited. Must be removed promptly after the sale ends.
Harrison County residential height limits typically 35 feet. Biloxi casino corridor allows towers up to 375+ feet (Beau Rivage is 347 ft). Keesler AFB Part 77 airspace surfaces impose FAA height restrictions near the base.
Harrison County limits impervious coverage to 40-60% residential. MS Β§49-27 Coastal Wetlands and MDEQ stormwater rules impose additional limits. Katrina-zone rebuilds triggered stricter runoff controls under EPA MS4 permits.
Harrison County zoning and Gulfport/Biloxi codes mandate setbacks varying by district. FEMA VE (Coastal High Hazard) zones along US-90 add elevation requirements. Dillon's Rule state, so all setbacks trace to state zoning enabling act.
Gulfport and Biloxi limit garage sales to 2-4 per household annually, typically 2-3 consecutive days each. Exceeding limits may trigger home business zoning or MS privilege tax (Β§27-17) obligations.
Gulfport requires a free garage sale permit obtainable at City Hall or online. Biloxi registration similar. Unincorporated Harrison County generally does not require permits but has frequency and sign limits.
Harrison County garage sales typically run 7 AM to 6 PM with no county permit required in unincorporated areas. Gulfport and Biloxi limit sales to 2-3 per year per household with daylight hours only.
Miss. Code Section 17-1-51 preempts Mississippi cities and counties from adopting local minimum wages, paid leave, or other employment-benefit mandates that exceed state or federal law.
Mississippi prohibits cities and counties from adopting local paid sick leave, paid family leave, or other employment-benefit mandates beyond state and federal law under Miss. Code Section 17-1-51.
Mississippi's employment preemption statute, Miss. Code Section 17-1-51, prevents cities from imposing predictive scheduling, fair workweek, or other work-hour ordinances on private employers.
Mississippi recognizes both a permit-based concealed carry license and permitless carry for adults legally able to possess firearms, with the Department of Public Safety administering the enhanced permit program.
Mississippi Code Section 45-9-51 broadly preempts cities and counties from regulating firearms, ammunition, components, or related items, with very narrow exceptions for public buildings and parades.
Mississippi permits open carry of firearms by lawful adults under its constitutional and statutory framework, and Miss. Code 45-9-51 prevents local governments from restricting open carry within their jurisdictions.
Miss. Code Section 45-9-101 establishes Mississippi's licensed concealed carry framework while related provisions and case law confirm that lawful adults may carry firearms in private motor vehicles without a permit, with statewide preemption barring local restrictions.
The Mississippi Employment Protection Act of 2008, codified at Miss. Code Section 71-11-3, requires every employer in the state, regardless of size, to use the federal E-Verify system to confirm the work eligibility of all newly hired employees.
Senate Bill 2710, codified at Miss. Code Section 17-21-7 in 2017, prohibits any Mississippi state agency, county, municipality, or public university from adopting sanctuary policies that limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
Mississippi limits local zoning authority over established agricultural operations through Miss. Code Section 95-3-29 and related statutes that protect farms from later-imposed restrictive land use rules.
Mississippi's Right to Farm law at Miss. Code Section 95-3-29 protects established agricultural operations from nuisance lawsuits when surrounding land uses change after the operation was established.
Mississippi's 2018 plastic bag preemption statute, Miss. Code Section 17-2-3, bars cities and counties from regulating, banning, or taxing auxiliary containers including plastic bags, cups, and packaging.
Mississippi's auxiliary container preemption in Miss. Code Section 17-2-3 prevents local governments from banning or regulating polystyrene foam cups, plates, and food packaging.
Plastic straws are auxiliary containers under Miss. Code Section 17-2-3, meaning Mississippi cities and counties cannot ban, restrict, tax, or impose fees on plastic straws or stirrers.
Mississippi prohibits the sale, distribution, or furnishing of tobacco, alternative nicotine, and vapor products to anyone under age 21 under Miss. Code Section 97-32-9 and related Chapter 32 provisions.
Mississippi has not enacted a statewide ban on flavored tobacco or vapor products, and its Title 97 Chapter 32 framework governs uniform tobacco regulation without authorizing local flavor restrictions.
Mississippi regulates the sale of electronic nicotine delivery systems through its tobacco statutes, requiring buyers to be at least 21 years old under Miss. Code 97-32-9 and prohibiting sales to minors.