Olive Branch addresses barking dogs as a public nuisance under local animal control ordinances. Continuous or excessive barking complaints are handled through animal control services.
Olive Branch limits construction to 7 AM to 6 PM weekdays and 8 AM to 4 PM Saturdays. The city's rapid residential growth along Goodman Road and Bethel Road corridors means construction noise ordinances are actively enforced near new subdivisions.
Olive Branch regulates leaf blower use primarily through general noise ordinance hours. Mississippi municipalities generally allow gas and electric blowers during daytime hours.
Olive Branch 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.
Olive Branch 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.
Olive Branch restricts commercial vehicle parking in residential zones through local zoning ordinances. Weight and size limits typically apply to vehicles stored overnight in residential areas.
Unincorporated DeSoto County has no blanket overnight street parking ban; county roads lack curbs. Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando city ordinances restrict overnight parking on major roads and ban overnight parking in city parks (typically 10 PM to 6 AM).
MS Code Β§63-23-1 et seq. governs abandoned vehicle removal. DeSoto County and its cities classify vehicles abandoned after 48-72 hours on public property or inoperable vehicles visible on private property. DeSoto County Sheriff's Office handles unincorporated; each city handles within city limits.
DeSoto County requires an electrical permit for Level 2 EV chargers. No EV-ready building mandate exists. Mississippi has NO state law preventing HOAs from banning chargers, so HOA CC&Rs control. Entergy and Northcentral EPA offer residential EV time-of-use considerations.
Desoto County regulates street parking through local traffic and parking ordinances. Time limits, overnight restrictions, and permit parking zones may apply in certain areas.
Olive Branch 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.
Olive Branch requires property owners to maintain defensible space and clear excessive vegetation under local property maintenance codes and MS Forestry Commission guidelines.
DeSoto County, MS regulates open burning through municipal fire codes, Mississippi Forestry Commission rules, and MDEQ air quality standards. Small recreational fires in approved containers are generally allowed, but burning yard waste, land-clearing debris, or any material within most DeSoto city limits requires permission. Burning trash, tires, construction debris, or treated lumber is prohibited statewide under Mississippi Air Quality Permit Regulation APC-S-1, with MDEQ penalties reaching $25,000 per day.
DeSoto County, MS permits recreational fire pits on private property subject to local fire prevention codes and Mississippi State Fire Marshal rules. Recreational fires must be at least 25 feet from structures and property lines, contained in an approved fire pit no larger than 3 feet across, attended at all times, and suspended during any Mississippi Forestry Commission burn ban. Only clean dry wood is permitted; trash, yard waste, and treated lumber are prohibited by MDEQ air quality rules.
DeSoto County has low wildfire risk β not within a designated Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) hazard zone. Mississippi Forestry Commission issues burn bans during drought. No defensible space mandate.
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.
Olive Branch requires a business license and zoning compliance check for short-term rentals. The city's suburban residential character means STRs face scrutiny to prevent disruption in neighborhoods along the Bethel Road and Bridgetown corridors.
Olive Branch has no dedicated short-term rental ordinance. Article XI, Section 5.A.1 of the city zoning ordinance requires two off-street paved spaces per dwelling unit, and Section 4.D.1 prohibits parking on yard areas. If a host is classified as a bed and breakfast, Section 5.A.3 adds one space per guest bedroom (minimum two).
Olive Branch has no STR-specific occupancy cap. Article XII.5 of the city zoning ordinance requires each dwelling unit to provide at least 150 square feet for the first occupant and 100 square feet for each additional occupant, and sleeping rooms must be at least 70 square feet (50 square feet per additional occupant). Article II caps unrelated 'family' occupancy at four persons.
Olive Branch applies standard noise ordinance rules to short-term rental properties. STR operators are responsible for ensuring guests comply with local quiet hours.
Olive Branch 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.
DeSoto County cities typically require STR hosts to carry $500,000 to $1 million liability insurance. Standard MS homeowner policies (HO-3) exclude business/commercial rental use; hosts need a commercial rider or dedicated STR policy. Airbnb AirCover/Host Liability is supplemental, not primary.
Olive Branch 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.
Olive Branch aggressively enforces weed and overgrowth ordinances with proactive code enforcement patrols. Properties along the city's major commercial corridors and in residential subdivisions must maintain weed-free yards and common areas.
DeSoto County, MS is served by abundant groundwater from the Memphis Sand Aquifer and rarely imposes permanent water restrictions. The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) regulates water-use permits under MS Code Ann. Β§51-3-1 et seq., and local utilities including DeSoto County Regional Utility Authority, Southaven Public Services, Hernando Water, Horn Lake Water, and Olive Branch Water issue temporary conservation advisories during drought. Typical drought measures include odd-even address watering and time-of-day limits between 10 AM and 6 PM.
DeSoto County has no general tree-removal permit for private property. Mississippi Right-to-Farm (Miss. Code Β§95-3-29) and strong private property rights limit regulation. Trees in the county right-of-way or on MDOT routes require coordination before removal.
DeSoto County permits artificial turf on residential lots with no permit required for ground-level installation. Drainage cannot discharge onto neighboring property. HOAs may restrict.
DeSoto County, MS regulates tree trimming and removal primarily through municipal ordinances, with utility companies holding statutory rights to clear vegetation near power lines under MS Code Ann. Β§77-3-33. Property owners must maintain trees overhanging sidewalks and streets to minimum clearances (8 feet over sidewalks, 14 feet over streets), and Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando each have landscape/tree preservation provisions. Storm-damaged trees may be removed without a permit for safety, a routine occurrence given Mississippi's frequent severe weather.
DeSoto County does not mandate native landscaping but encourages it. Mississippi State Extension (Miss State) and USDA Zone 7b guide plant selection. No xeriscape mandate β north Mississippi has adequate rainfall.
Mississippi imposes no state-level restriction on residential rainwater harvesting. DeSoto County and its cities allow rain barrels and cisterns without a permit for typical residential garden and irrigation use.
Olive Branch 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.
Olive Branch 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.
Olive Branch enforces strict leash laws requiring dogs to be on a leash no longer than 6 feet in all public areas. The city's parks along Pigeon Roost Creek and Olive Branch City Park are popular walking areas with active enforcement.
Olive Branch may enforce breed-specific or dangerous dog ordinances. Mississippi does not have a statewide breed ban but allows municipalities to adopt local breed restrictions.
Mississippi Code Β§49-8-5 requires a permit from MDWFP to possess inherently dangerous wild animals (big cats, bears, primates, venomous reptiles). DeSoto County zoning restricts exotic animals in residential districts.
MDWFP prohibits supplemental feeding of deer in CWD Management Zones (DeSoto County is within the MS CWD Zone). Baiting restrictions apply. Feeding that creates a nuisance violates county nuisance code.
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.
Olive Branch 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.
Olive Branch regulates accessory structures and dwelling units through Appendix A - Zoning Ordinance, Article VII (Accessory Buildings and Uses). True accessory dwelling units (ADUs) are listed as a permitted use only in the C-1 Neighborhood Commercial District (Sec. 8.A.1); residential AR, R-1, R-2, R-3, and R-4 districts permit accessory buildings (detached garages, pool houses, gazebos, sheds) but not full secondary dwelling units. State authority: Miss. Code Ann. Β§17-1-3 et seq. (municipal zoning).
Article VII of the Olive Branch zoning ordinance prohibits using accessory or temporary buildings for dwelling purposes, ruling out converting a detached garage into a separate living unit. Converting an attached garage into interior living space is allowed with a building permit but reduces required parking; the home must still meet the two off-street paved spaces per dwelling unit standard in Article XI, Section 5.A.1.
DeSoto County permits tiny homes on foundation as dwellings meeting IRC Appendix Q (400 sq ft minimum not required in Appendix Q). Tiny homes on wheels classified as RVs β only in approved RV parks.
DeSoto County requires a building permit for all carports. 5-foot side setback, 25-foot front setback, 15-foot max height, counts toward 30% lot coverage. HOAs may restrict.
Olive Branch enforces residential pool barrier rules through its adopted 2018 International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (ISPSC) and 2018 International Residential Code (IRC) Appendix G / Section R326, which require a 48-inch barrier with self-closing, self-latching gates. The state Montjoy Pool Safety Act (Miss. Code Ann. Β§45-43-7 and Β§45-43-9) mirrors the 48-inch enclosure standard for owners associations. Building Department permits both Private Pool and Owner Above/In-Ground Pool applications.
Olive Branch enforces pool safety requirements including water quality, drain covers, and maintenance standards. The MS State Department of Health oversees public pool safety regulations.
Olive Branch 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.
DeSoto County requires an electrical permit for hot tub 240V installation. Locking safety cover meeting ASTM F1346 satisfies barrier requirement. 5-foot setback from property lines.
DeSoto County requires a building permit for above-ground pools over 24 inches deep or 5,000 gallons. Barrier per Mississippi-adopted IRC, 10-foot setback from property lines, GFCI electrical.
Olive Branch may require permits for fence installation depending on height, location, and type. Permit requirements are established through local building and zoning codes.
Olive Branch limits front yard fences to 3 feet and rear/side yard fences to 6 feet in residential zones. Many planned communities along Bethel Road and Polk Lane have HOA covenants requiring specific fence styles that exceed city minimums.
Olive Branch addresses boundary fences and neighbor disputes through local ordinances. Mississippi follows general common law principles for shared fences and property line placement.
DeSoto County, MS permits a wide range of common fence materials including wood, vinyl, chain link, aluminum, and wrought iron in residential zones, with restrictions on barbed wire and electric fencing. Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando zoning codes typically restrict chain link in front yards of newer subdivisions and limit barbed wire to agricultural or industrial districts. Mississippi's humid climate favors rot-resistant and moisture-tolerant options like treated pine, cedar, and vinyl.
DeSoto County requires a building permit for retaining walls over 4 feet measured from bottom of footing to top of wall. Over 4 feet, a licensed MS professional engineer must stamp the design. Surcharge loads (driveways, pools, structures within 1H:1V) lower the permit-free height.
DeSoto County enforces IRC Appendix G / ISPSC pool barrier standards: minimum 48-inch barrier, self-closing and self-latching gates with latch at least 54 inches high, openings under 4 inches, and either perimeter fencing or house-wall door alarms. Strict drowning-prevention enforcement.
Olive Branch 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.
DeSoto County, MS strictly limits signage for home-based businesses in residential zones to preserve neighborhood character in Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando. Municipal zoning codes adopted under MS Code Ann. Β§17-1-1 et seq. either prohibit exterior signs entirely or allow only a single non-illuminated nameplate no larger than 1-2 square feet mounted flat on the building. Freestanding signs, illuminated signs, banners, flags, and vehicle-mounted advertising are prohibited on residential parcels.
Mississippi State Department of Health licenses home daycares serving 6+ children under Miss. Code Β§43-20-1. DeSoto County zoning permits licensed family daycare in residential districts as a home occupation.
DeSoto County, MS limits customer and client traffic to home-based businesses to preserve residential quality of life under MS Code Ann. Β§17-1-1 et seq. zoning authority. Home occupation permits in Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando typically prohibit retail walk-in traffic, cap professional client visits at 2-4 per day, and restrict deliveries to normal residential levels. Conditional use permits may be required for businesses expecting regular visitors, and HOAs often impose additional restrictions.
Mississippi Cottage Food Law (SB 2553, 2013, codified at Miss. Code Β§75-34-1 et seq.) allows home-based sale of non-potentially hazardous foods up to $35,000 annually. Labeling and direct-sale rules apply.
Olive Branch 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.
DeSoto County parks close at dusk or 10 PM. Southaven Central Park and Snowden Grove close 10 PM (11 PM during concerts). Arkabutla Lake (USACE) closes sunset unless camping in permitted areas.
Olive Branch participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) and regulates floodplain development through Code of Ordinances Chapter 30 - Floods. The countywide DeSoto County Flood Insurance Study and Digital FIRMs became effective May 5, 2014 (FIS 28033CV001A; panel set 28033C). Federal authority is the National Flood Insurance Act (42 U.S.C. Β§4001 et seq.) and 44 CFR Parts 59-60; state authority is Miss. Code Ann. Β§17-1-3 et seq. The Coldwater River and its tributaries (including Cow Pen Creek and Camp Creek) drain the city.
DeSoto County requires erosion and sediment control on all land-disturbing activity of 1 acre or more, consistent with MDEQ's Large Construction General Permit. Silt fence, stabilized entrances, and inlet protection are standard; disturbed areas must be stabilized within 14 days of inactivity.
Not applicable. DeSoto County is in North Mississippi near the Tennessee border and has no coastline. Mississippi coastal development rules (Miss. Code Β§49-27 Wetlands Act) apply only to Hancock, Harrison, and Jackson counties on the Gulf Coast.
DeSoto County and its cities operate MS4 stormwater programs under MDEQ NPDES Phase II permits. New development over 1 acre disturbed must submit a stormwater management plan; post-construction runoff control and illicit discharge prohibitions are enforced.
DeSoto County requires a grading permit for earthwork exceeding 50 cubic yards or disturbing 1 acre. Drainage cannot be redirected to harm neighboring properties β Mississippi follows the modified civil-law (reasonable use) rule for surface water.
Mississippi Β§21-19-11 authorizes DeSoto County and municipalities to cut grass exceeding 10 inches on vacant lots and bill owner. Liens attach to property. No vacant property registration countywide.
DeSoto County municipalities enforce property maintenance codes against garage sales that create blight. Merchandise must be displayed neatly, stored out of view after hours, and signs removed within 24 hours of the sale's end.
DeSoto County contracts solid waste collection through Waste Pro and Republic Services by municipality. Bins screened from street between pickups. Place at curb evening before pickup, retrieve within 24 hours.
DeSoto County enforces property maintenance under adopted 2018 International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC). Mississippi Β§21-19-11 authorizes municipal abatement with property liens. 15-30 day compliance notices.
DeSoto County has no snow or ice sidewalk-clearing ordinance. Significant snowfall is rare in North Mississippi. General sidewalk maintenance and debris-clearing duties apply year-round under municipal property maintenance codes.
DeSoto County does not operate a countywide rental registration program. Mississippi has no state mandate for rental registration. Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando handle rental code compliance through the International Property Maintenance Code via complaint-driven inspections.
Mississippi is a landlord-friendly state with no just-cause eviction requirement. Under MS Code Β§89-7-27 and Β§89-8-13, landlords may terminate month-to-month tenancies with 30 days notice without stating a reason. Evictions run through DeSoto County Justice Court.
DeSoto County has no rent control. Mississippi has no statewide rent control statute, and the Landlord and Tenant Act (Title 89, Ch. 8) sets no cap on rent increases. Landlords set market rates freely.
DeSoto County, MS cities offer scheduled bulk item pickup for large furniture, mattresses, and appliances through municipal public works or contracted haulers. Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando typically provide appointment-based or monthly bulk collection. Appliances with refrigerant (fridges, freezers, AC units) require EPA-compliant refrigerant recovery before pickup. Electronics, hazardous materials, paint, and batteries are excluded and must go to the DeSoto County Transfer Station or special drop-off events.
DeSoto County, MS provides weekly curbside trash collection through municipal public works departments and contracted haulers including Waste Pro and Waste Connections. Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, Hernando, and Walls each assign pickup days by neighborhood, with recycling service available in most cities. Bins must be at curbside by 6-7 AM on pickup day. Holidays including New Year's, Thanksgiving, and Christmas shift pickup by one day.
DeSoto County, MS cities require trash and recycling bins placed at the curbside on collection day with lids fully closed, spaced at least 3 feet apart and clear of mailboxes, parked cars, and utility poles. Bins must be retrieved within 12 to 24 hours after collection under Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando property maintenance codes. Between pickups, bins must be stored out of view from the street, typically behind a fence or beside the house.
DeSoto County has no mandatory curbside recycling ordinance. Southaven, Olive Branch, Horn Lake, and Hernando offer voluntary drop-off sites; curbside recycling was discontinued across DeSoto cities in 2018-2019 after market collapse.
DeSoto County zoning requires 25 ft front, 8 ft side, 20 ft rear typical for R-1 residential. Southaven and Olive Branch follow similar standards; corner lots and flag lots have increased setbacks.
DeSoto County R-1 residential limits buildings to 35 ft / 2.5 stories. Southaven and Olive Branch allow 40 ft in some residential zones. Commercial corridors along Goodman Rd permit taller structures.
DeSoto County R-1 lots typically limited to 40% coverage by buildings, 60% total impervious. Southaven R-1A is 35% building coverage. Stormwater management required on larger lots per MS DEQ rules.
DeSoto County requires building and electrical permits for rooftop solar installations. Entergy Mississippi and Northcentral Electric Power Association require interconnection agreements. MS has no net metering mandate; instead the MS PSC uses net billing at avoided cost plus 2.5 cents/kWh premium.
Mississippi has NO solar access law protecting homeowners from HOA solar panel bans. HOAs in DeSoto County (Snowden Grove, Plantation Lakes, Wedgewood, Eastover) may restrict or prohibit rooftop solar via CC&Rs. Review covenants before purchase or installation.
DeSoto County allows temporary garage sale signs during the sale only. Most DeSoto cities cap garage sales at 2-4 per household per year. Signs are prohibited on utility poles, street signs, and in MDOT or county right-of-way.
DeSoto County permits residential holiday decorations without a permit. No specific duration cap in unincorporated areas. HOAs in Southaven, Olive Branch, Hernando, and Horn Lake master-planned subdivisions commonly restrict installation to 30 days before and 15-30 days after the holiday.
DeSoto County allows political signs on private property with size limits, consistent with First Amendment protections. MS Code Β§23-15-895 prohibits tampering with political signs. Signs in public right-of-way and on MDOT highways are prohibited. Remove within 10 days after the election.
DeSoto County cities require door-to-door solicitor permits with background checks. Southaven charges $50-$100, requires MS photo ID, and limits hours to 9 AM-8 PM. Religious and political canvassing exempt.
Southaven and Olive Branch honor posted 'No Soliciting' signs under city code; violating a posted sign is a separate citation. DeSoto cities do not maintain formal no-knock registries like Memphis.
DeSoto County has no unified countywide garage sale frequency limit in unincorporated areas. Municipalities set their own caps β Southaven and Olive Branch each limit residents to roughly 4 sales per calendar year under their peddler/transient vendor codes.
DeSoto County cities have minimal garage sale regulation. Southaven, Olive Branch, and Horn Lake limit sales to 2-3 per year per address without permit. Hernando requires free registration for sales over 2 days.
DeSoto County municipalities restrict garage sales to daytime hours, generally 7 AM to sunset. Signs in public rights-of-way are prohibited under MDOT and municipal sign codes and are routinely removed by public works.
DeSoto County has no formal heritage tree registry, but Hernando preserves 24+ inch DBH trees as 'significant trees' in its tree preservation ordinance. Courthouse Square live oaks historically protected.
Hernando requires 1:1 to 2:1 tree replacement in new development under its preservation ordinance. Southaven and Olive Branch require replacement only in platted subdivisions and commercial site plans.
DeSoto County and its cities have minimal tree removal permit requirements on private residential property β Mississippi generally defers to property rights. Hernando has a tree preservation ordinance; Southaven and Olive Branch require permits only on new subdivisions.
Home cultivation of cannabis is prohibited throughout DeSoto County. Mississippi's Medical Cannabis Act (Miss. Code Β§41-137) does NOT authorize patient home grows β only licensed cultivators may produce cannabis in Mississippi.
Mississippi's Medical Cannabis Act allowed municipalities and counties to opt out. Several DeSoto County cities opted out; dispensaries that do operate must meet 1,000-foot buffers from schools, churches, and child-care centers under Miss. Code Β§41-137-35.
DeSoto County municipalities treat light trespass as a nuisance under general property and zoning codes. Residential property-line illumination generally capped at 0.5 to 1.0 foot-candle. Enforcement is complaint-driven.
DeSoto County has no formal dark-sky ordinance. Commercial site-plan review in municipalities typically requires full-cutoff fixtures and limits spillover to 0.5 foot-candles at residential property lines. Residential lighting is largely unregulated.
DeSoto cities restrict food trucks from public rights-of-way; most vending occurs on private property with owner permission. Southaven Towne Center and Olive Branch Old Towne have specific event-based vending zones.
DeSoto County food trucks need MS Department of Health permit plus city-specific mobile vendor license. Southaven, Olive Branch, Hernando each require separate privilege licenses; fees range $50 to $250 annually.
Commercial drone operators in DeSoto County need FAA Part 107 certification plus privilege license under MS Code Β§27-17. Memphis Class B airspace over Southaven/Horn Lake requires LAANC waivers.
DeSoto County drone use follows FAA Part 107 and Β§44809 recreational rules. Memphis International Airport Class B airspace covers northern DeSoto β LAANC authorization required over Southaven and Horn Lake.
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.