In unincorporated Lane County, residential off-street parking is limited to passenger cars, vans and pickups up to one ton (recreational vehicles excepted), and parking areas may not be used to dismantle vehicles for parts as a business. Driveway approaches to county roads require a Public Works access permit.
Lane Code 16.250(1) sets residential on-lot parking standards in addition to zone requirements. Off-street parking is limited to passenger cars, vans and pickups up to one ton, excluding RVs (16.250(1)(b)); RVs, boats and trailers must not block roadway vision clearance (16.250(1)(d)); and parking areas may not be used to dismantle vehicles for the parts business (16.250(1)(e)). A new or modified driveway connecting to a county road needs a facility-permit/road-approach permit from Lane County Public Works. Cities govern driveways within city limits.
Unpermitted road approaches and prohibited parking-area uses are enforced by Lane County Public Works and Land Management under LC Chapter 5, with orders to correct and civil penalties.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Lane County allows residential backyard composting and actively promotes it through its Waste Management program. There is no compost permit for home use, bu...
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Lane County has no ordinance regulating, requiring, or banning artificial turf for residential landscaping. Ground-cover choice is unregulated on ordinary lo...
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Lane County does not require homeowners to plant native species, and the noxious-vegetation code exempts nothing based on native status. In forest and ripari...
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Rainwater harvesting is legal statewide. ORS 537.141 exempts collecting precipitation from an artificial impervious surface, like a rooftop, from Oregon's wa...
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Oregon has no statewide homeowner lawn-watering ban, and Lane County sets no county-wide outdoor-watering schedule. Restrictions come from your local water u...
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Lane Code 9.057.574 defines weeds more than ten inches high as "noxious vegetation," along with poison oak or ivy, tansy ragwort, thistle, and encroaching bl...
See how Lane County's driveway rules rules stack up against other locations.
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