Showing ordinances that apply to Woodbourne, PA
Woodbourne is an unincorporated community (population 3,710) in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Because Woodbourne is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Bucks County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The garage sale rules rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Bucks County garage sale display and cleanup requirements are set by municipal property maintenance codes (typically IPMC). Merchandise must be organized, not scattered. Tables, racks, and unsold items must be removed or screened daily. Signs must come down within 24 hours. Patterns of visible clutter trigger blight citations.
Property maintenance standards for garage sales in Bucks County derive from each municipality's adopted property maintenance code, most commonly the International Property Maintenance Code (IPMC) 2018 or 2021 edition adopted under the PA Uniform Construction Code framework. Key IPMC provisions applied to garage sales: ยง302.1 (premises in clean, safe, sanitary condition); ยง302.4 (weeds/plant growth โ tables and merchandise cannot block regular landscape maintenance); ยง302.8 (no accumulation of materials creating blighted conditions); ยง304.1 (exterior of structures in good repair). Applied to garage sales: merchandise must be displayed in an organized fashion (on tables, racks, or organized ground layouts), not scattered randomly across the yard; at the end of each sale day, all merchandise, tables, clothing racks, and display items must be stored indoors, in garages, under tarps away from street view, or otherwise screened from public view; unsold items cannot remain at the curb or prominently in the front yard between multi-day sale periods; at the end of the sale, the property must be returned to normal residential appearance with no visible clutter. Signs directing to the sale must be removed within 24 hours of the sale ending from utility poles, traffic signs, public rights-of-way, and other unauthorized locations (utility pole signs violate PA Code and federal highway beautification laws). Patterns of leaving items out between sales or failing to clean up promptly can trigger broader property blight investigations and potentially escalate to home business zoning review if the pattern suggests ongoing commercial activity. HOAs in planned communities commonly add stricter appearance standards enforceable through HOA covenants.
Items left curbside/visible after sale: $50-$200 property blight citation under IPMC. Signs not removed within 24 hours: $25-$50 per sign. Habitual violations (multiple sales with cleanup issues): escalating fines up to $1,000 and potential cease-and-desist for unpermitted commercial activity. HOA violations: separate enforcement through CCR restrictions and potential liens.
See how Woodbourne's garage sale rules rules stack up against other locations.
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