Coconino County enforces blight through its Zoning Ordinance and state nuisance law. Junk, debris, and inoperable or unlicensed vehicles left unshielded from public view are the core violations across the unincorporated county.
Blight is where county authority bites. The Coconino County Zoning Ordinance makes it a violation to store building materials, tires, auto parts, appliances, household refuse, and inoperable, unlicensed, or abandoned vehicles where they are not shielded from public view. In the rural G, AR, and RR zones, limited outdoor storage is allowed, but it must sit to the rear of the property and be screened by a wall, opaque fencing, landscaping, or a structure. State law backs this up: accumulated garbage, trash, and rubbish is a public-health nuisance under A.R.S. §36-601. The county investigates reported violations and responds within two business days.
Owners receive notice and a deadline to comply. Unshielded junk, debris, or dead vehicles can be abated with costs charged to the property, alongside nuisance enforcement under A.R.S. §36-601.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Page, AZ
The City of Page regulates noise through its Code of Ordinances (American Legal Publishing at https://codelibrary.amlegal.com/codes/page/latest/overview). Di...
Coconino County, AZ
Coconino County may require hosts to carry liability insurance for short-term rental properties. Minimum coverage amounts vary by jurisdiction.
Coconino County, AZ
Coconino County limits the number of guests allowed in short-term rental properties. Occupancy caps are typically based on bedroom count or square footage to...
Coconino County, AZ
Neither Arizona nor Coconino County regulates holiday decorations. No permit is needed for lights, inflatables, or yard displays on your own property. The re...
Coconino County, AZ
Temporary garage- and yard-sale signs are allowed on private property during the sale, but only for a short window and only with the owner's permission. Sign...
Coconino County, AZ
Arizona strongly protects political signs. A.R.S. §16-1019 lets you place them in the public right-of-way from 71 days before an election through 15 days aft...
See how Page's property blight rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.