Showing ordinances that apply to Paloma Creek, TX
Paloma Creek is an unincorporated community (population 3,177) in Denton County, Texas. Because Paloma Creek is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Denton County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The vacant lot maintenance rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Denton County has limited authority to regulate vacant lot conditions in unincorporated areas. Under Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 343, the county can require owners to maintain vacant lots free of conditions that create public health hazards such as accumulated refuse, stagnant water, or dense brush harboring vermin. The county cannot impose mowing schedules, aesthetic standards, or development timelines on vacant parcels. Rapid development in north Denton County near Celina, Aubrey, and Prosper makes vacant lot maintenance increasingly relevant.
Vacant lot regulation in unincorporated Denton County is limited to the public nuisance abatement powers granted by Texas Health and Safety Code Chapter 343. The county can require owners to remove refuse, cut vegetation that harbors vermin or constitutes a fire hazard, drain stagnant water, and eliminate other conditions harmful to public health. The county cannot require regular mowing schedules, fencing, or maintenance of lots to any aesthetic standard. Many subdivisions in the rapidly growing north Denton County corridor (Celina, Aubrey, Cross Roads, Northlake) are platted with HOA covenants that impose strict vacant lot maintenance requirements including regular mowing, weed control, erosion measures, and construction site cleanliness standards during the building period. For properties within city limits or ETJ, the applicable city ordinance controls. Denton County Code Compliance at (940) 349-2860 handles complaints about vacant lots in unincorporated areas.
Vacant lot owners who fail to abate nuisance conditions after notice face county-performed cleanup with costs assessed as a lien against the property. Criminal penalties under Health and Safety Code 343.011 can reach $1,000 per day. HOA violations for lot maintenance in master-planned communities follow the associations enforcement procedures, typically fines of $50 to $200 per violation after notice.
See how Paloma Creek's vacant lot maintenance rules stack up against other locations.
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