Clark County Title 11 requires owners of vacant lots to control weeds, trash, debris, and illegal dumping. Desert parcels are particular dust and fire risk sources. Uncontrolled vacant lots are a major Code Enforcement complaint category in unincorporated areas.
Vacant and undeveloped lots in unincorporated Clark County are subject to property maintenance standards under Title 11 (Abatement of Nuisances) and Title 9 (Sanitation). Owners must keep vacant lots free from: accumulated trash and debris; overgrown, dry, or dead weeds that create fire hazards; illegal dumping of bulk items; broken fencing and security hazards; and blowing dust from untreated soil surfaces. The desert landscape of unincorporated Clark County — including large undeveloped parcels in Enterprise, the northwest and northeast areas, and south Las Vegas Valley — creates unique challenges. Dust control on vacant lots is regulated by the Clark County Department of Environment and Sustainability under Air Quality Regulations (especially Regulation 90 series) because of federal Clean Air Act PM-10 attainment requirements for the Las Vegas Valley. Owners of vacant lots larger than specified thresholds may need dust control permits and Best Available Control Measures (BACM) such as stabilized gravel, chemical stabilizers, or fencing. Weed abatement is required seasonally — dry, tall weeds are a fire hazard especially in high-wildfire seasons and near the urban-wildland interface. Illegal dumping on vacant desert parcels is a persistent problem; cameras, secured fencing, and frequent inspections are recommended. Uncontrolled vacant lots can trigger multi-agency enforcement involving Code Enforcement, Air Quality, and Fire Department.
Air quality violations on vacant lots can carry significant fines under Clark County Air Quality Regulations — often 500 to several thousand dollars per violation. Weed and debris violations under Title 11 start around 100 dollars and escalate with non-compliance. Abatement can be performed by the county at owner expense and placed as a lien.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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