North Dakota counties and townships may adopt agricultural zoning under NDCC 11-33 and 58-03, balancing local land use control with statewide Right to Farm protections.
Counties exercise zoning authority through NDCC 11-33, while organized townships may zone under NDCC 58-03. These statutes allow local governments to designate agricultural districts, set lot sizes, regulate confined animal feeding operations, and govern accessory uses. However, agricultural zoning must work alongside the NDCC 42-04 Right to Farm shield, meaning counties cannot use zoning to retroactively eliminate established farms. NDCC 4.1-01 limits local authority over corporate farming for certain entities, and the state Department of Environmental Quality oversees feedlot permitting. Local rules vary widely, with rural counties typically less restrictive than those near growing cities like Fargo and Bismarck.
Violating county or township agricultural zoning typically results in civil fines, court-ordered abatement, and potential injunctive relief under NDCC 11-33-19. Operating a feedlot without required state permits invites penalties from the Department of Environmental Quality. Local zoning that conflicts with NDCC 42-04 Right to Farm protections or state corporate farming rules can be struck down on appeal.
Horace, ND
Horace regulates amplified music and outdoor sound systems primarily through quiet-hour enforcement. Amplified sound audible beyond the property line during ...
Horace, ND
Horace regulates persistent barking dogs as a public nuisance under local animal control ordinances. Continuous barking beyond 10 to 15 minutes may trigger e...
Horace, ND
Horace limits construction hours as one of North Dakota's fastest-growing small cities. Extensive new subdivision development on former agricultural land cre...
Horace, ND
Horace enforces quiet hours generally from 10 PM to 7 AM under local municipal ordinances. North Dakota Century Code provides broad nuisance authority for ci...
Horace, ND
Horace, ND limits fences in front and street side yards to 3 feet (no more than 25% opaque), interior side and rear-yard fences in residential districts to 6...
Horace, ND
Horace follows North Dakota boundary fence law under NDCC Β§47-26 which establishes shared responsibilities for partition fences between neighboring properties.
See how Horace's agricultural zoning protection rules stack up against other locations.
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