Georgia counties retain zoning authority for agricultural operations, balanced against the Right to Farm Act's nuisance protections for established farms.
Georgia counties and cities exercise zoning authority granted under Article IX of the state constitution and Title 36, allowing classification of agricultural districts and conservation use covenants. The Right to Farm Act in O.C.G.A. 41-1-7 limits the use of zoning amendments and nuisance suits to shut down established farms when surrounding land changes character. Conservation Use Valuation Assessment under O.C.G.A. 48-5-7.4 provides property tax relief for qualifying agricultural land. Local zoning may regulate setbacks, signage, and accessory uses but cannot retroactively render lawful long-running farms a nuisance.
Zoning violations follow local code enforcement; CUVA covenant breaches trigger tax recapture penalties.
See how Senoia's agricultural zoning protection rules stack up against other locations.
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