Rhode Island's Right to Farm Act under RIGL Chapter 2-23 protects qualifying agricultural operations from nuisance lawsuits and overly restrictive municipal ordinances when farms follow generally accepted agricultural practices.
RIGL Chapter 2-23, particularly RIGL 2-23-3 through 2-23-7, declares that agricultural operations conducted in conformity with generally accepted agricultural practices shall not be deemed a public or private nuisance. The law shields qualifying farms from nuisance suits brought by neighbors over noise, odor, dust, fumes, and other ordinary farm operations, provided the farm was established before the conflicting use and continues to operate properly. Municipalities are limited in their ability to enact ordinances that unreasonably restrict accepted farm practices. The Department of Environmental Management and the Division of Agriculture support agricultural viability through related programs and offer guidance on what constitutes accepted practice.
Right to Farm protections are an affirmative defense rather than a punitive law; municipalities or plaintiffs improperly pursuing actions against protected farms may face dismissal, attorney fees, and damages in some cases.
Providence County, RI
Rhode Island does not set statewide barking dog standards. Providence County has no county government. Barking dog complaints are handled by individual munic...
Providence County, RI
RIGL 31-42 governs abandoned motor vehicles statewide. Vehicles left 10 or more days in commercial garages after notice are deemed abandoned. Individual muni...
Providence County, RI
Providence County cities prohibit sidewalk blocking and unpaved front-yard parking. Providence Code Β§23-21 and Cranston Code require paved driveway surfaces....
Providence County, RI
RIGL 34-10-9 requires partition fences to run on the dividing line with each owner maintaining one-half and costs shared equally unless otherwise agreed. RIG...
Providence County, RI
RI State Building Code (SBC-1) exempts fences under 6 feet from building permits, but Providence County cities require zoning permits for most new fences. Hi...
Providence County, RI
Urban Providence County cities (Providence, Central Falls, Pawtucket) restrict or prohibit backyard chickens. Smithfield, Lincoln, Cumberland, and Johnston a...
See how Foster Center's farm nuisance protection rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.