Showing ordinances that apply to Bunkerville, NV
Bunkerville is an unincorporated community (population 1,069) in Clark County, Nevada. Because Bunkerville is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Clark County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The obstruction rules rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Clark County prohibits obstructing public sidewalks with vegetation, merchandise, signs, trash bins, or vehicles. Vegetation must be trimmed to maintain a clear pedestrian path and minimum overhead clearance. Violations are enforced under Title 11 and Title 18.
Clark County Code Titles 11 (Abatement of Nuisances), 14 (Traffic), and 18 (Roads) prohibit obstructions on public sidewalks and rights-of-way throughout unincorporated Clark County. Property owners must maintain vegetation, fences, structures, and personal property so that the sidewalk remains clear for pedestrian passage, wheelchairs, and strollers. Typical minimum standards require at least a four-foot-wide unobstructed path and an overhead clearance of about eight feet free of tree branches, vines, and shrubs. Obstructions commonly cited include: overgrown shrubs and tree branches extending into walkways, trash and recycling bins left on the sidewalk outside of collection days, merchandise or portable signs placed on public sidewalks without permit, vehicles parked across sidewalks blocking the pedestrian path, basketball hoops and other sports equipment, and temporary construction materials or debris. Near the Las Vegas Strip and high-pedestrian corridors, additional special-use standards apply for commercial street activity. Trimming of county-maintained street trees must be coordinated with Public Works. Private trees overhanging public sidewalks are the property owner responsibility to prune. Code Enforcement responds to complaints; serious obstructions blocking ADA pedestrian access may be expedited. Unincorporated areas like Paradise that border the Strip have high complaint volumes.
Obstructions are typically addressed first through a Notice of Violation with a compliance deadline (often 10 to 30 days). Continued non-compliance can lead to administrative citations starting around 100 dollars, abatement by the county at the owner expense, and potential liability for pedestrian injuries.
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