Showing ordinances that apply to Sells, AZ
Sells is an unincorporated community (population 2,121) in Pima County, Arizona. Because Sells is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Pima County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The obstruction rules rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Obstructing sidewalks and pedestrian paths in unincorporated Pima County violates county right-of-way encroachment regulations. Trash containers, vehicles, landscaping, and construction materials must not block pedestrian passage. ADA accessibility requirements apply to all public sidewalks.
Pima County prohibits obstructions on public sidewalks and pedestrian facilities within county rights-of-way. Common obstruction issues include trash containers left on sidewalks after collection days, vehicles parked across sidewalks (driveways blocking pedestrian paths), overgrown vegetation from adjacent properties, construction materials and equipment without encroachment permits, and sandwich board signs or merchandise displays. Pima County DOT addresses obstruction complaints through its right-of-way management program. Property owners with vegetation encroaching into public sidewalks may receive notice to trim to maintain minimum clearance (typically 7 feet vertical, full sidewalk width horizontal). Construction projects requiring temporary sidewalk closures need PCDOT encroachment permits with pedestrian detour plans. ADA requirements (28 CFR Part 35) mandate that public sidewalks remain accessible, and Pima County must address reported barriers under its ADA transition plan. Utility companies performing work on county rights-of-way must restore sidewalks to pre-work condition. Desert landscaping that extends gravel or decorative rock onto public sidewalks is a common Pima County issue addressed through right-of-way enforcement.
Encroachment on county right-of-way: notice to remove, county may remove at property owner expense. Persistent vehicle obstruction: parking citation. ADA violations: federal civil rights complaint potential. Construction obstruction without permit: stop work order.
See how Sells's obstruction rules rules stack up against other locations.
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