Texas Transportation Code Section 552.006 prohibits obstructing sidewalks in unincorporated Tarrant County. Common violations include trash bins, vehicles, basketball goals, and overgrown vegetation.
Because sidewalks are scarce in unincorporated Tarrant County, obstruction rules primarily apply within platted subdivisions where pedestrian walkways exist along interior streets or common areas. Texas Transportation Code Section 552.006 states that a pedestrian may not be required to leave a sidewalk and travel in the roadway to go around an obstacle, making it a Class C misdemeanor to obstruct the walkway with a vehicle, trailer, equipment, or other object. Common problems include trash bins left out too long in the public right-of-way, basketball goals, parked vehicles that block the sidewalk across a driveway, and overgrown shrubs or tree limbs that intrude on the pedestrian path. Texas Transportation Code Section 552.003 gives pedestrians the right-of-way on sidewalks except where specifically regulated otherwise. Temporary obstructions for construction, landscaping, or moving trucks are generally acceptable for short periods but should be coordinated so pedestrians can still pass. In subdivisions, HOA covenants often duplicate and expand these state rules with private enforcement mechanisms. Tarrant County code enforcement typically responds to complaints about vegetation overhang and junk items blocking walkways, issuing notices of violation and requiring abatement. Law enforcement handles vehicle-on-sidewalk issues as traffic violations under state law. Persistent obstruction can lead to citations, towing of vehicles, and civil penalties.
Contact your local code enforcement office for specific penalty information.
See how Tarrant County's obstruction rules rules stack up against other locations.
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