Showing ordinances that apply to Paloma Creek, TX
Paloma Creek is an unincorporated community (population 3,177) in Denton County, Texas. Because Paloma Creek is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Denton County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The solicitor permits rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Denton County does not require permits for door-to-door solicitors, peddlers, or canvassers in unincorporated areas. Texas counties lack the general ordinance-making authority to create solicitor licensing or permitting programs. Solicitors operating in unincorporated Denton County are subject to Texas Penal Code provisions on trespassing and criminal solicitation but face no county-level registration or permit requirements. Most cities within Denton County require solicitor permits within their jurisdictions, and HOA communities commonly restrict or prohibit unsolicited door-to-door activity.
Denton County has no solicitor permit ordinance applicable to unincorporated areas. The county cannot require solicitors, peddlers, salespeople, or canvassers to register, obtain permits, carry identification, or operate during specific hours. Texas Penal Code Section 30.05 (Criminal Trespass) provides the primary legal tool for dealing with unwanted solicitors: a person who remains on property after receiving notice to leave (verbal, written, or by posted signage) commits criminal trespass. The Denton County Sheriffs office responds to trespass complaints. Solicitors are also subject to Texas Business and Commerce Code provisions on deceptive trade practices. In practice, most residential properties in Denton County are within HOA-governed communities where the CC&Rs and gate access controls significantly restrict door-to-door solicitation. Gated communities require solicitor identification at the gate, and many master-planned communities in the Flower Mound, Argyle, and Northlake areas prohibit commercial solicitation entirely. Cities within the county maintain their own solicitor ordinances: the City of Denton requires a solicitor permit and restricts hours, while Flower Mound issues permits through its police department.
No county permit violations exist for solicitors. Remaining on private property after being told to leave constitutes criminal trespass under Texas Penal Code 30.05 (Class C misdemeanor, fine up to $500; escalates to Class B if on agricultural land or within 100 feet of a residence). Contact Denton County Sheriff at (940) 349-1600 for trespass complaints.
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