Showing ordinances that apply to Fairless Hills, PA
Fairless Hills is an unincorporated community (population 9,041) in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Because Fairless Hills is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Bucks County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The heritage & protected trees rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Bucks County has no countywide heritage tree program but several municipalities and land trusts designate exceptional trees. Bowman's Hill Wildflower Preserve and the PA DCNR Big Tree Register recognize state champions. Heritage designations in Doylestown Township and Solebury protect specimen trees from removal.
Heritage and landmark tree protection in Bucks County exists in limited municipal and nonprofit frameworks. Pennsylvania has no statewide heritage tree law; protection is case-by-case. The PA DCNR Bureau of Forestry maintains the Pennsylvania Big Tree Register recognizing state champion specimens of each native species by trunk circumference, height, and crown spread — several Bucks County trees hold state records. Municipal designations: Doylestown Township, Solebury Township, and Newtown Township tree ordinances provide enhanced protection for 'specimen' or 'significant' trees typically defined as 24+ inch DBH or designated species of high value (white oak, tulip poplar, American beech, sycamore). Removal requires more stringent review — often board of supervisors approval rather than administrative permit — and hazardous condition documentation. Bowman's Hill Wildflower Preserve (New Hope), Heritage Conservancy (Doylestown), Natural Lands Trust, and Peace Valley Nature Center contribute to regional tree conservation via easements on private lands. Construction projects adjacent to protected trees must install tree protection fencing at the critical root zone (typically 1 foot radius per inch of DBH) and may require arborist supervision. Historic district properties may have additional HARB review affecting mature trees. The Heritage Conservancy has preserved over 14,000 acres in Bucks with many significant trees. Bucks County Parks and Recreation maintains notable historic trees in Core Creek, Peace Valley, and Tyler parks. Homeowners can nominate trees to PA Big Tree Register through DCNR.
Unauthorized removal of designated heritage tree: $2,000-$25,000 per tree depending on municipal ordinance and tree value. Damage during construction (grade changes, root cutting, trunk wounds): $1,000-$10,000 plus remediation and replacement at enhanced ratio (often 3:1 or 5:1). Violations of tree protection zones during construction: stop-work orders.
See how Fairless Hills's heritage & protected trees rules stack up against other locations.
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