Showing ordinances that apply to Churchville, PA
Churchville is an unincorporated community (population 5,348) in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Because Churchville is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, Bucks County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The tree removal permits rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Bucks County does not have a countywide tree removal ordinance. Several municipalities โ notably Doylestown Township, Newtown Township, Solebury, Upper Makefield, and Buckingham โ require tree removal permits for trees above specified diameters. Street trees in boroughs are municipal property. PA has no statewide private tree protection.
Tree removal regulation in Bucks County operates at the municipal level. Pennsylvania has no statewide tree protection law for private property (unlike New Jersey across the Delaware). Several Bucks municipalities with strong environmental character have adopted tree protection ordinances: Doylestown Township, Newtown Township, Solebury Township, Upper Makefield Township, Buckingham Township, Warrington Township, and Warwick Township all have some form of tree protection, typically requiring permits for removal of trees above 6-12 inches DBH (diameter at breast height, measured 4.5 ft above grade). Common ordinance elements: threshold DBH (6, 8, or 12 inches), species carve-outs (invasive species like tree-of-heaven often exempt; native species like oak and beech protected), agricultural exemption (working farms under PA Right to Farm Act), and hazardous tree expedited permits with certified arborist report. Street trees within the public right-of-way in Doylestown Borough, Newtown Borough, New Hope, Bristol, and other incorporated areas are municipal property and cannot be removed by residents โ the borough's public works or shade tree commission manages removal. Many Bucks municipalities have active Shade Tree Commissions under the PA Shade Tree Commission Act (53 P.S. ยง2951). The Bucks County Conservation District promotes tree preservation for stormwater and watershed benefits. Development-scale tree removal during subdivision approval is regulated through the municipal subdivision and land development ordinance (SALDO) with required tree surveys and replacement plans.
Unauthorized tree removal in permitted municipality: $500-$10,000 per tree depending on ordinance and size. Replacement planting required at 1:1-3:1 ratio. Unauthorized street tree removal: additional borough/township charges plus tree replacement value. Development without required tree preservation plan: stop-work and mandatory replanting.
See how Churchville's tree removal permits rules stack up against other locations.
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