Florida law prohibits local governments from requiring replacement plantings or mitigation when a residential tree is removed under documented danger conditions.
Section 163.045(2), Florida Statutes, expressly states that a local government may not require a property owner to replant a tree that was pruned, trimmed, or removed in accordance with the section. This means cities and counties cannot impose mitigation fees, in-lieu payments, or replacement caliper-inch requirements on residential homeowners who remove a documented dangerous tree. Replacement requirements remain valid for non-dangerous tree removals and for non-residential properties.
A local government attempting to enforce replanting after lawful Section 163.045 removal is subject to civil action, with potential attorney-fee shifting and injunctive relief.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Boynton Beach, FL
Commercial operations in Boynton Beach must not exceed 65 dBA at the property line during day hours and 60 dBA at night. Loading dock activity restricted 7 A...
Boynton Beach, FL
Gas leaf blowers are allowed in Boynton Beach during standard landscaping hours 7 AM to 6 PM weekdays and 8 AM to 5 PM Saturday. No decibel cap specific to b...
Boynton Beach, FL
Persistent dog barking exceeding 15 continuous minutes or 30 minutes intermittently is a noise violation in Boynton Beach. Palm Beach County Animal Care and ...
Boynton Beach, FL
Modified exhaust, loud stereos audible 50 feet from a vehicle, and engine revving in residential zones are prohibited in Boynton Beach. FL Β§316.272 provides ...
Boynton Beach, FL
Boynton Beach enforces quiet hours from 10 PM to 7 AM under City Code Chapter 15, Article VI. Unreasonable noise audible beyond 100 feet of the property line...
Boynton Beach, FL
Amplified music plainly audible beyond 100 feet from the source (50 feet for vehicles) violates Boynton Beach noise code. Downtown district and beachfront ev...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Palm Beach County.
See how Boynton Beach's tree replacement requirements rules stack up against other locations.
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