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This is a very interesting point. One point of opposition I have encountered in our gated community from one person (at 325 feet away) is that they don't want to set a precedent of suddenly everything would be allowed as pets and then everybody would want chickens. (Well, okay, I wish y'all BYC'ers were my neighbors...it'd be a moot point; right?). So, yes, THEY may deny MY revocable request to even attempt to have chickens, but in our HOA community there would be 27 homes that fall outside of these people's "consent zone" that COULD raise chickens if they wanted to (and got all the neighbors' consent, etc). Bizarre logic. Seems highly unfair, IMHO.
What is HOA policy? If you can get the to okay it as a general rule, it might fit the city's requirements.
That said, the 350' (or any specific proximity) is based upon the distance that they perceive may be a nuisance. So you might ask why they specify 350' rather than 400' or 200'. If they have an answer that is technically appropriate (versus "duh, that seemed like a good distance, duh?) then fine. If the answer doesn't seem reasonable, you might try to challenge the specific distance specified.
This is a very interesting point. One point of opposition I have encountered in our gated community from one person (at 325 feet away) is that they don't want to set a precedent of suddenly everything would be allowed as pets and then everybody would want chickens. (Well, okay, I wish y'all BYC'ers were my neighbors...it'd be a moot point; right?). So, yes, THEY may deny MY revocable request to even attempt to have chickens, but in our HOA community there would be 27 homes that fall outside of these people's "consent zone" that COULD raise chickens if they wanted to (and got all the neighbors' consent, etc). Bizarre logic. Seems highly unfair, IMHO.
What is HOA policy? If you can get the to okay it as a general rule, it might fit the city's requirements.
That said, the 350' (or any specific proximity) is based upon the distance that they perceive may be a nuisance. So you might ask why they specify 350' rather than 400' or 200'. If they have an answer that is technically appropriate (versus "duh, that seemed like a good distance, duh?) then fine. If the answer doesn't seem reasonable, you might try to challenge the specific distance specified.