Hello-
I thought my recent experience might possibly help a few people. I recently wanted to build a garage/polebarn for my chickens that are coming in two weeks, and to free up some space in my existing garage. My wife wasn't looking forward to the smell, and my dogs didn't want to share their space, so I needed it soon. I sent the plan to the township, and it was denied, as the zoning ordinance said that any accessory buildings need to be behind the livable portion of the house. Well, I didn't want it there. I wanted it off of my driveway turnaround, so I could put a car in it also, and use it for more than a storage building.
My options were to pay $200 and apply for a variance which would take a couple of months and I was told I would probably not be granted, or just let local government tell me what I can do on MY property. I was really annoyed. I live in a rural area. My house is one of three on a mile long dirt, private road. My driveway is 350 feet long, and I live on a 6 acre fully wooded lot. No one would ever even see the barn. Not to mention the fact that I'm paying a ton more in taxes on my newly built house than probably most of the single wide trailers with junk collections in the lawns that occupy the majority of my township. There had to be another way. (By the way, I'm an employee of a city government, so I'm not one of those "anti-government" people, I just didn't like being told what I could do on property that I own.)
So, I looked up the ordinance online and it said "this does not apply to buildings associated with farm use." Then I looked up their definition of a "farm." It was really loose, and here's why- the "right to farm act" basically protects farmers (from large scale, for-profit farmers down to hobby farmers,) from local governments. Because I am getting "livestock," and the building I wanted was to keep that livestock, they had to leave me alone.
There are a couple of hitches- you actually have to have livestock of some sort, (no set number or purpose,) there are some lot size requirements, and you can't be within city limits or a suburb/residential zone. You have to follow these conditions, too- the zoning guy, understandably upset by the fact that I went around him, said that if I didn't, the township would make me tear the barn down. However, if you can meet these requirements, your local government has no right to tell you that you aren't a farmer.
You might have a hard time fighting against the federal or state government, but with a little research and time, you can get around local government regulations. My brand new 24X32 chicken barn/workshop, complete with a rooster weathervane is proof. Hopefully I'll have the electric in before my 25 chicks come later this month!
-Jason
I thought my recent experience might possibly help a few people. I recently wanted to build a garage/polebarn for my chickens that are coming in two weeks, and to free up some space in my existing garage. My wife wasn't looking forward to the smell, and my dogs didn't want to share their space, so I needed it soon. I sent the plan to the township, and it was denied, as the zoning ordinance said that any accessory buildings need to be behind the livable portion of the house. Well, I didn't want it there. I wanted it off of my driveway turnaround, so I could put a car in it also, and use it for more than a storage building.
My options were to pay $200 and apply for a variance which would take a couple of months and I was told I would probably not be granted, or just let local government tell me what I can do on MY property. I was really annoyed. I live in a rural area. My house is one of three on a mile long dirt, private road. My driveway is 350 feet long, and I live on a 6 acre fully wooded lot. No one would ever even see the barn. Not to mention the fact that I'm paying a ton more in taxes on my newly built house than probably most of the single wide trailers with junk collections in the lawns that occupy the majority of my township. There had to be another way. (By the way, I'm an employee of a city government, so I'm not one of those "anti-government" people, I just didn't like being told what I could do on property that I own.)
So, I looked up the ordinance online and it said "this does not apply to buildings associated with farm use." Then I looked up their definition of a "farm." It was really loose, and here's why- the "right to farm act" basically protects farmers (from large scale, for-profit farmers down to hobby farmers,) from local governments. Because I am getting "livestock," and the building I wanted was to keep that livestock, they had to leave me alone.
There are a couple of hitches- you actually have to have livestock of some sort, (no set number or purpose,) there are some lot size requirements, and you can't be within city limits or a suburb/residential zone. You have to follow these conditions, too- the zoning guy, understandably upset by the fact that I went around him, said that if I didn't, the township would make me tear the barn down. However, if you can meet these requirements, your local government has no right to tell you that you aren't a farmer.
You might have a hard time fighting against the federal or state government, but with a little research and time, you can get around local government regulations. My brand new 24X32 chicken barn/workshop, complete with a rooster weathervane is proof. Hopefully I'll have the electric in before my 25 chicks come later this month!
-Jason