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The Code of the City of Pottsville, Pennsylvania, in plain language — with links to the official text

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Chapter 171

Property, Quality of Life Maintenance of

Summarized as of July 18, 2026 · Official text on eCode360 →

This chapter sets rules for property upkeep and neighborhood quality of life in Pottsville, covering trash and rubbish storage, littering, junked or nuisance vehicles, animal waste, weeds, snow/ice removal, swimming pools, vending, and tenant/permit registration.

Who this affects

Property owners, tenants, landlords, and businesses in Pottsville — anyone responsible for a property or structure, since violations can be ticketed to owners, occupants, or the individual responsible.

Key rules

  • Exterior property and building interiors must be kept free of accumulated waste, trash, rubbish, debris, or garbage.
  • Appliances or furniture (ranges, refrigerators, TVs, mattresses, sofas, etc.) cannot be stored or displayed outside for sale or other reasons, except during temporary removal or maintenance.
  • Discarded refrigerators and similar equipment must have their doors removed before storage or disposal.
  • Hazardous materials must be stored per fire/building codes and at least 10 feet from the public right-of-way.
  • Waste/trash containers must be durable, watertight, covered, kept out of view from the public right-of-way, and only set out the night before scheduled pickup, returned by the next daybreak.
  • Dumping or littering on public or private property is prohibited.
  • Unregistered, uninspected, inoperative, unlicensed, junked, or nuisance vehicles cannot be stored on premises not designated for that use; vehicle painting outside an approved spray booth is prohibited; for-profit vehicle repair is not allowed in residential districts.
  • Advertising material cannot be placed on public property or on private property without the owner's written approval.
  • Animals cannot run at large or make unreasonable noise; owners must clean up pet waste daily on their own property and immediately elsewhere; dogs must be registered annually with proof of rabies vaccination, wear tags, and be leashed off-property; feeding or sheltering stray or wild animals is prohibited.
  • Insect or vermin infestations must be reported to the Health Officer and abated without unnecessary delay.
  • Weeds or plant growth over eight inches, and standing water that attracts insects or vermin, are prohibited.
  • Snow and ice must be cleared from sidewalks within 12 hours of a snow/sleet/ice event, to within one foot of the curbline; shoveling snow or ice into streets or alleys is prohibited.
  • Swimming pools must be kept in good repair, clean, and covered when not in use; pools holding 24+ inches of water require permits, inspections, and safeguards like fencing and locking gates.
  • Changes to buildings in the Historical District must comply with HARB permits and regulations.
  • Businesses, vending carts, food carts, and yard sales require proper permits and must comply with vending license terms.
  • Potentially hazardous food (out-of-date, improperly stored, previously opened) cannot be stored or served.
  • Adult tenants and occupants must be registered with the City Treasurer within 10 days of moving in; landlords and tenants are both responsible for ensuring this.
  • Work on buildings or structures requires a permit where required by the Zoning Ordinance; temporary dumpsters need a permit; signs/billboards need approval; contractors need a business license and proof of insurance.
  • Accessory structures (detached garages, fences, walls) must be kept structurally sound and in good repair.

Penalties

Violation tickets: $50 for a first offense, $100 for a second offense of the same violation, $150 for a third, and a citation for a fourth and subsequent offense of the same violation. Citations carry a fine of not less than $300 and not more than $1,000 per offense, or imprisonment of up to 90 days, or both. Each day a violation continues may count as a separate offense. If a ticket isn't paid or appealed within 30 days, it goes to a collection agency. The City may also abate violations itself (charging $60/hour per worker plus materials with a 20% surcharge) or direct a contractor to do so (with a 30% processing fee added to the contractor's bill), and unpaid amounts can become a lien on the property after 45 days.

Notable and archaic details

  • The City can perform abatement work itself at a stated rate of $60 per hour per worker, plus a 20% surcharge on materials.
  • A person can appeal a violation ticket to the City Administrator within 15 calendar days, but the appeal must be accompanied by the fine amount.
  • Residents are prohibited from feeding, sheltering, or otherwise interacting with outdoor animals, wildlife, or suspected strays.

The official, authoritative text is Chapter 171: Property, Quality of Life Maintenance of on eCode360 →