this post was submitted on 19 Dec 2025
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Native Plant Gardening

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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/31676944

An anonymous neighbor wanted to control the appearance of my yard without speaking directly to me. So whoever they are, they filed a report that I have weeds and I was cited.

I wanted to understand what law was being used against me, so I looked it up. It turns out the law is in a body of statutes covering health and public safety. So my 1st thought is: that’s bizarre.. an ugly plant is a health issue?

WTF is a “weed”?

In common language most people are making a value judgment by regarding ugly plants as weeds. But the legal definition is not so subjective. It’s plants that have toxins and allergens. So things like Poison Ivy. The law names 6 or so examples but is not limited to those.

So the law is perhaps reasonably written to control health hazards, not so people can control the appearance of other people’s property. But the enforcers were either clueless about this or they were intellectually dishonest in hopes that those cited would naively create a pretty landscape for the demanding neighbor without first reading the law.

I might have been willing to do a landscape had the process of telling me the yard looks ugly not been as rude as sending cops to bully me.

A citation generally saying “you have weeds” is likely typically a false accusation. They should be writing on the citation exactly which plant specie is toxic or hazardous, just as a speeding ticket says how fast you were measured at.

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[–] frankenswine@lemmy.world 4 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

this needs context: most of all legal (where is this situation taking place)

[–] Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe 1 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

Yea, cops in any town I've lived in would disregard such complaints.

My understanding is it would be a civil issue in a town, not criminal, so some kind of city inspector would be involved, not police. And they would post a notice to resolve the issue, with their contact info. Only if you ignored that 2 or 3 times would they involve police to issue a ticket or summons, so a judge can tell you to clean up your shit. Even then you don't necessarily get fined, unless you don't clean up the mess.

To get a ticket from police I can only imagine what the yard looks like - police aren't going to bother unless it's quite an eyesore. If it isn't, they'll resent the person who complained for wasting their time.

I suspect there's much more to this story.