06-02-2014, 09:46 AM
looks like my only option is ... move from my land that Ive lived on over 15 years.
At the risk of sounding like an uncaring snark, yes: you settled in a non-residential area (perhaps failed to perform due diligence?) and are now expecting "residential" norms.
County allowed this problem to be created -- figuring it wouldn't matter, since nobody was supposed to actually try to live in these "agricultural" subdivisions.
County now perpetuates these "quality of life"" problems by refusing to adjust the regulations to match how the land is actually being used, while silently ignoring (or outright refusing to enforce) any existing regulations that may apply (noise, roaming dogs, there's probably even a traffic code for "unsafe start" that covers the squealing tires, etc).
Good suggestion above re calling the State Dept of Health -- that's the agency that's currently harassing HPP about their "fugitive dust", so apparently they do actually follow through when people complain, unlike certain local government agencies...
At the risk of sounding like an uncaring snark, yes: you settled in a non-residential area (perhaps failed to perform due diligence?) and are now expecting "residential" norms.
County allowed this problem to be created -- figuring it wouldn't matter, since nobody was supposed to actually try to live in these "agricultural" subdivisions.
County now perpetuates these "quality of life"" problems by refusing to adjust the regulations to match how the land is actually being used, while silently ignoring (or outright refusing to enforce) any existing regulations that may apply (noise, roaming dogs, there's probably even a traffic code for "unsafe start" that covers the squealing tires, etc).
Good suggestion above re calling the State Dept of Health -- that's the agency that's currently harassing HPP about their "fugitive dust", so apparently they do actually follow through when people complain, unlike certain local government agencies...