top of page
Forest

Georgia Forestry Commission

Welcome!

Welcome to the Georgia Forestry Commission! We are dedicated to ensuring all ordinances regarding your safety and well being are met when dealing with fire and burning things. We will have updates posted below that are open for the public to view 24/7

Updates:

Changes to burn permit and Notifications Statute with respect to Residential Burning of Leaves, Yard debris and Hand-piled Vegetation

O.C.G.A. 12-6-90 (c) Currently requires persons wishing to burn pastures, crop land residue, and leaf piles to notify the Georgia Forestry Commission prior to commencing the burn. Failure to provide such notice is a misdemeanor offense under 12-6-90 (e). This statute was amended by Senate Bill 119, which goes into effect July 1, 2021. Under the amendment, persons wishing to burn pastures and crop land must notify the Georgia Forestry Commission. However, persons wishing to burn leaves, yard debris, and hand-piled vegetation "on the premises at which they occur" will no longer require the notifying of the Georgia Forestry Commission or the need to obtain a state burn permit.

Such burns are nevertheless subject to a list of specific rules:

 - Fires must be at least 25 feet from woodlands and 50 feet from any structures

 - Fires must be attended at all times until the fire is extinguished 

 - All necessary precautions must be taken that keep a fire contained

 

These burns may only take place between sunrise and sunset. It remains a misdemeanor offense to violate any of these new provisions of the statute.

Any person violating these provisions can be cited by any law enforcement officer without the necessity of a county ordinance making the conduct illegal. Counties are not required to adopt an ordinance requiring notice of the county of burning activities regulated by the new provisions of 12-6-90 (c). However, counties are not preempted from adopting an ordinance requiring that the county be notified of these activities so that public safety officers can monitor the fires. This is a matter of local discretion. Your county may receive solicitations from private entities offering services in this regard. Whether such private services are desirable is entirely up to your county. The amendments enacted by Senate Bill 119 do not mandate that the county take any action in this area. 

Any pre-existing local burning ordinances remain applicable. In addition, restrictions on burning in 54 northern Georgia counties under the Environmental Protection Division summer burn ban from May 1 - September 30th continues to be in effect. 

The Georgia Forestry Commission has resources to assist in educating citizens about these new changes:

 - "Take Five: How to comply with Georgia's new Outdoor Burning Laws"

 - "Take Five": Overview

 - Georgia's Outdoor Burn notification system fact sheet

 - GA Senate Bill 119 (text): https://engagifi-billtracking.azurewebsites.net/api/1.0/file/365922

Contact Us

 Address. 790 Veterans Pkwy Barnesville, GA 30204

© 2035 by ITG. Powered and secured by Wix

bottom of page