Midland, TX Pesticide Notification Rules

Environmental Protection Texas 4 Minutes Read · published February 21, 2026 Flag of Texas

In Midland, Texas, residents often ask how and when they must be notified about pesticide applications on public property, rights-of-way, or by contractors working near homes. This guide summarizes what the city publishes, the likely roles of municipal and state enforcers, how residents can request notice or report concerns, and where to find official permits and licensing. It focuses on practical steps for Midland, Texas households and property managers to receive advance warnings, understand compliance checks, and pursue enforcement when needed.

Penalties & Enforcement

The City of Midland's consolidated municipal code does not publish a citywide, pesticide-specific notification schedule or explicit fine amounts on its general code pages; for city-level text the source is the municipal code and department enforcement pages noted below. View municipal code[1] State licensing and application standards for commercial applicators are set by the Texas Department of Agriculture, which also establishes licensing and discipline for applicators. Texas Department of Agriculture - Pesticides[2] Federal standards such as the EPA Worker Protection Standard may apply in agricultural or commercial settings. EPA Pesticides[3]

Because a dedicated municipal pesticide-notification ordinance is not locateable on the cited city code page, specific fine amounts, escalation ranges, and continuing-offence penalties are not specified on the cited page. For city enforcement the likely responsible offices include Code Enforcement, Public Works, or Parks and Recreation depending on where the application occurs; contact details appear in the Help and Support section below.

  • Fines: not specified on the cited municipal code page; state-level penalties and license discipline are handled by the Texas Department of Agriculture.[2]
  • Escalation: not specified on the cited municipal code page; enforcement may include civil fines, stop-work directives, or referral for state administrative action.[1]
  • Non-monetary sanctions: city orders to cease application, corrective requirements, property cleanup, or referral to state regulators or courts (not specified as exact remedies on the cited municipal page).[1]
  • Enforcer and complaints: Code Enforcement/Public Works or Parks staff receive complaints; state complaints about licensed applicators go to the Texas Department of Agriculture.[2]
  • Appeals and time limits: specific appeal periods and administrative-review steps are not specified on the cited city code page; state license actions follow TDA procedures published on its site.[2]
If you believe a pesticide application presents an immediate hazard, contact emergency services and your local city department right away.

Applications & Forms

For municipal permits or notifications there is no single published city pesticide-notice form found on the general municipal code page; the Texas Department of Agriculture publishes applicator licensing and complaint forms for commercial applicators and dealers.[2] If you are a commercial or public applicator, check the TDA site for license application, renewal, and complaint forms. For questions about city permits or right-of-way work, contact the City of Midland departments listed below.

How notification typically works

When specific municipal programs exist — for example mosquito control or parks maintenance — the city or its contractor should publish outreach or seasonal schedules; if the city contracts for spraying, check the relevant department's notices. For private commercial or agricultural applicators, state rules require licensing and label compliance; notification duties may be specified by contract, building rules, or state standards depending on the setting.[2]

Keep records of dates, times, and any written notices or labels if you plan to file a complaint.

Common violations and typical responses

  • Failure to display or post required notices near treated areas — may prompt a compliance inspection (penalties not specified on the cited municipal page).[1]
  • Unlicensed commercial application — referred to the Texas Department of Agriculture for license enforcement.[2]
  • Use inconsistent with product label or WPS requirements — may lead to state or federal enforcement actions.[3]
If the city has a contracted spraying program, it may post schedules on department pages or social media rather than in the municipal code.

FAQ

How can I find out if the city will spray near my home?
Contact the relevant city department (Parks, Public Works, or Code Enforcement) listed below and ask about seasonal spraying schedules or contractor notices.
Does Midland require advance written notice for pesticide applications on private property?
Not specified on the cited municipal code page; private applications are primarily governed by state licensing and label requirements, and by any agreement between property owners and applicators.[2]
How do I report an unsafe or unlicensed pesticide application?
Document date, time, product label if possible, and contact the City of Midland department for on-site complaints and file a complaint with the Texas Department of Agriculture for licensing concerns.[2]

How-To

  1. Identify the location, time, and any label information from the application.
  2. Contact the City of Midland department responsible (Code Enforcement or Parks) to report the incident and request inspection.
  3. File a complaint with the Texas Department of Agriculture if the applicator appears unlicensed or if label misuse is suspected.[2]
  4. If needed, consult federal EPA guidance for worker and community protection standards applicable to the situation.[3]
Keep a photo of product labels and any contractor identification to support complaints.

Key Takeaways

  • The municipal code does not publish a clear citywide pesticide-notice ordinance on the cited page; check departments for program notices.[1]
  • State licensing and complaint processes are handled by the Texas Department of Agriculture.[2]

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of Midland Code of Ordinances (municipal code)
  2. [2] Texas Department of Agriculture - Pesticides
  3. [3] U.S. EPA - Pesticides