will be interesting to see how this turns out
HUNTSVILLE, AL (WAFF) -
A Huntsville man joined the military to fight for our rights, but now he says his own rights are being threatened.
A veteran and his girlfriend said their home was deemed 'unsafe' by city officials because they choose to live by self-sufficient means.MORE
Tyler Truitt and his girlfriend Soraya Hamar are currently living within city limits but without city utilities.
Huntsville officials said that's not allowed. The city filed a lawsuit against Truitt and Hamar, calling their self-sufficient lifestyle unsafe.
The couple says they'd rather be arrested than leave their land.
"We live out here off the grid, 100 percent self-sustaining," Truitt said. "So I basically made all my utilities: I have my solar panels, I have my rainwater collection and stuff."
The city doesn't see that as a good thing.
"They say our house is a trailer, which is not allowed in city limits," Truitt said.
City officials also took issue with Truitt's off-the-grid lifestyle.
"They came and they condemned our house and told us if we stayed here we'd be arrested for trespassing on our own property, and the reason why is, they said, it was unsafe living conditions because we don't have city utilities hooked up," Truitt explained.
The former military member says he just wants the freedoms he swore he'd protect.
"I took an oath that I would support and defend the constitution and the freedoms that entails, and I really feel like those are being trampled upon," Truitt said.
Truitt is prepared to fight for his property. "You have to stand up for what you believe in. They could come out here today if they wanted to and take us to jail for trespassing if that's what they want to call it and, you know, that'd be fine with me. I'll still come back the next day and the next day and the next day because it's my home and because I live here. Where else am I supposed to go really?"
We reached out to Huntsville Utilities and Huntsville City Attorney Peter Joffrion. So far, neither have responded.
if you are talking about a composting or incinerating toilet you should be fine, a lot of areas recognize them as proper sewer systems, if you are talking outhouse, houston we might have a problem. Check with your local agency.
Outhouses are still allowed here in Maine but you must get a permit and an approved design. Yet it is state law that if you are within 500 feet of municipal water and sewer then you must connect to them but I believe you can get a variance for that from the town if you wanted to put in a well or septic.
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