This idealistic picture of the early 20th-century housewife describes how I feel when line drying my laundry. I love to dry my clothes outside. Apart from the economy of it, I have found going outside and hanging the clothes on the line very tranquil, almost meditative. The sunshine beaming down, the sound of nature, the fresh air, all would make for a calming break in my day. Then we moved to Ohio. The Home Owners Association (HOA) for the subdivision we moved to does not allow clotheslines. I have had to revert to drying racks. I still get to hang my clothes outside, but very few of them at a time, in a confined area on our deck, away from the prying eyes of the neighborhood association members. I suppose I understand their thinking. Clotheslines are a thing of the past, something used by people who cannot afford a laundry suite in the homes. They feel it "cheapens" our home values seeing other peoples linens flapping in the wind. But in a world where fuel costs are rising, pollution and greenhouse gasses are destroying our environment, and "all-natural" is the phrase of the day, should we be forced to use conventional appliances? Moreover, should a small group of individuals have the right to regulate how we choose to do something as basic as our laundry? These questions have started a movement.
The Right to Dry Movement began in Florida in the 1970s. Many years later, Colorado, Utah, Maine and Hawaii, as well as Ontario Canada, followed suit, passing legislation allowing homeowners the right to line-dry their laundry, superseding Home Owner Association (HOAs) rules to the contrary. There are now 19 states that have some sort of Right to Dry law on their books, and it continues to grow. While 6 states' laws explicitly affirm homeowners have a right to line dry their clothes, several other states say line drying falls under a "Solar Power" act, stating that line drying clothes is making use of solar energy, therefore, protected from HOA laws.
There are several organizations focused on Right to Dry legislation, seeing this more as a homeowners' rights issue than anything else. The best-known of these groups is Project Laundry List (http://laundrylist.org/) , founded by Alexander Lee in 1995. They state,
For many people, the right to dry clothes on a clothesline is as fundamental as freedom itself, seeing the HOA laws an affront to homeowner's rights.The Right to Dry is about reforming community associations and municipalities so that we can compost, garden, xeriscape, hang clotheslines, have screen windows, and participate in all sorts of frugal, green, common sense activities currently banned or severely restricted by many associations. (http://www.laundrylist.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/TheRightToDryGuide.pdf)
Let me know what you think. Should HOAs have the right to regulate line drying?