City removes inoperable vehicle as public nuisance; owner pays removal costs
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed from neighborhoods and costs are charged to the owner. This clears blight and frees up street or lot space.
Birmingham council actions holding owners of vacant or blighted structures accountable for the condition of their property.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed from neighborhoods and costs are charged to the owner. This clears blight and frees up street or lot space.
Property owners will be charged to cover city weed-removal costs on their neglected land. The amount and affected properties are not specified in this item title.
Property owners will face special assessments to cover city costs of clearing weeds from their land. Amounts and affected properties are listed in the resolution.
Property owners will receive special assessments to recover costs of city-ordered weed removal on their land. If unpaid, these liens may affect property taxes or sale.
Property owners may face new charges for city-ordered removal of noxious weeds from their land. Citizens should review notices to confirm whether their parcels are affected and the assessed cost.
City is charging property owners for weed-removal costs. You may owe a special assessment if your property was declared noxious or dangerous under the February 2022 resolution.
Property owners may face special assessments to cover city costs for removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, following an earlier declaration under Resolution 456-23.
City moves to clear 55 blighted properties with dangerous vegetation. Property owners will receive notice and face enforcement action if weeds aren't removed.
City imposes cleanup costs on property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds. Owners may face tax liens if they don't pay the assessment.
Property owners in designated blighted areas will be charged for city-ordered weed removal. Affected residents should review the property list to see if their address is included and understand the special assessment amount owed.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds face cost recovery charges from the city for cleanup. Costs are assessed as a lien against the affected parcels.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds declared hazardous in 2022 will now be charged special assessments to cover abatement costs. Property owners will receive bills for weed removal.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds may face special assessments to cover city abatement costs, per Resolution 632-23 adopted April 2023.
City will charge property owners for cost of clearing noxious or dangerous weeds under 2020 ordinance. Affected owners will receive assessment bill.
Property owners may face added tax charges to recover costs of removing noxious weeds from their lots. Affects properties previously declared hazardous under Resolution 651-21.
Properties with noxious weeds declared in April 2021 now face special assessments; affected property owners will receive bills for city abatement costs.
Property owners with noxious weeds will face special assessments to recover city cleanup costs. The city previously declared these properties dangerous under Resolution 226-23 (Feb 2023).
Property owners may face a special assessment bill to cover the cost of removing noxious weeds from their land. The city previously declared these properties dangerous under Resolution 1014-22 (June 2022).
Property owners will face special assessments to cover costs of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, or the city will pursue collection. Costs and affected properties are detailed in the resolution.
Building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance will be demolished to remove blight and safety hazards from the neighborhood.
Property at 1127 Avenue J deemed unsafe and a public nuisance; city will demolish the structure. Removes a blighted building from the neighborhood.
City is tearing down a condemned building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. The property at 615 3rd Street North will be demolished.
City declares the building unsafe and a public nuisance, and will demolish it. Removal will clear a blighted property from the neighborhood.
Building at 7240 Queenstown Avenue is deemed unsafe and a public nuisance; city will demolish it to remove the hazard.
City declares the structure unsafe and will tear it down to remove a public hazard from your neighborhood.