City recovers $3,698 demolition cost from 2101 21st Ave N owner
Property owner at 2101 21st Avenue North will be billed $3,698 to reimburse the city for demolishing an unsafe building. This cost becomes a lien against the property until paid.
Birmingham council actions holding owners of vacant or blighted structures accountable for the condition of their property.
Property owner at 2101 21st Avenue North will be billed $3,698 to reimburse the city for demolishing an unsafe building. This cost becomes a lien against the property until paid.
Property owner at 1013 Ethel Lane will be billed $3,502 to recover the city's cost for demolishing an unsafe building.
The city demolished an unsafe structure and is passing the $3,240 cost to the property owner through a special assessment. This clears the city's demolition expense from public funds.
Unsafe building demolished at this address; the owner is billed $2,817 for the cost under city special assessment rules.
City is notifying owners of 161 properties with dangerous weed growth and declaring them public nuisances—owners must remediate or face city action and potential fines.
Property owners have legal notice to clear weeds or face city abatement and potential liens. Addresses blight affecting neighborhood safety and property values across the city.
Properties with dangerous weeds will receive notice and face abatement action. Cleans up blighted neighborhoods and protects public health and safety.
Properties with overgrown weeds now face mandatory cleanup or city enforcement. Property owners have notice to remediate or face city action and potential cost recovery.
Property owner at 300 Avenue U will be assessed $37,604 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building. This expense becomes a lien against the property unless paid.
City demolishes unsafe building at 9020 Belvoir Drive; owner now owes the full cost as a special assessment on their property tax bill.
Property owner at 4816 9th Terrace North will be charged $4,836 to cover demolition costs of an unsafe structure. The assessment becomes a lien against the property.
Property owners of weed-choked vacant lots may face cost recovery charges to cover the city's abatement work. Specific parcels and amounts are listed separately on the agenda.
Property owners will face financial charges for city-ordered weed removal on their land. Costs are tied to prior abatement work completed under 2018 authority.
Property owners will owe a special assessment to cover the cost of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, as declared under a 2019 council resolution.
Properties declared hazardous for noxious weeds face special assessments to recover cleanup costs. You may owe money if your property was cited.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds face a special assessment to cover abatement costs. Check your property bill if you own land in the affected areas.
Property owners may face liens or charges to cover costs of clearing noxious weeds from their land under the city's abatement program.
City assigns cleanup costs to property owners with overgrown lots. Affected residents may owe special assessments on their tax bills to reimburse the city for removal work.
City is charging property owners for clearing noxious weeds from their land. Owners may face liens or penalties if they don't pay the assessment.
Property owners will face special assessments to cover costs of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, as declared in a 2020 city resolution.
Property owners may face liens to recover city costs for clearing weeds on neglected parcels. Affects specific properties declared noxious or dangerous under prior council action.
Property owners will receive bills for city-ordered weed removal costs on their parcels. The assessment amount depends on cleanup scope.
City charges property owners for costs to remove dangerous weeds on their land. Failure to pay may result in tax liens or foreclosure.
Property owners will owe a special assessment to cover the cost of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land. The city declared these properties blighted under a 2019 resolution and is now billing owners for cleanup.
Property owners with noxious weeds may face cleanup costs billed to their tax accounts. Assessment covers abatement work under the city's blighted-property ordinance.