Special assessment approved for weed abatement on city properties
Property owners with overgrown weeds on their land may face special assessments to cover the city's abatement costs, as authorized under Resolution 1391-18 from 2018.
Council decisions on police technology, surveillance, and data-sharing arrangements that affect resident privacy.
Property owners with overgrown weeds on their land may face special assessments to cover the city's abatement costs, as authorized under Resolution 1391-18 from 2018.
City charges property owners for costs of removing noxious weeds from vacant or neglected lots. Owners receive bills tied to the cleanup work completed under prior council action.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds will face special assessments to cover abatement costs. Property owners will receive a bill for weed-removal work performed on their land.
City commits to Procore project management platform through GSA cooperative purchasing. Contract scope and dollar value not specified in item.
City charges property owners for cost of clearing noxious weeds from their lots. Owners may face liens or additional fines if assessments go unpaid.
Property owners will face special assessments to cover costs of city-ordered weed removal on blighted or dangerous lots. This decision enforces compliance with a 2018 resolution requiring property upkeep.
City contracts Ranger Environmental to upgrade Venice Road's culvert discharge system, improving stormwater management in that area.
City is transferring ownership of a parcel in Block 0001 to a private developer. This removes the property from public ownership and potential future city use.
City will charge property owners for clearing noxious weeds from their land. Owners who don't pay may face liens or additional enforcement action.
Property owners will face special assessments to cover costs of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land. The amount owed depends on your property's location and the abatement work required.
Property owners may face charges to cover costs of removing noxious weeds from their land under a 2018 city declaration. Owners have a right to be heard before the assessment is finalized.
Property owners may face added costs to cover city weed-abatement work on their lots. Assessment details and property list not provided in agenda item.
Property owners will receive a special assessment bill to recover costs of city-ordered weed removal. Specific properties and amounts are listed in the full resolution.
Property owners of neglected lots may face costs to clear noxious weeds; unpaid assessments can be collected from future sales or tax proceeds.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds face a special assessment to cover abatement costs. Details on affected properties and amounts will be presented at a public hearing.
Property owners may face charges for city-ordered removal of noxious or dangerous weeds on their land. The assessment amount and affected properties are determined by prior resolution from 2018.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will be assessed cleanup costs. This enforces city health and safety standards for neglected land.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds face a special assessment to cover abatement costs. Property owners can present objections at the hearing.
Property owners will be billed for city costs to clear weeds from their parcels. Assessment amount and affected addresses will be determined at public hearing.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds are being assessed charges to cover city cleanup costs. Property owners may owe money to the city unless they clear the weeds themselves.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will face a special assessment to cover abatement costs. The city can enforce collection against non-compliant properties.
54 properties with noxious or dangerous weeds are now officially flagged as public nuisances. Property owners will receive notice and face potential enforcement action if weeds aren't cleared.
Allows Birmingham Sunrise Rotary Foundation to build a public trail on city land. Project details and location not yet disclosed in agenda materials.
Property owners may owe special assessments to cover city costs for removing noxious weeds. The assessment applies to parcels declared hazardous by the council in 2019.
Property owners may face charges for city-ordered weed removal on their land. Costs are recovered through special assessments tied to properties declared noxious or dangerous under prior city action.