Special weed-abatement assessment levied on property owners
Property owners may face costs to cover city weed-removal work on their land. Details on affected parcels and assessment amounts are incomplete in the agenda.
Council decisions on police technology, surveillance, and data-sharing arrangements that affect resident privacy.
Property owners may face costs to cover city weed-removal work on their land. Details on affected parcels and assessment amounts are incomplete in the agenda.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds declared by 2018 council vote will be charged for abatement costs. Owners can contest the assessment at a public hearing.
Property owners declared negligent for noxious weeds must pay city abatement costs. Affected properties were identified under a 2019 ordinance; this vote finalizes the assessment and hearing process.
Properties with noxious weeds face special assessments to cover city abatement costs; affected property owners can present their case at a public hearing.
Properties with dangerous weeds will be assessed costs for cleanup under a 2018 city policy. Property owners may see charges on tax bills if weeds aren't cleared.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds will face a special assessment to recover abatement costs. Check if your property is affected.
Property owners may face charges for city-ordered weed removal on their land. Specific parcels and amounts not listed in this summary.
Properties flagged for dangerous or noxious weeds will face special assessments to cover abatement costs unless owners comply. Affected property owners need to appear at the hearing to contest the assessment.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will be assessed costs for city-ordered cleanup under a 2020 abatement program. Affected owners have the right to a hearing to contest the assessment.
Property owners of designated blighted parcels will owe a special assessment to cover the cost of city-ordered weed removal. The abatement was originally declared in September 2017.
Property owners with noxious weeds declared dangerous in 2018 will face assessment charges. The city clears weeds at city expense, then bills property owners for the cost.
City is charging property owners for costs of clearing noxious weeds declared hazardous in 2019. You may owe a special assessment if your property was included.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds face a special assessment bill to recover city cleanup costs. Check if your address is on the list.
Property owners will receive bills to cover the cost of removing noxious weeds from their land. Failure to pay may result in liens or foreclosure.
Council is setting the cost homeowners must pay to cover the city's cost of clearing noxious weeds from their properties. Property owners will receive bills for the abatement work already done under the June 2018 declaration.
Property owners with blighted land declared dangerous by the city must pay a special assessment to cover weed removal costs. The city can place a lien on the property if the assessment goes unpaid.
City is collecting costs from property owners for clearing noxious weeds declared a public nuisance in 2020. Property owners may face liens or added tax bills if assessments aren't paid.
City pursues cost recovery from property owners for clearing noxious weeds declared a public hazard in 2018. Owners may owe special assessments.
Property owners may face assessments to cover costs of clearing weeds from neglected parcels. The city uses liens to recover abatement expenses.
Storm sewer collapse has created a hazardous sinkhole in the westbound lane of 34th Avenue North (2600 block). Emergency contract with Gillespie Construction will repair the pipe and reopen the road.
Property owners will be charged for city-ordered weed removal on vacant or neglected lots. Assessment amounts and affected addresses will be detailed at the public hearing.
Property owners will face charges to cover the cost of removing noxious weeds from their land. This assessment recovers abatement expenses declared under a 2017 resolution.
Property owners will receive bills for city-ordered weed removal on their land. Amount depends on property size and abatement costs; affected addresses not listed in this agenda item.
Property owners declared to have noxious weeds will receive bills for abatement costs under Resolution 4-19. Affected property owners have the right to a hearing to contest the assessment.
Council receives notice of emergency spending to fix a sewage leak at City Hall. Emergency purchases bypass standard bidding rules but require council notification to ensure public oversight of urgent spending.