Council removes inoperable vehicle as public nuisance
City removes abandoned or damaged vehicle; owner pays removal costs.
City removes abandoned or damaged vehicle; owner pays removal costs.
City removes an abandoned or broken-down car being treated as a public nuisance. The vehicle owner will be billed for removal costs.
The city will remove an abandoned, non-working vehicle and charge the registered owner for removal costs, cleaning up neighborhood blight.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a neighborhood and bill the registered owner for removal costs, reducing blight and hazards on residential streets.
City will demolish a structure declared unsafe and a public nuisance. Removes a blighted property from the neighborhood.
Funds emergency management operations and disaster preparedness for the city. This is the city's annual share of operational costs for Jefferson County Emergency Management.
Property at 600-86th Street South is being demolished after the city determined it unsafe and a public nuisance. The structure will be removed to improve neighborhood safety and property conditions.
This blighted structure will be torn down, removing a public safety hazard and clearing the parcel for potential redevelopment or neighborhood improvement.
The city will clear overgrown weeds and debris from neglected properties and bill the property owners; unpaid costs become liens on the properties. Affects owners of properties on the abatement list.
City buys emergency lighting equipment through state contract. Ensures public safety infrastructure is available for emergency response.
Property owners have 30 days to clear weeds or face city abatement and costs. Affects neighborhoods citywide.
Property owners will face cost recovery charges for city-ordered weed removal on their lots. Amounts and specific addresses depend on individual parcel assessments under the 2022 abatement program.
Property owners with declared noxious or dangerous weeds face special assessment charges to recover the city's abatement costs from the 2020 weed-clearing program.
Property owners will face special assessments to cover costs of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, declared a public nuisance in 2020. The city is now collecting these cleanup costs from owners.
Property owners will receive a bill to cover the cost of removing dangerous weeds declared a nuisance in 2021. The assessment is levied against specific parcels identified in the original declaration.
City will clean up blighted properties and charge owners the cost as a lien. Affects properties with overgrown vegetation or similar hazards.
Properties declared blighted for dangerous weeds face special assessment charges. Owners will receive bills tied to abatement work ordered in 2020.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle and bill the registered owner for the cost of removal.
City removes an inoperable vehicle from a property and charges the registered owner for removal costs. Helps clear neighborhood nuisances and recover public expense.
City removes weeds and hazards from neglected properties and bills owners through property liens. Cleanup costs recover from responsible parties rather than city budget.