Special assessment imposed for weed abatement on city properties
Property owners may face special assessments to cover the cost of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, as authorized under prior council action.
Property owners may face special assessments to cover the cost of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, as authorized under prior council action.
Property owners may receive bills for city weed-removal costs on their land. Details on affected parcels and amounts are incomplete in this notice.
Property owners with code violations will receive bills to cover the city's cost of removing noxious weeds. Owners can challenge the assessment at a public hearing.
Property owners will receive a bill for city costs to remove dangerous weeds from their land. The amount owed depends on the size of each property.
Property owners may face new charges to cover costs of clearing noxious weeds from blighted parcels. This enforces city cleanup standards from a June 2022 declaration.
Property owners will face special assessments to recover costs of clearing noxious weeds from their land. The hearing offers a chance to challenge the assessment.
Property owners will face costs to clear noxious weeds on their land or pay a city-imposed assessment. Details on which properties and amounts owed are not specified in this summary.
City assesses costs of clearing noxious weeds from neglected parcels; property owners may owe cleanup charges if they don't act first.
City will clean up blighted or dangerous properties and charge owners; unpaid bills become liens on the land. Specific properties are listed in the consent package.
City is imposing charges against property owners for clearing noxious weeds on their land. Property owners may be responsible for paying the abatement costs.
Abandoned or deteriorating buildings attract crime and drag down neighborhood property values. This demolition removes a public safety hazard from Birmingham.
Dangerous or abandoned building at 5021 1st Avenue North Rear will be torn down, removing a public hazard from the neighborhood.
City will demolish a building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. Removes hazard from neighborhood.
The city will demolish a building declared unsafe and a public nuisance. This clears a hazardous structure from the neighborhood.
The city demolished an unsafe structure at 2313–24th Street West and is billing the property owner for the $8,422 cost. Property owners can be charged for demolition of condemned buildings on their land.
Property owner at 116 68th Place North will be charged $6,080 to recover the city's cost for demolishing an unsafe building on their land.
An unsafe, blighted structure will be torn down. This clears a public nuisance from the neighborhood.
The building has been deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. Demolition removes a hazard from the neighborhood.
Building declared a public nuisance and safety hazard; demolition will remove blight and risk from the neighborhood.
Property owner is charged for the cost of tearing down an unsafe building on their lot. The city will place a special assessment against the property to recover the demolition expense.