Weed abatement: 3520 Carver Ave. SW removed from city cleanup list
Property at 3520 Carver Avenue SW is no longer subject to city-ordered weed removal and associated costs. The property has been removed from the citywide abatement program.
Property at 3520 Carver Avenue SW is no longer subject to city-ordered weed removal and associated costs. The property has been removed from the citywide abatement program.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds face special assessments to cover abatement costs. Affected properties were identified in an earlier council vote (Resolution 1821-24, December 3, 2024).
City will clear nuisances (weeds, debris) from blighted properties and bill owners; unpaid costs become legal liens that can affect property sale or refinance.
City will remove an abandoned or non-working vehicle from a residential or commercial property and charge the vehicle's registered owner for removal costs.
Removal of abandoned or inoperable vehicles improves neighborhood conditions and safety. Costs are assessed against the vehicle's registered owner.
City posts notices on 383 parcels with dangerous weeds, launching abatement action. Properties may face removal of vegetation at owner expense.
Abandoned or broken-down cars clutter neighborhoods and create safety hazards. This clears one such vehicle and charges the owner for removal costs.
City will remove an abandoned car from a neighborhood and bill the registered owner for removal costs.
City will remove an abandoned vehicle and charge the registered owner for removal costs.
Cost of vehicle removal will be charged to the registered owner. Addresses abandoned or non-functioning vehicles in neighborhoods.
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicles from streets and neighborhoods as a public nuisance. Removal costs are charged to the registered owner.
City removes weeds/nuisances from vacant or neglected properties and charges owners the cleanup cost as a tax lien. Owners who don't maintain their land pay for the city to do it.
City clears abandoned or non-functioning vehicles from streets and properties. Removal costs are charged to the registered owner.
Annual monitoring fee keeps 115 automated external defibrillators operational across Birmingham Police facilities, ensuring life-saving equipment is ready if cardiac emergencies occur.
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property; removal costs charged to the vehicle's owner.
Routine purchase of office furniture for Police Department operations using competitive pricing.
Inoperable vehicles left on public property create neighborhood blight and safety hazards. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner for removal costs.
City abates abandoned or non-working vehicles as public nuisances. Owner will be billed for removal and disposal costs.
City clears overgrown or blighted properties and places liens on owners to recover cleanup costs. Property owners can appeal at a public hearing.
The city will remove an abandoned or disabled vehicle from a property and charge the registered owner for removal costs. This clears blight and improves neighborhood safety.