Remove inoperable vehicle declared public nuisance
City removes an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a residential or commercial property and charges the vehicle owner for removal costs.
City removes an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a residential or commercial property and charges the vehicle owner for removal costs.
City will demolish a structure deemed unsafe and a public nuisance in your neighborhood, clearing a potential hazard.
City declares the structure unsafe and a public nuisance, and will tear it down. Removes a blight hazard from the neighborhood.
The city will demolish a blighted structure deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. This removes a hazard from the neighborhood.
City removes an abandoned or broken-down car from your street and charges the vehicle owner for the cost. Clears visual blight and frees up neighborhood space.
City is tearing down a building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance in your neighborhood. Demolition removes blight and safety hazards from the area.
Blighted building at 711 12th Avenue West will be demolished. Removes an unsafe structure and public nuisance from the neighborhood.
City removes a non-working vehicle that has become a public nuisance. The cost of removal will be billed to the vehicle's registered owner.
City will clear nuisances from specific properties and charge cleanup costs back to owners as liens. Affected property owners will owe the city for abatement work.
Condemned structure at 329 21st Street SW will be torn down as a public safety hazard and nuisance. Removes risk of collapse or illegal occupation in the neighborhood.
City removes abandoned or broken-down cars from neighborhoods and charges the owner for removal. Keeps streets cleaner and safer.
Building declared a public nuisance and safety hazard; city will tear it down to protect neighborhood residents and remove blight.
The property has been deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. Its demolition removes a potential hazard from the neighborhood.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed from neighborhoods to reduce blight and safety hazards. Removal costs are charged to the vehicle owner.
Abandoned or inoperable vehicles are removed as public nuisances; cleanup costs are charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
City removes abandoned or broken-down cars from neighborhoods and bills the registered owner for removal costs. Clears visual blight and safety hazards from streets.
The building at 1314 Lomb Avenue has been declared unsafe and a public nuisance; city will demolish it to remove blight and safety hazards from the neighborhood.
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicle as a public nuisance; owner pays removal costs.
Birmingham Police will use Cellebrite's subscription service to extract and analyze data from phones and devices—a capability that directly affects surveillance and investigation practices. Sole-source procurement means no competitive bidding.
City will remove an abandoned or disabled vehicle from a property and bill the registered owner for removal costs.