City removes inoperable vehicle; owner pays removal cost
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed as public nuisances. The registered owner is billed for the removal cost.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed as public nuisances. The registered owner is billed for the removal cost.
Property owners may receive bills for city weed-removal work under a 2016 abatement program. Costs are recovered through special assessments on affected parcels.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will be assessed costs for city abatement. Owners can appear at the hearing to contest the assessment.
City is recovering costs to remove noxious or dangerous weeds from vacant or neglected properties. Property owners will receive bills for abatement work already completed under Resolution 2083-16 (October 2016).
City levies costs against property owners who fail to clear noxious or dangerous weeds; owners receive a hearing to contest the charges. Abatement assessments can add liens to tax bills for affected homes.
Property owners may face charges for city-ordered weed removal on their lots. Assessment details and affected parcels will be presented at a public hearing.
City enforces cleanup of noxious weeds on abandoned or neglected parcels; property owners face special assessments to recover abatement costs. Affects identified blighted properties under the 2016 weed ordinance.
Property owners with weeds declared noxious or dangerous face special assessments to cover city abatement costs. If you own affected property, you'll receive a bill for cleanup.
City clears weeds and blight from neglected properties and charges owners cleanup costs as a property lien. Owners who don't maintain properties will see their tax bills increase.
Birmingham extends its pandemic restrictions, updating rules that govern movement and business operations during the COVID-19 public health crisis.
City removes abandoned or disabled vehicle from neighborhood; removal costs billed to the vehicle's registered owner instead of taxpayers.
City removes abandoned or non-working vehicles from streets and properties; costs are billed to the registered owner.
City removes abandoned or disabled vehicle from a property and charges the registered owner for removal costs. Clears neighborhood blight.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles on streets and property create safety and blight concerns. Removal costs are assessed to the registered owner.
City removes an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from residential or commercial property and charges the registered owner for removal costs.
Clears abandoned vehicles from neighborhoods, reducing blight and safety hazards. Costs recover through assessment against registered owner.
City removes abandoned or broken-down cars from neighborhoods, assessing cleanup costs to registered vehicle owners. This keeps streets safer and improves neighborhood appearance.
Blighted property marked unsafe will be removed from neighborhood. Demolition clears a public nuisance and opens the parcel for future development.
Building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance will be torn down. Removes a blighted property from the neighborhood.
City council declares the structure unsafe and a public nuisance, triggering demolition. Removes a blighted property from the neighborhood and eliminates a potential safety hazard for Pratt City residents.