City removes inoperable vehicle; owner pays removal costs
Abandoned cars clutter neighborhoods and reduce property values. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner for the cost.
Abandoned cars clutter neighborhoods and reduce property values. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner for the cost.
City will tow and dispose of an abandoned or broken-down vehicle cluttering a neighborhood. The registered owner will be billed for removal costs.
City removes abandoned or non-working vehicles from neighborhoods. Costs of removal are charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
City removes a junk vehicle classified as a public nuisance. Owner pays removal costs.
Library building is repaired and safe for public use. Emergency procurement allows the city to fix urgent facility damage without standard bid delays.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are declared public nuisances and will be removed; the cost gets charged to the vehicle owner. This clears blight from neighborhoods and improves community appearance.
City removes abandoned or non-working vehicles from streets and properties; costs are billed to the registered owner.
City will demolish an unsafe building at 1226 3rd Place North. Clearing blighted or hazardous properties improves neighborhood safety and can open the door to redevelopment.
Building at 1629 Pine Avenue will be demolished after city determination it is unsafe and a public nuisance. Removes blight and hazard from the neighborhood.
Police get funding to expand body-worn camera use, boosting accountability in officer interactions. Program documents incidents for public safety and legal review.
The city is redirecting $276,000 in police grant funding to a separate municipal fund. This internal budget adjustment affects how police department grant money is allocated and managed across city accounts.
City moves to clear dangerous weeds from vacant lots across Birmingham, reducing fire risk and blight in affected neighborhoods.
Building at 1516 Avenue K will be torn down after being declared a public nuisance and safety hazard. Demolition removes a blighted structure from the neighborhood.
This is Birmingham's annual dues payment to Jefferson County Emergency Management, which coordinates disaster response and emergency services that protect residents during crises and severe weather.
City removes abandoned or disabled vehicle from neighborhood; removal costs billed to the vehicle's registered owner instead of taxpayers.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed from neighborhoods and costs charged to the registered owner. Keeps streets safer and cleaner.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are declared public nuisances and will be removed; the cost gets charged to the vehicle owner. This clears blight from neighborhoods and improves community appearance.
Abandoned cars clutter neighborhoods and reduce property values. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner for the cost.
City removes abandoned or non-working vehicles from streets and properties; costs are billed to the registered owner.
City will tow and dispose of an abandoned or broken-down vehicle cluttering a neighborhood. The registered owner will be billed for removal costs.