Special assessment: $4,971 demolition cost at 1336 Alabama Ave
Property owner must pay the city's cost to demolish an unsafe building at this address. The assessment becomes a lien against the property.
Property owner must pay the city's cost to demolish an unsafe building at this address. The assessment becomes a lien against the property.
Property owner is charged for city's removal of unsafe building. Demolition clears blight from the neighborhood.
Property owner at 1605 Alabama Avenue S.W. must pay demolition costs after the city removed an unsafe structure. The charge becomes a lien against the property.
Property owner will be billed $4,121 to cover demolition of an unsafe building. The cost becomes a lien against the property unless paid.
City removed a blighted structure and is recovering demolition costs by billing the property owner. This clears an unsafe building from the neighborhood.
Property owners will receive notice and face mandatory weed removal or city abatement action. Neglected lots pose fire hazards and drag down neighborhood conditions.
Birmingham may compete to host this major sporting event, which could bring national attention, tourism revenue, and temporary job opportunities to the city.
Property owner will be billed $8,311 for city demolition of an unsafe building at this address. The cost becomes a special assessment against the property.
Birmingham will share law enforcement data through an outside contractor. This affects how police information flows and who has access to it—important for transparency and privacy protections.
Unsafe structure at 1600 13th Street North will be demolished, removing a public hazard from the neighborhood.
City removes nuisances from vacant or neglected properties and charges owners for cleanup costs, which become legal claims against the property. Helps combat neighborhood blight but may affect property sales or refinancing.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are cleared from neighborhoods and costs charged to the registered owner, improving neighborhood conditions.
Abandoned or inoperable vehicles attract illegal dumping, create safety hazards, and lower neighborhood quality. Removal costs are charged back to the vehicle's registered owner.
Abandoned vehicles are cleared from neighborhoods and the owner is billed for removal costs, reducing blight and improving street safety.
City removes abandoned or broken-down cars that create blight and safety hazards in neighborhoods. Removal costs are charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
Abandoned cars clutter neighborhoods and attract crime. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner to recover costs.
City removes a junk vehicle classified as a public nuisance. Owner pays removal costs.
City removes a junk vehicle classified as a public nuisance. Owner pays removal costs.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles clutter neighborhoods and signal neglect. The city removes them and charges the registered owner for the cost.
City removes abandoned or non-working vehicles from neighborhoods. Costs of removal are charged to the vehicle's registered owner.