Demolition approved: Unsafe building at 4410 7th Avenue
The city will demolish a condemned building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. Removal clears blight from the neighborhood and reduces hazards.
The city will demolish a condemned building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. Removal clears blight from the neighborhood and reduces hazards.
City removes abandoned or broken-down cars from streets and properties, charging the registered owner for removal and disposal costs.
City identifies this structure as unsafe and a public nuisance, ordering demolition to remove blight and improve neighborhood safety.
City removes an abandoned or inoperable vehicle and charges the registered owner for removal costs.
City will remove an abandoned or non-working vehicle and charge the owner for removal costs. Gets eyesores off residential streets.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property and bill the registered owner for the removal cost, helping clear public nuisances from neighborhood streets.
City will remove an abandoned or disabled vehicle cluttering a neighborhood and charge the registered owner for removal. Keeps streets clear and recovers cleanup costs.
Removes abandoned or broken-down vehicle from neighborhood; costs assessed to registered owner. Improves public safety and neighborhood appearance.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are cleared from streets and properties, reducing neighborhood blight. Removal costs are billed to the registered vehicle owner.
City will remove an abandoned or non-working vehicle and bill the registered owner for removal costs.
City clears noxious weeds from neglected properties and bills the owners. Property owners must pay the assessment or face collection action.
City spending $1,700 per vehicle for custom paint on new police cars. Part of routine fleet maintenance and equipment purchases.
The city is shifting $23,872 from emergency/planned capital projects to non-departmental spending. This internal reallocation affects which public safety or infrastructure work gets funded this fiscal year.
Property owners will receive bills for the city's cost to remove noxious weeds from their land. This is a follow-up to the March 2024 weed declaration and hearing.
Property owners face special tax assessments to cover city costs for clearing weeds on their land. Failure to maintain properties can result in city action and bills passed to owners.
Property owners will be charged a special assessment to cover costs of removing noxious weeds from their land. The specific properties and amounts cannot be confirmed from the agenda text provided.
City extends public safety surveillance capabilities under existing master contract. Amendment terms and vendor identity not disclosed in agenda item.
City will charge property owners for clearing noxious weeds declared a public nuisance on March 25, 2025. Those who don't pay may face liens or loss of their properties.
Property owners will receive bills to cover city costs for removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their lots. Assessment amounts vary by property.
Property owners declared liable for noxious or dangerous weeds may face special assessments to recover abatement costs. Exact properties, amounts, and hearing details are cut off in the agenda text.