Council declares 1416 Old Shell Road a public nuisance; orders demolition
A blighted property in District 2 will be demolished to remove a hazard and improve neighborhood safety. The city will assume demolition costs.
A blighted property in District 2 will be demolished to remove a hazard and improve neighborhood safety. The city will assume demolition costs.
City is shifting $300,000 from police support services to improve security cameras in public parks, aiming to boost safety for residents using park facilities.
The city receives $250,000 in federal funding to strengthen emergency response capabilities for pipeline safety and hazardous materials incidents, with no local matching funds required.
This item addresses three policy areas—public safety, procurement rules, and economic development—that directly affect residents' neighborhoods, city spending, and business opportunity. The specific proposals and their impact remain unclear from the title alone.
Mobile continues managing nuisance beavers that damage property and infrastructure. The sole-source contract with Waylon's Wildlife Services covers ongoing removal and control services.
The city plans to demolish a structure in District 3 and is opening a public hearing on the $4,100 cost. Residents affected by the demolition or interested in the site can weigh in on the decision.
City will demolish an unsafe or blighted structure in District 2. The hearing lets residents comment before the $3,700 cost is finalized.
Unsafe structure at 1622 Duval will be torn down. Demolition removes a public safety hazard from the neighborhood.
Blighted property at 2203 Height Street moves toward removal, improving neighborhood safety and clearing a vacant structure.
Removal of the abandoned building will clear a neighborhood hazard and help stabilize the area. The site will be added to Mobile's property recovery program.
Dilapidated structure at 2203 Height Street in District 2 will be torn down using city funds. Removes a blight hazard from the neighborhood.
Event at Public Safety Memorial Park (District 5) gets approval to operate until 10 p.m. on June 27 without noise ordinance restrictions—neighbors should expect louder activity that evening.
Purchase of traffic control barricades for law enforcement operations. Competitive procurement method ensures value.
Mobile County Public Schools will receive prevention and intervention services aimed at keeping students safe. The annual $65,000 commitment funds specialized support for at-risk youth in the district.
The city is removing a blighted structure that poses a safety or health risk to the neighborhood. Demolition helps stabilize the block and may open the property for redevelopment.
City will hold a public hearing to determine if the building at 553 Live Oak Street should be demolished as a public nuisance. Property owners and neighbors can testify before the decision is made.