Council abates inoperable vehicle as public nuisance
Inoperable vehicles are removed from neighborhoods and owners are billed for the cost of removal, cleaning up blighted properties.
Inoperable vehicles are removed from neighborhoods and owners are billed for the cost of removal, cleaning up blighted properties.
City removes an abandoned or non-working vehicle from a property and bills the vehicle owner for the removal cost.
Inoperable vehicles are declared public nuisances and removed from city property; the owner pays the removal cost.
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicles from streets and properties. Costs are charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
City can remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property and bill the owner for removal costs, cleaning up neighborhood blight.
Abandoned or inoperable vehicles are removed from neighborhoods and the cost is charged to the registered owner.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a neighborhood and bill the registered owner for removal costs, reducing blight and hazards on residential streets.
The city will remove an abandoned, non-working vehicle and charge the registered owner for removal costs, cleaning up neighborhood blight.
City removes an abandoned or broken-down car being treated as a public nuisance. The vehicle owner will be billed for removal costs.
City removes abandoned or damaged vehicle; owner pays removal costs.
City will remove an abandoned or inoperable car from a neighborhood and charge the owner for removal costs, reducing blight and improving local conditions.
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property; owner pays the removal costs.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are cleared from neighborhoods as public nuisances. Removal costs are billed to the vehicle's registered owner.
City will tow an abandoned or non-working car from private property and bill the vehicle owner for removal—a tool to clear neighborhood nuisances.
City will remove an abandoned or inoperable vehicle from a property and charge the registered owner for removal costs. This clears public health and safety hazards from neighborhoods.
City will remove an abandoned car and bill the registered owner for the cost, clearing a public nuisance from the neighborhood.
City will remove an abandoned or non-functioning vehicle from a neighborhood and charge the registered owner for the removal cost, clearing a public nuisance.
City removes an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property and bills the registered owner for the cost of removal.
City removes an abandoned or broken-down vehicle cluttering a neighborhood; removal costs will be charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
City will remove an abandoned or non-functioning vehicle from a neighborhood street or property, and bill the registered owner for removal costs.