Special assessment: Weed abatement costs charged to property owners
Property owners face charges for city-ordered weed removal on their lots. Specific addresses and amounts not provided in this summary.
Property owners face charges for city-ordered weed removal on their lots. Specific addresses and amounts not provided in this summary.
Property owners may face special assessment charges to cover cost of city weed removal on their land. Details on which parcels and assessment amounts not provided in this notice.
City clears nuisance weeds from neglected properties and bills owners. Costs become a lien against the property and must be paid before sale.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds get cleaned up at owner expense via special assessment. Charges appear on tax bills for affected parcels.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds face a special assessment to cover abatement costs. This enforces the city's weed ordinance and recovers cleanup expenses from property owners.
Property owners will face special assessments to recover costs of city-mandated weed removal on their blighted parcels. The actual properties and amounts are not yet specified in this consent item.
Routine spending: office demolition and buildout work. Amount is small enough for consent-agenda treatment but citizens deserve visibility on who receives city contracts and for what.
Property owners will face abatement charges on their tax bills for weed-removal work the city completed on their land.
Property owners may face charges to cover costs of city-ordered weed removal on their lots. Details on affected addresses and assessment amounts are not yet available in this agenda item.
City will clean up dangerous or neglected sites and charge property owners. Liens secure repayment for abatement costs.
City imposes cleanup costs on property owners with dangerous or noxious weeds; owners can appeal at a public hearing.
City removes overgrown weeds from vacant or neglected properties and bills the owners. Liens placed on properties until costs are paid.
Property owners will receive bills to cover costs of clearing noxious weeds from their land. Failure to pay may result in a lien on the property.
City will charge property owners for costs of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land. Affected homeowners should review the list to see if their parcel is included and the amount owed.
Settlement resolves a public safety-related dispute involving formal claims and city liability. Details of the agreement affect how the city manages similar incidents going forward.
Blighted building will be demolished to improve neighborhood safety and property values. Parcel 40-1026 moves toward clearance.
City purchases specialized communication gear (3M/Scott Epic radio voice amplifiers) for firefighters. No-bid procurement.
Mobile gets federal funding to reduce flooding risks through the FEMA Flood Mitigation Assistance program. The city will contribute $150,000 in local matching funds (25% match required).