Remove inoperable vehicle as public nuisance; charge owner for cost
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicles that pose safety or blight risks. Removal costs are billed to the registered owner, not taxpayers.
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicles that pose safety or blight risks. Removal costs are billed to the registered owner, not taxpayers.
Abandoned or broken vehicles are removed from streets and neighborhoods as public nuisances; the owner pays for the removal and associated costs.
Removal costs for the abandoned vehicle will be charged to its registered owner. This clears blight from the neighborhood.
An abandoned vehicle will be towed and scrapped; removal costs will be billed to the registered owner. This clears blight from the neighborhood.
City will tow and scrap an abandoned or inoperable car clogging a neighborhood; the registered owner pays the removal bill.
City will remove an abandoned or non-working car from a property and bill the vehicle owner for the cost. Helps clear blighted areas and reduces neighborhood eyesores.
City removes abandoned cars that create eyesores and hazards in neighborhoods. Owner pays the removal cost.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property and bill the owner for the cost, clearing a neighborhood eyesore and safety hazard.
Removes abandoned or non-working vehicle from neighborhood; removal cost will be charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
City removes inoperable vehicle from neighborhood; costs charged to registered owner.
Police Department will host a community engagement initiative for 10 weeks. Program details and budget not yet disclosed.
Police Department renews technology or services contract with Watch Systems for two months. No dollar amount specified in item, limiting transparency on public safety spending.
Birmingham Police will continue using Watch Systems' law enforcement services through October 2023. The contract details—vendor, scope, and cost—deserve public transparency even as a routine renewal.
City is moving to clean up 171 properties overgrown with dangerous weeds. Notice will be posted on each property, triggering a formal nuisance-abatement process.
Property owners will be charged for city-ordered weed removal on their land. The assessment covers costs from cleanup declared necessary in October 2018.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds will be assessed cleanup costs. Owners may face liens or payment obligations if weeds aren't removed.
Property owners may face charges for city-ordered weed removal on their land. Details on affected parcels and amounts are incomplete in this agenda entry.
Property owners will face special assessments for city-ordered weed removal on their land. The city declared these properties noxious or dangerous in 2017; this vote finalizes the cost recovery against those owners.
Property owners will receive bills for city weed-removal costs on their land. Unpaid assessments can become tax liens.
Property owner at 4136 38th Avenue North will be charged $13,341.12 to cover the city's cost to demolish an unsafe building on the site.