City bills property owner $3,046 for unsafe building demolition
Property owner at 335 25th Street is assessed the full demolition cost. This shifts the expense burden to the property owner rather than the city budget.
Property owner at 335 25th Street is assessed the full demolition cost. This shifts the expense burden to the property owner rather than the city budget.
City clears nuisances from abandoned or neglected properties; costs become liens that owners must pay or face foreclosure. Helps protect neighborhood safety and property values.
Property owner at 828 16th Avenue West will be billed $11,422 for the city's demolition of an unsafe building, payable as a special assessment against the property.
Property owner at 4138 41st Avenue North will be assessed $5,709.26 to cover the cost of tearing down an unsafe structure on their land. This shifts demolition costs from the city to the private property owner.
Unsafe structure declared public nuisance and scheduled for demolition. Removes blighted property from the neighborhood.
Property at 2520 38th Avenue North is being demolished after city officials declared it unsafe and a public nuisance. The action removes a hazardous structure from the neighborhood.
Property owner at 2915 Avenue T will be billed $20,465 for the city's cost to demolish an unsafe building on the site. The charge becomes a lien on the property.
The city is tearing down a condemned building deemed unsafe and a public nuisance in the Ensley neighborhood. This removes a neighborhood hazard.
Police Department receives $3.99M from COVID relief funds, part of broader budget adjustments totaling over $7.4M across city departments for the 2023 fiscal year.
City establishes loan program for small businesses in emergency financial hardship through partnership with Birmingham Business Resource Center.
City will remove weeds and overgrowth from neglected properties and bill the owners. Unpaid bills become legal claims against the land.
City Print Shop's cutting machine is out of service; emergency repair restores in-house printing capacity for city operations and documents.
City approves emergency contract with Tecta America for urgent roof repairs at Police Headquarters. Protects critical public safety facility from weather damage.
Fire Station #18's heating and cooling system is down and needs immediate repair to keep the station operational and firefighters safe and comfortable on duty.
City activates emergency procurement to fix critical drainage issue at public venue, ensuring building integrity and public event operations continue without interruption.
Keeps police and fire vehicles equipped with emergency lighting for responses. Unit prices are locked in on the renewal; budget impact depends on emergency vehicle purchases over the 12-month period.
Owners of these properties must cut weeds or face city action and costs. Notice will be posted on each property, giving owners time to comply before the city may step in.
Council receives notice of emergency repairs needed at police headquarters to prevent further water damage and operational disruption.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds face a special tax assessment to cover abatement costs. The city will hold a hearing for affected property owners to be heard.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds may face special assessment charges. This follows the city's 2018 declaration of blight and allows the city to recover weed-removal costs from responsible parties.