City to demolish unsafe building at 400 14th Court North
This vacant or blighted structure will be removed from the neighborhood. Demolition clears blight, reduces safety risks, and can support neighborhood stability.
This vacant or blighted structure will be removed from the neighborhood. Demolition clears blight, reduces safety risks, and can support neighborhood stability.
Property owners will receive bills for city-ordered weed removal on their land. The assessment covers abatement work declared necessary in 2019.
Property owners will receive a special assessment bill to cover city costs for removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land. The amount and affected addresses are listed in the full resolution.
Property owners may face assessments for city-ordered weed removal. Specific parcels affected are not detailed in this item.
City will clear overgrown or blighted properties and charge owners for the cost through a property lien. Affected owners will be notified and can dispute the charges at a hearing.
Property owners may face new charges to recover costs of removing noxious weeds from their land under a 2019 council order.
Homeowners with noxious or dangerous weeds may face special assessments added to their property tax bills to cover abatement costs declared by the city in 2018.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will be charged a special assessment to cover city abatement costs. This follows the city's 2019 declaration and applies to properties that failed to comply with cleanup orders.
Property owners face charges to cover city costs for clearing noxious weeds from their land, as ordered in 2018.
Property owners facing special assessments must pay for weed removal on their land; exact properties and amounts not detailed in agenda summary.
Property owners will face charges to cover costs of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land. The assessment is tied to an earlier city declaration and hearing process.
Condemned structure declared a public nuisance will be torn down, clearing a blighted property from the neighborhood.
Property owner at 1135 Jersey Street N will no longer face a special weed-abatement assessment from the city.
Renews one-year contract for asbestos removal at city facilities. Protects public health by ensuring safe hazmat abatement services remain available.
Birmingham police will gain access to ALEA resources and expertise through this partnership, improving public safety capabilities without additional spending. The agreement lets both agencies combine equipment and personnel for mutual benefit.
Properties flagged for weed abatement will receive notice and face enforcement action if owners don't clear vegetation. Affects 447 parcels across the city.
City will clear overgrown weeds and nuisances on abandoned properties and bill owners through property liens. Cleans up neighborhoods while shifting cleanup costs to negligent property owners.
Property owners with unpaid weed-abatement charges will see those costs added to their tax bills and collected by the county, simplifying enforcement of code violations on overgrown lots.
Property owner at 1914 15th Court North will receive a bill for $6,510 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building. The assessment becomes a lien on the property.
City charges property owners for clearing noxious or dangerous weeds on their land. Costs appear as a lien against the property if unpaid.