Demolition cost assessment: $6,623 charged to 204-68th Place North
Property owner at 204-68th Place North faces a $6,623 bill for demolition of an unsafe building. The cost will be collected as a special assessment against the property.
Property owner at 204-68th Place North faces a $6,623 bill for demolition of an unsafe building. The cost will be collected as a special assessment against the property.
The city demolished an unsafe structure at 205 - 61st Street South and is billing the property owner $5,309.52 for the cost. You may see this charge if you own property subject to similar code enforcement.
City demolished an unsafe building at this address and is charging the property owner $9,323 to cover the cost. The owner will owe this amount as a special assessment against the property.
Property owner at 8017 3rd Avenue North faces a special assessment for $3,299 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building. The owner is responsible for repaying the demolition expense.
If you own the property at 1101 Southwood Drive, the city is charging you $5,760 for demolishing an unsafe structure on your lot. Special assessments like this become a lien on the property if unpaid.
Property owner at 1201 Lawson Road will be billed $9,492 for the city's cost to demolish an unsafe building on the site. This assessment becomes a lien against the property.
Properties with dangerous or noxious weeds in your neighborhood will get notice to clear them or face city abatement action. Affects 73 parcels across the city.
City can remove abandoned or broken-down cars from neighborhoods. Owner pays the removal bill.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle and charge the owner for removal costs. Helps clear neighborhood blight and public safety hazards.
An abandoned car will be removed from a neighborhood property; the owner will be billed for removal costs.
Abandoning an inoperable vehicle on your property can result in city removal and the owner being charged for the cost.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property and bill the owner for removal costs. This helps clean up neighborhoods and enforce nuisance codes.
Funds emergency responders' life-safety equipment (SCBA = self-contained breathing apparatus). Purchase is via regional volume contract, keeping costs competitive.
City removes an abandoned or non-functioning vehicle from a neighborhood property. Owner will be billed for removal costs.
City will remove an abandoned or broken-down vehicle from a property and bill the registered owner for the cost, clearing neighborhood blight.
City will remove an abandoned vehicle from a property and charge the registered owner for removal costs. This clears neighborhood blight and recovers abatement expenses.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles on residential streets create neighborhood blight and safety hazards. The city will remove the vehicle and charge the registered owner for the cost of removal.
City removes abandoned vehicle from neighborhood; owner pays removal costs. Improves street safety and appearance.
Property owners will receive bills to cover costs of removing noxious weeds from their parcels, as previously ordered by the city in 2018. Failure to pay the assessment may result in tax liens.
City is charging property owners for removal of noxious weeds on their lots, following a 2018 abatement declaration. Affected owners will see a special assessment on their tax bill.