City removes inoperable vehicle; owner pays removal cost
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed as public nuisances. The registered owner is billed for the removal cost.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed as public nuisances. The registered owner is billed for the removal cost.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are cleared from neighborhoods and costs charged to the registered owner, improving neighborhood conditions.
Eliminates abandoned vehicle from neighborhood streets; removal costs billed to the registered owner.
Abandoned vehicles are cleared from neighborhoods and the owner is billed for removal costs, reducing blight and improving street safety.
City identifies 112 blighted parcels for weed abatement and clears path for cleanup enforcement. Owners have notice to act or face city removal at their cost.
Abandoned vehicles clutter neighborhoods and attract blight. Removal costs are charged to the registered owner.
City will clear overgrown weeds from vacant lots and bill property owners. Liens ensure payment and help combat neighborhood blight.
Property owners may face charges to cover weed removal costs on abandoned or neglected parcels; city enforces public health and safety standards by taxing properties that violate ordinances.
City will charge property owners for costs of clearing noxious weeds from their land. Owners may face liens if assessments go unpaid.
Property owners will receive bills for city weed-removal costs on their blighted parcels. Assessments recover abatement expenses from owners rather than city taxpayers.
City imposes cleanup costs on property owners of abandoned, overgrown lots. Owners who don't clear weeds will see charges added to their tax bills.
Properties with noxious or dangerous weeds face special charges to cover abatement costs. This applies to properties declared in violation under a 2017 council decision.
Property owners with overgrown weeds face special tax assessments to recover city cleanup costs. Affects parcels designated under 2019 blight ordinance.
Property owners with noxious weeds face special tax assessments to recover cleanup costs. Check if your property is affected.
Property owners may face special charges to recover costs of removing noxious weeds from their land, as originally ordered in 2019. Check the full resolution to learn if your property is affected.
City pursues cost recovery from property owners who failed to clear noxious weeds. Owners may face liens or foreclosure if assessments go unpaid.
City bills property owners for cost of removing noxious weeds from neglected parcels. Assessments recover public cleanup expenses.
Property owners with declared noxious weeds will face special assessments to cover city cleanup costs. The city recovers abatement expenses through liens against the properties.
Property owners may owe special assessment fees if the city cleared dangerous weeds from their land and they didn't comply with abatement orders. Assessments become tax liens if unpaid.
Property owners may owe special assessments to cover city costs of clearing noxious weeds from their land. This applies rules set in 2017 to recover public spending on blight removal.