Property owner billed $5,617.84 for building demolition
City demolished an unsafe structure at 4413 12th Court in Wylam and is charging the property owner for the cost. This special assessment becomes a lien on the property.
City demolished an unsafe structure at 4413 12th Court in Wylam and is charging the property owner for the cost. This special assessment becomes a lien on the property.
Property owner at 2200 Dawson Avenue will receive a bill for $2,772.56 to recover the city's cost for demolishing an unsafe building. The assessment becomes a lien on the property.
Owners of properties with dangerous weeds will receive formal notice and face potential city abatement action. This clearing process targets blight that affects neighborhood safety and property values across the city.
Birmingham receives $64,000 in state funding to support law enforcement drug-trafficking operations in partnership with Alabama's Gulf Coast task force.
The owner of the unsafe building at 1540 Cotton Avenue will be billed $4,504 for the demolition the city paid for. Property owners must cover costs when the city removes dangerous structures.
Property owner at 1402 Avenue K will be charged for demolition costs, allowing the city to recover expenses for removing the unsafe structure in Ensley.
Property owner at 5828 Martin Luther Avenue will be billed $5,136.40 for the city's cost to demolish an unsafe building. This recovers public spending on blight removal.
City has demolished an unsafe structure at your property and is now billing you for the $8,385.20 cost through a special assessment. Payment will be added to property taxes if not resolved.
Abandoned vehicles are cleared from neighborhoods and the owner is billed for removal costs, reducing blight and improving street safety.
Abandoned cars clutter neighborhoods and attract crime. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner to recover costs.
City removes nuisances from vacant or neglected properties and charges owners for cleanup costs, which become legal claims against the property. Helps combat neighborhood blight but may affect property sales or refinancing.
City imposes cleanup costs on property owners who fail to remove noxious weeds, helping restore neighborhood conditions. Owners can appeal at a public hearing.
City charges property owners for costs of clearing noxious weeds from blighted sites. Property owners receive notice of special assessment and right to hearing.
Property owners will receive bills for city weed-abatement costs on their blighted parcels. This follows a 2017 city declaration and gives owners a chance to contest the charges at a public hearing.
City charges property owners for weed removal on blighted sites declared under 2017 resolution. Property owners may face liens if they don't pay the assessment.
Abandoned cars clutter neighborhoods and attract crime. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner to recover costs.
Extends cleaning services at North and West Police precincts under existing vendor agreement. Routine facility maintenance renewal.
Property owners with noxious weeds face city cost recovery charges. Abatement work enforces long-standing blight rules first declared in 2017.
Abandoned vehicles clutter neighborhoods and attract blight. Removal costs are charged to the registered owner.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed as public nuisances. The registered owner is billed for the removal cost.