Weed abatement special assessments on blighted properties
City assesses property owners for costs of clearing noxious weeds from blighted parcels. Owners may face liens or added tax burden if unpaid.
City assesses property owners for costs of clearing noxious weeds from blighted parcels. Owners may face liens or added tax burden if unpaid.
Property owners may face a special assessment for weed-abatement costs on their parcels if declared noxious or dangerous. This is the formal hearing and assessment phase for properties identified under the 2016 resolution.
Property owners will receive bills for costs to clear noxious weeds from their land, following a 2019 city declaration. Unpaid assessments can become tax liens.
Property owners will face assessments for weed removal on blighted parcels. The city enforces cleanup standards to reduce public health and safety hazards in neighborhoods.
City enforces cleanup of noxious weeds on abandoned or neglected parcels; property owners face special assessments to recover abatement costs. Affects identified blighted properties under the 2016 weed ordinance.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will be billed for city abatement costs. The assessment covers work declared necessary under 2018 resolution 2472-18.
Property owners may face liens and assessments for city-ordered weed removal. Unpaid assessments become tax-delinquent debt.
Property owners with declared noxious weeds face special assessments to cover city abatement costs. Check if your address is affected by Resolution 248-17.
City clears weeds and blight from neglected properties and charges owners cleanup costs as a property lien. Owners who don't maintain properties will see their tax bills increase.
Fire Station #17 HVAC system gets emergency repair to keep firefighting operations and equipment uninterrupted. Emergency procurement bypasses normal bidding to restore critical infrastructure quickly.
Property owner at 7710 4th Avenue North must pay $10,763.14 to cover the city's cost for demolishing an unsafe building on the site. The charge becomes a special tax assessment against the property.
The property owner at 6308 3rd Court South faces a special tax bill to recover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe structure. This shifts demolition expenses from the general budget to the individual property owner.
The city will bill the property owner $4,953.44 for tearing down an unsafe building at 434 Camellia Road. This cost-recovery approach holds owners accountable for blight and frees city funds for other priorities.
Property owner at 9309 8th Avenue North will be charged $3,907.72 to cover the city's cost to demolish an unsafe building. This assessment becomes a lien on the property and must be paid.
Property owner at 216 50th Street North will be charged $10,233.88 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building. The assessment becomes a lien against the property.
Property owner charged demolition costs for unsafe structure removed by city; amount will appear on property tax bill.
Property owners with noxious weeds may face special assessments to cover city cleanup costs. Check your property if it's in District 4 or similar enforcement area.
Property owner at 841 50th Street North will pay $7,184.20 to cover the city's cost of tearing down an unsafe building. This special assessment becomes a lien on the property.
Property owner at 8619 2nd Avenue North will be charged $4,155.60 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building on the lot. The special assessment becomes a lien on the property until paid.
Property owners with overgrown lots pay special assessments to cover city cleanup costs. The city removes hazardous vegetation and bills owners for the work.