City removes inoperable vehicle as public nuisance; costs assessed to owner
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles clutter neighborhoods and signal neglect. The city removes them and charges the registered owner for the cost.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles clutter neighborhoods and signal neglect. The city removes them and charges the registered owner for the cost.
City removes a junk vehicle classified as a public nuisance. Owner pays removal costs.
Abandoned cars clutter neighborhoods and attract crime. The city removes the vehicle and bills the registered owner to recover costs.
City is targeting 47 properties with dangerous weeds for cleanup. Property owners will receive notice and face enforcement action if weeds aren't removed.
City demolished an unsafe building at this address and is now charging the property owner for the cost through a special assessment. If you own property in the area, check your notice for any similar charges.
Property owner will receive a special tax bill for the city's cost to tear down an unsafe building. The assessment becomes a lien against the property unless paid.
Property owner at 1625 34th Street, Ensley, will be charged $8,144.29 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building on the site.
Clears the mechanism for recovering costs of blighted-property weed removal. Property owners now have one collection point (Tax Collector) for abatement bills, streamlining debt recovery.
The property owner at 1416 Avenue H will be assessed $4,627.36 to cover the city's cost of tearing down an unsafe structure — a common mechanism to recover demolition expenses and incentivize owners to maintain properties.
Property owner at 829 Avenue G will be billed $6,051.20 to cover the city's demolition costs for an unsafe structure. This is a one-time special tax against that parcel.
Property owner at 2422 Avenue H will be charged $9,879.20 to recover the city's cost for demolishing an unsafe building. The assessment becomes a lien on the property.
Owner of 1001 Piedmont Avenue is assessed $10,613 to cover the city's cost to demolish an unsafe structure. The special tax becomes a lien on the property.
Unsafe building demolished at property owner's cost; bill now placed as lien against the address. This recovers public expense from the property holder responsible for the structure.
Property owner will owe $4,249 to cover the city's cost of tearing down an unsafe building at this address. This shifts the demolition expense to the property owner rather than the general fund.
City demolished an unsafe building at this address and is charging the property owner for the $6,048.95 cost. Property owners can be assessed for demolition expenses when the city removes hazardous structures.
City removes abandoned or broken-down cars that create blight and safety hazards in neighborhoods. Removal costs are charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
Property owner at 2800 20th Place West will be billed $10,668.60 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building. Owners of blighted properties may face similar charges to recover public demolition expenses.
Property owner at 2644 Bush Boulevard will receive a bill for $5,033.70 to cover the city's cost of demolishing an unsafe building on the lot.
Property owner at 210 2nd Street is billed for the city's cost to tear down an unsafe structure. This is a cost-recovery action on consent agenda.
Property owner at 1536 30th Street now owes a special tax bill to cover the city's cost for demolishing an unsafe building on their lot. This shifts the demolition expense from city budget to the individual owner.