970 State Street building declared public nuisance, demolition ordered
City will demolish the deteriorated building at 970 State Street, removing a public safety hazard from the neighborhood.
City will demolish the deteriorated building at 970 State Street, removing a public safety hazard from the neighborhood.
Property declared a public nuisance; demolition removes hazard from neighborhood. Affects the immediate area around this address.
Building at 1167 Texas Street will be torn down after being declared a public nuisance. This clears a blighted property from the neighborhood.
Unsafe structure at 1213 Texas Street will be demolished. Removes a public safety hazard from the neighborhood.
Unsafe structure removal improves neighborhood safety and clears a long-vacant property. Demolition begins cleanup of a public nuisance in the area.
Dilapidated structure removed from neighborhood. Demolition clears the property for potential redevelopment or safety recovery in the area.
City approves emergency repairs to critical storm drainage pipe and roadway damage. Work restores drainage function and road safety without competitive bidding delay.
Property owners can now pay weed-abatement charges on their Jefferson County tax bills rather than through separate invoices, simplifying the collection process.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles are removed from neighborhoods and the cost is billed to the registered owner. Keeps streets cleaner and safer.
Abandoned or broken-down vehicles clutter neighborhoods and signal neglect. The city will tow and scrap the vehicle, then bill the owner for removal costs.
Removes abandoned or broken-down vehicles from neighborhood streets. Costs of removal are charged to the vehicle owner.
Property at 3737 Todd Avenue is removed from the city's weed-abatement special assessment list, reducing or eliminating the property owner's liability for abatement costs.
Clears abandoned vehicle from neighborhood streets. Removal cost will be charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
City removes abandoned or broken-down vehicles cluttering neighborhoods and assesses removal costs to the registered owner.
Property owner at 2522 26th Avenue no longer faces city weed-abatement charges. The parcel is being removed from the special assessment list that covers noxious or dangerous weeds citywide.
A new executive appointment shapes city priorities on public safety, economic growth, and governance. This role influences policy across multiple critical areas affecting residents' safety and economic opportunities.
MFRD repairs critical pumper and aerial truck engines to keep fire response operational. Emergency procurement avoids delays that could affect neighborhood safety and response times.
Mobile Fire-Rescue Department renews emergency dispatch and patient tracking system. No competitive bidding used for this annual software contract.
Mobile is spending $141,373 on surveillance camera equipment and accessories to expand the city-wide camera system. The no-bid purchase method means Motorola was selected without competitive bidding.