Special assessment for weed abatement on noxious properties
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will be charged for abatement costs. This follows the Council's November 2023 declaration identifying properties requiring weed removal.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will be charged for abatement costs. This follows the Council's November 2023 declaration identifying properties requiring weed removal.
Property owners will receive special assessments to cover the cost of city-ordered weed removal from their land. The amounts and specific parcels are listed in the full resolution.
City is charging property owners for costs to remove dangerous weeds from their land, as authorized by a January 2023 council vote. Affected property owners will receive bills for abatement work already completed.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will face special assessment charges; this enforces the city's 2021 weed abatement declaration and allows lien recovery on affected parcels.
Property owners will face charges for city-ordered weed removal; exact properties and amounts unknown from item description.
City places a special tax on property owners for clearing noxious weeds declared dangerous under city rules. Property owners will receive a bill for cleanup costs.
Property owners may face financial charges to recover city costs for clearing noxious weeds from vacant or neglected lots. Details on affected addresses and dollar amounts will determine impact on individual homeowners.
Birmingham receives in-kind equipment donation valued at no direct cost; supports public safety operations ahead of 2025 World Police and Fire Games hosting.
Property owner at 2416 22nd Avenue North is no longer liable for weed-abatement costs under the city's special assessment program.
Property owners will receive bills to cover weed removal costs the city paid for. Assessment details and affected parcels are listed in the resolution.
Property owners will face special assessments to cover weed removal costs on neglected parcels. Affected properties are identified in a hearing process that began in November 2022.
Property owners may face special assessment bills to cover the city's cost of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land. This follows the city's June 2023 declaration that weeds posed a public safety hazard.
Property owners may face charges for city weed removal on their land. Hearing allows owners to contest the assessment before charges are finalized.
Property owners will face charges to cover the cost of removing noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, as declared by prior council action in October 2023.
City imposes cleanup costs on property owners with noxious weeds; owners who don't abate will face special assessments added to their tax bills.
Property owners will be charged for city-ordered weed removal on their land. Costs vary by parcel size and cleanup scope.
Property owners will receive bills for costs to remove noxious or dangerous weeds from their land, as declared in a prior city action.
Property owners with noxious or dangerous weeds will face special assessments to cover abatement costs under rules adopted in January 2023.
City sets cleanup costs for properties with overgrown weeds; property owners can respond at public hearing.
Property at 1917 10th Way is removed from the special weed-abatement assessment, lowering the owner's liability for cleanup costs.