Special weed-abatement assessment imposed on listed properties
Property owners may owe special assessments to cover weed removal costs on their land. Check the full resolution for the parcel list and amounts owed.
Property owners may owe special assessments to cover weed removal costs on their land. Check the full resolution for the parcel list and amounts owed.
Property owners may face special assessments to cover city costs of clearing noxious weeds from blighted parcels. This formalizes liens that could affect property sales or refinancing.
Property owners may face charges to recover costs of city weed removal on their land. Details on affected properties and assessment amounts are not provided in this notice.
Property owners will receive assessments to cover costs of removing noxious weeds from their land, following initial abatement work by the city in 2022.
Lipscomb Fire Department receives surplus public safety equipment at no cost, reducing its operational expenses for protective gear and rescue tools.
Condemned structure at 7017 67th Street South will be torn down as a public safety hazard. Removes a dangerous, blighted property from the neighborhood.
Building at 957 Pike Road will be demolished after being deemed unsafe and a public nuisance. Removes a hazard from the neighborhood.
City will demolish the structure; property may be cleared for redevelopment or stabilization. Removes a safety hazard from the neighborhood.
An unsafe, blighted property in your neighborhood will be torn down, removing a public hazard and potential blight magnet. This clears the way for future redevelopment.
Unsafe structure at this address will be removed. Demolition of blighted buildings improves neighborhood safety and property values.
Police Department receives equipment funding from general fund. No-bid purchase from Turnerboone Birmingham, LLC.
Painting contract for new police interceptors — roof and door work on fleet vehicles to prepare them for service.
Property owners will receive notice to remove dangerous weeds or face city abatement action. Affects 258 parcels across the city.
City abates a junk vehicle as a public nuisance and bills the registered owner for removal costs—a typical enforcement action that clears neighborhood eyesores and holds owners financially accountable.
City approves demolition work for condemned buildings across multiple neighborhoods. Contract pricing and scope details are on file with the purchasing office.
City removes blighted housing through competitive bid. Clears condemned structures and debris from neighborhoods citywide.
Police will use Finder's platform to share data across agencies through a federated system. No dollar amount is listed, but the sole-source contract means the city bypassed competitive bidding.
City can remove abandoned or broken-down vehicles from neighborhoods and bill the registered owner for the cost, clearing public nuisances.
City removes abandoned or non-working vehicle from residential or commercial property. Removal costs will be charged to the vehicle's registered owner.
Condemned buildings across the city will be demolished and cleared under this contract. Removes blighted properties from neighborhoods.