The Board of Supervisors finds that deteriorating properties, including the improvements and the land on which they are built, have a deleterious effect on property values and the quality of life in the area surrounding them. This article is enacted to provide for the abatement of blight which threatens the health, safety, morals and welfare of the community.
The County may clear or repair any blighted property as defined herein in order to abate blight. In addition, the County may recover the cost of any clearing or repair of such property from the owner.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
BLIGHTED PROPERTY
Any individual commercial, industrial, or residential structure or improvement that endangers the public's health, safety, or welfare because the structure or improvement upon the property is dilapidated, deteriorated, or violates minimum health and safety standards, or any structure or improvement previously designated as blighted under the process for determination of spot blight.
SPOT BLIGHT
A structure or improvement that is a blighted property as defined herein.
SPOT BLIGHT ABATEMENT PLAN
The written plan prepared by the owner or owners of record of the real property to address spot blight. If the owner or owners of record of the real property fail to respond as provided in this chapter, the County can prepare a spot blight abatement plan to address the spot blight with respect to an individual commercial, industrial, or residential structure or improvement, but may only implement such plan in accordance with the provisions of this article.
A. 
The County Administrator, or his designee, shall make a preliminary determination that a property is a blighted property under this article. The administrator, or his designee, shall provide written notice as indicated by the last address listed for the owner on the County's assessment records of such property, that the property has been determined to be blighted. The notice shall describe the conditions of the property, and shall provide any other reasons, which form the basis for this determination.
B. 
The owner of property that has been preliminarily determined to be blighted shall have 30 days from the date of the notice in which to present to the County Administrator, or his designee, a plan to eliminate or otherwise cure, within a reasonable period of time, the blighted conditions.
A. 
If the owner of a property that has been preliminarily determined to be blighted does not respond or fails to present the abatement plan which is acceptable to the County Administrator, or his designee, the Administrator, or his designee, may request that the Board of Supervisors adopt an ordinance declaring the property to be blighted and make findings and recommendations regarding the property, including approving a plan for the repair or other disposal, or for the acquisition and repair or other disposal, of the property ("spot blight abatement plan").
B. 
Prior to the Board meeting to consider the ordinance to declare the property as blighted and the spot blight abatement plan, the County Administrator, or his designee, shall cause a notice of the date, time, place and purpose of the hearing to be sent, by regular mail, to the last address listed for the owner on the County's assessment records for the property, together with a copy of such spot blight abatement plan prepared by the County.
C. 
If the Board of Supervisors determines the property to be blighted and the County's plan for the property, in whole or in part, to be appropriate, the County may then carry out the approved plan.
The Board of Supervisors shall not approve, under this article, any plan for the acquisition of property that is occupied for personal residential purposes if the plan will result in the displacement of any persons residing in the property, unless the acquisition is authorized by Title 36 of the Code of Virginia (1950), as amended; provided that this section shall not apply to the acquisition of property that has been condemned for human habitation for more than one year. In addition, if the Board of Supervisors exercises the powers of eminent domain in accordance with Code of Virginia Title 25.1, may provide for temporary relocation of any person living in the blighted property, provided the relocation is within the financial means of such person.
A. 
The County shall have a lien on all property so repaired or acquired under an approved spot blight abatement plan to recover the cost of i) improvements made by the County to bring the blighted property into compliance with applicable building codes and ii) disposal, if any. The lien authorized by this subsection may be recorded as a lien among the land records of the circuit court, which lien shall be treated in all respects as a tax lien and enforceable in the same manner as provided in Articles 3 (§ 58.1-3940 et seq.) and 4 (§ 58.1-3965 et seq.) of Chapter 39 of Title 58.1. The County may recover its costs of repair from the owner or owners of record of the property when the repairs were made at such time as the property is sold or disposed of by such owner or owners. If the property is acquired by the County through eminent domain, the cost of repair may be recovered when the governing body sells or disposes of the property. In either case, the costs of repair shall be recovered from the proceeds of any such sale.
B. 
The lien on such property shall bear interest at the legal rate of interest established in Code of Virginia, § 6.2-301, beginning on the date the repairs are completed through the date on which the lien is paid.
In lieu of the acquisition of blighted property by the exercise of eminent domain, and in lieu of the exercise of other powers granted herein, the County may, by ordinance, declare any blighted property to constitute a nuisance, and thereupon abate the nuisance pursuant to § 15.2-900 of the Code of Virginia. Such ordinance shall be adopted only after written notice by certified mail to the owner or owners at the last known address of such owner as shown on the current real estate tax assessment books or current real estate tax assessment records. If the owner does not abate or remove the nuisance and the County abates or removes the nuisance at its expense, the costs of the removal or abatement of the nuisance shall be a lien on the property and such lien shall bear interest at the legal rate of interest established in § 6.2-301, beginning on the date the removal or abatement is completed through the date on which the lien is paid.
Nothing in this article shall be construed to relieve an owner of blighted property, or any other person or entity, from complying with other applicable laws relating to the development, use, rehabilitation, condition, maintenance or taxation of real property. The provisions of this article shall be in addition to any other remedies for blight abatement set out in state law or County ordinances.
State Law reference — Authorized by Code of Virginia, § 36-49.1:1.