[HISTORY: Adopted by the Borough Council of the Borough of Folcroft 9-20-2022 by Ord. No. 2022-05. Amendments noted where applicable.]
A. 
By reason of the danger they pose to public health, safety, or the ecology of the Borough, the following plants or conditions are hereby declared to be nuisances:
(1) 
Any plant that encroaches onto a roadway or sidewalk to an extent that it obstructs the vision of pedestrians or motorists, constitutes a tripping hazard for pedestrians, or otherwise interferes with safe travel by pedestrians or motor vehicles.
(2) 
Any weed or plant designated as noxious in the noxious weed list set forth in the Act of Oct. 30, 2017, P.L. 774, No. 46, 3 Pa.C.S.A. § 1519, as it may be amended from time to time by the Commonwealth's Controlled Plant and Noxious Weed Committee, Carduus nutans, commonly known as "musk thistle"; Cirsium arvense, commonly known as "Canadian thistle"; Cirsium vulgare, commonly known as "bull thistle"; Datura stramonium, commonly known as "jimson weed"; Galega officinalis, commonly known as "goat's rue"; Heracleum mantegazzianum, commonly known as "giant hogweed"; Lythrum salicaria, commonly known as "Purple loosestrife"; Persicaria perfoliata, commonly known as "mile-a-minute"; Puerria DC, commonly known as "kudzu"; Rose multiflora, commonly known as "multiflora rose"; Sorghum bicolor Moench ssp. drummondii, commonly known as "shattercane"; and Sorghum halepense, commonly known as "Johnson grass."
(3) 
Bamboo, meaning any monopodial (running), tropical or semitropical grass from the genus Bambusa, including but not limited to Bambusa, Phyllostachys, and Pseudosasa; including Bambusa vulgaris, commonly known as "common bamboo"; Phyllostachy aurea, commonly known as "golden bamboo"; and Pseudosasa japonica, commonly known as "arrow bamboo."
(4) 
Aegeopodium podograria, commonly known as "goutweed"; Ampelopsis brevipedunculata, commonly known as "porcelain berry"; Microstegium vimineum, commonly known as "Japanese stiltgrass"; Polygonum cuspidatu, commonly known as "Japanese knotweed"; Celastrus Orbiculatus, commonly known as "Oriental Bittersweet"; Hedera Helix L., commonly known as "English ivy"; Humulus Japonicus, commonly known as "Japanese Hops"; Wisteria sinensis, commonly known as "Chinese Wisteria"; and Rubus phoenicolasius, commonly known as "wineberry."
(5) 
Toxicodendron pubescens, commonly known as "Atlantic poison oak"; Toxicodendron radicans, commonly known as "eastern poison ivy"; and Toxicodendron vernix, commonly known as "poison sumac."
(6) 
Other noxious, toxic or allergenic weeds of like kind or, if offensive, any vines, tall grass or other vegetation exceeding 12 inches in height.
B. 
Prohibited acts.
(1) 
It is hereby declared to be unlawful for any landowner or occupant to propagate, allow to grow, or maintain on land within the Borough any plant declared by this chapter to be a nuisance.
(2) 
Bamboo.
(a) 
Qualified bamboo exemption. Although bamboo is declared to be a nuisance plant and growing or allowing it to grow on land within the Borough is prohibited, bamboo that was propagated or allowed to grow before the effective date of this chapter is exempt from the prohibition and may remain on the land. This exemption does not apply, however, to any bamboo that migrates or falls onto any land owned or held by the Borough, onto any roadway or sidewalk, onto the private property of another, or which is within 20 feet of the property line of a third party or a public or private right-of-way. Whether planted or growing as described in this chapter, all bamboo plants shall be located, trimmed and maintained so that no part of the plant or root system is closer than 20 feet to any property line.
(b) 
Replanting prohibited. Any bamboo either planted or caused to be planted or existing on a property prior to the effective date of this chapter may not be replanted or replaced in kind once such running bamboo is or has become, for any reason, dead, destroyed, uprooted or otherwise removed.
A. 
The Borough is hereby authorized to issue a notice of violation to any landowner upon finding that a nuisance plant is growing on that landowner's property or has migrated onto any land owned or held by the Borough, onto any roadway or sidewalk or right-of-way. Such notice shall be served by regular mail, with proof of mailing, or hand delivery, or if service cannot be effected by either means, by posting the notice in a conspicuous manner on the property. The notice shall require the landowner, within 30 days of the date of the notice, to remove the nuisance plant from the property(ies), sidewalk, or roadway specified in the notice, and shall set forth the penalties for a failure to abate, including payment of the costs incurred by the Borough in removing the nuisance should the landowner fail to do so.
B. 
When removing and destroying bamboo, all rhizome (underground plant stem capable of producing the shoot and root systems of a new plant) disposal must be by incineration only. No composting or trash disposal of rhizomes shall be allowed.
C. 
A landowner may appeal a notice of violation by letter setting forth the grounds therefor and sent within 14 days of receipt or posting of the notice of violation to the Code Inspector. The appeal shall be heard by the Borough Council.
D. 
For the purposes of this chapter, nuisance plants found growing upon a property shall constitute presumptive evidence that the nuisance plant was planted and/or grown by and/or with the consent of the landowner.
E. 
It shall be a valid and complete defense to a notice of violation based on the presence of bamboo on the respondent-landowner's property either that:
(1) 
The bamboo was growing on the property prior to the effective date of this chapter and is not within 20 feet of the property line of a third party or a public or private right-of-way; or
(2) 
The bamboo migrated from property not owned or controlled by the respondent-landowner, and either:
(a) 
Before receiving the notice of violation, the respondent-landowner had given written notice to the owner of the land from which the bamboo migrated of the unlawful encroachment and had demanded its removal, to no avail; or
(b) 
The respondent-landowner has taken steps to remove the encroaching bamboo.
F. 
If bamboo growing on a property prior to the effective date of this chapter encroaches onto adjoining property, public or private, or within 20 feet of the property line of a third party or a public or private right-of-way, the respondent-landowner is hereby required to remove the encroachment and to install at least 20 feet from the property boundary an impenetrable barrier made of masonry, metal, or high-density, eighty-mil-thick polyethylene to a depth of 30 inches below grade and two to three inches above grade to prevent the encroachment from recurring. The failure to comply with either of these requirements shall constitute a separate violation.
G. 
If bamboo growing on a property prior to the effective date of this chapter encroaches onto adjoining property, public or private, or within 20 feet of the property line of a third party or a public or private right-of-way, the respondent-landowner is hereby required to remove the encroachment and to install at least 20 feet from the property boundary an impenetrable barrier to a depth of three feet below grade to prevent the encroachment from recurring. The failure to comply with either of these requirements shall constitute a separate violation.
H. 
The appeal of a notice of violation shall toll the running of the thirty-day period for abating a violation until the date of a final decision.
In the event that the owner or occupant shall refuse or neglect to abate such health hazard or nuisance within a period of 30 days from the date of a notice of violation, the Code Inspector may cause such weeds, vines, tall grasses, poison ivy, poison sumac, poison oak or other objectionable vegetation to be cut, eradicated and removed, keeping an account of the expenses of inspecting the premises, service of notice and abating the health hazard and nuisance; and all such costs and expenses shall be charged to and paid by such owner or occupant.
All costs and expenses incurred by the Borough in the abatement of such health hazards and nuisances shall be a lien upon the premises, and whenever a bill therefor remains unpaid for a period of 60 days after it has been rendered, the Borough Solicitor shall file a municipal claim or an action of assumpsit for such costs and expenses, together with a penalty of 10%, in the manner provided by law for the collection of municipal claims.
Any person, firm or corporation failing to abate such health hazard or nuisance in accordance with the requirements of any notice given as provided in § 235-2 above shall, in addition to the payment of said costs and expenses, be subject to a fine or penalty not exceeding $600 for each and every offense; and whenever such person shall have been notified by the Code Inspector by service of such notice or summons in a prosecution or in any other way that he is committing such violation of this chapter, each day that he shall continue such violation after the expiration of the aforesaid 10 days shall constitute a separate offense punishable by a like fine or penalty. Such fines or penalties shall be collected as like fines or penalties are now by law collected.
All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict with the provisions of this chapter are hereby repealed to the extent of such conflict. The Borough reserves the right at any time by ordinance to amend or otherwise modify or repeal this chapter.
A. 
Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to affect any suit or proceedings in any court, any rights acquired or liability incurred, any permit issued, or any cause or causes of action existing under the Borough Code prior to the adoption of this amendment.
B. 
This chapter shall not be deemed to alter any rights of common law or otherwise that any property owner may have to recover the cost of removal of any plant declared by this chapter to be a nuisance on their own property from another property owner from whose property the nuisance plant has spread.