Vacant buildings are a major cause and source of blight in both residential and nonresidential neighborhoods, especially when the owner of the building fails to actively maintain and manage the building to ensure that it does not become a liability to the neighborhood. Vacant buildings attract vagrants and transients and invite criminal activity. Use of vacant buildings by transients who may employ primitive cooking or heating methods creates a risk of fire for vacant buildings and adjacent properties. Vacant buildings (whether or not those buildings are boarded) discourage economic development and retard appreciation of property values. It is the responsibility of the owner to prevent owned property from becoming a burden to the neighborhood and community and a threat to the public health, safety and welfare.
Because of the potential economic and public health, welfare and safety problems caused by vacant buildings, the city needs to monitor vacant buildings, so that they do not become attractive nuisances, are not used by vagrants or trespassers, are properly secured and maintained, and do not become a blighting influence in the neighborhood. City departments involved in such monitoring include the police department, code enforcement, planning department and engineering department. There is a substantial cost to the city for monitoring vacant buildings which should be paid by the owners of the vacant buildings. The city has established the vacant building monitoring program to accomplish this purpose.
(Ord. 06-1272 § 2, 2006)