A.
Every act unlawfully done and every omission to perform a duty, which act or omission does any of the following, shall constitute a public nuisance:
1.
Annoys, injures, or endangers the safety, health, comfort, repose, or life of the citizens of the city; or
2.
Offends public decency; or
3.
Unlawfully interferes with, obstructs, or tends to obstruct, or renders dangerous for passage, a public park, street, alley, highway, or other public area; or
4.
In any way renders any citizens of the city insecure in life or use of property.
B.
The following acts, in addition to any others in violation of subsection A of this section, shall constitute a public nuisance:
1.
Erecting, continuing, or using any building, room, property, or other place in the city for the exercise of any trade, employment, or manufacture which results in offensive odors or other annoyances being released, and which annoys, injures, or is offensive or detrimental to the health of the individuals there employed or residing, or to the public;
2.
Burning of refuse or other material in such a manner as to cause or permit the smoke, ashes, soot, or gases arising from such burning to become discomforting or annoying, or to injure or endanger the health of any person or neighborhood;
3.
Any building, house, room, or other structure, vehicle, or place maintained or used for the purpose of lewdness, assignation, or prostitution;
4.
All houses, rooms, booths, or other structures used as a place or resort where disorderly persons are allowed to congregate, or in which drunkenness, or the unlawful use or sale of drugs, is carried on or permitted;
5.
Any pit, basin, hole, or other excavation which is unguarded and dangerous to life, or which has been abandoned, or is no longer used for the purpose for which it was constructed, or is maintained contrary to law;
6.
All obstructions to streets, rights-of-way, or other public ways of the city, and all excavations in or under the same, which are by ordinance prohibited, or which may be made without lawful permission, or which, having been made by lawful permission, are kept and maintained after the purpose thereof has been accomplished, or for an unreasonable length of time;
7.
Erecting, maintaining, using, placing, depositing, leaving, or permitting to be or remain in or upon, any private lot, building, structure, or premises, or in or upon any street, alley, sidewalk, park, parkway, or other public or private place in the city, any one or more of, but not limited to, the following conditions or things:
a.
Any unsound, putrid, or unwholesome bone, meat, hides, skin, or the whole or parts of any dead animal or fish, or any unsound, putrid, or unwholesome substance; or the offal, garbage, or other offensive parts of any animals; or any noxious, offensive, dangerous or otherwise injurious chemicals or other materials such as oil, grease, poisons, explosives, radioactive materials, and other similar substances in such a manner as to be offensive or injurious to public health, or unpleasant or disagreeable to the adjacent residences or persons,
b.
Any cellar, vault, drain, sewer, or septic tank to become, from any cause, noxious, foul, offensive, or injurious to public health, or unpleasant or disagreeable to the adjacent residences or persons,
c.
Any noxious, foul, or putrid liquid or substances, including but not limited to any privy contents, drainage from buildings, the effluent from any sewerage treatment device, or any kitchen or laundry wastewater, or any liquid or substance likely to become noxious, foul, offensive, or putrid, to be discharged, placed, or thrown upon, or to flow from or out of, any premises into, or upon, any adjacent premises, or any public street or alley, or to stand, remain, or be upon any premises;
8.
All premises, buildings and vehicles whereon or wherein intoxicating liquor or drugs are manufactured, sold, bartered, exchanged, given away, furnished, disposed of, consumed, or permitted to be consumed, in violation of the laws of the state and the ordinances of the city;
9.
All vacant, unused, or unoccupied buildings and structures within the city, which are allowed to become or remain open to entrance by unauthorized persons, or the general public, because of broken, missing, or open doors, windows, or other openings, so that the same may be used by vagrants or other persons in a manner detrimental to the health and welfare of the inhabitants of the city;
10.
Any refrigerator, icebox or deep-freeze locker, or any other container manufactured, custom-made or homemade designed for storage which is discarded, abandoned or left in any place accessible to children and which has not had the door or latching mechanism removed to prevent the latching or locking of the door;
11.
All buildings, or parts thereof, or other structures, wherein any gambling, as defined by RCW 9.46.020, may be found, and any gambling device, as defined by RCW 9.46.020, may be found, except as licensed and within the scope of the license required under state law, and which complies with local law;
12.
Spitting upon the floors or walls of a public building or buildings used for public assemblage, or of a building used for manufacture or industrial purposes;
13.
The depositing or allowing of irrigation or other water to run by any street, alley, or other public place, in such manner as to cause settling or damage to the street, alley, or other public place, or to cause annoyance, damage, or hazard to any user of the street, alley, or other public place;
14.
Any privy, cesspool, septic tank, or other receptacle for human excrement which shall be constructed, maintained or used so that flies have or may have access to the excrementitious matter contained therein;
15.
The allowing of the contents of privies, cesspools, septic tanks, or other receptacles for human excrement to be placed upon the surface of the ground or be used for fertilizing purposes for crops, gardens, or for other reasons;
16.
Any privy, urinal, toilet, or other receptacle for human excrement allowed to be constructed, maintained or used in any room, or have direct connection with any room, wherein any kind of exposed foods or foodstuffs are prepared, stored or handled for sale;
18.
Throwing, depositing, exposing, or causing to be disposed of, in any street or other public place within the city, any garbage, waste, refuse, litter, debris, or other deleterious, unlawful or unreasonable materials or articles, unless disposal of such items in such place is specifically authorized by law, or causing or allowing garbage, waste, refuse, litter, debris, or other deleterious, unlawful or unreasonable materials or articles, to be collected, deposited, remain, or unreasonably accumulate in any place in the city, unless otherwise permitted by law. For purposes of this section, garbage, waste, refuse, litter, debris, or other deleterious, unlawful or unreasonable materials or articles may include, but not be limited to, bottles, cans, glass, ashes, pieces of scrap iron or other metal or plastic or vinyl, wire, metal or plastic or vinyl articles, used aluminum or plastic containers, broken stone or cement, broken crockery, broken glass, broken plaster or sheetrock, barrels, boxes, rags, crates, packing cases, mattresses, bedding, packing material, lumber not neatly piled, scrap lumber, scrap building material, vehicle parts, junk or hulk vehicles, tires, wheels, broken or unused furniture, appliances, or plumbing fixtures;
19.
Intentionally feeding wildlife or feral animals, or making food available for consumption by wildlife or feral animals on private or public property within the city of Prosser. For the purposes of this subsection the following terms shall mean:
a.
"Wildlife" is defined in this section as undomesticated animals that grow or live wild in an area without being introduced by humans. Some, but not necessarily all, examples of wildlife are: deer, raccoons, skunks, coyotes, foxes, otters, squirrels, chipmunks, rats and mice. For the purpose of this subsection, wild birds will not be considered wildlife.
b.
"Feral animals" are defined in this section as an animal having reverted to a wild state, as from domestication, including, but not limited to, cats and dogs.
c.
"Food" is defined in this section as a nourishing substance that is eaten or otherwise taken in the body of an organism to sustain life, provide energy, or promote growth. "Food" also includes substances containing mineral nutrients, such as salt.
A person shall be presumed to have intentionally fed wildlife or feral animals or made food available for their consumption if the person places food or causes food to be placed on the ground outdoors or in any outdoor area reachable by wildlife or feral animals. This subsection does not apply to an animal control officer, veterinarian, peace officer, city employee, federal or state wildlife official or property owner who is authorized by a local, state, or federal government to treat, manage, capture, trap, hunt or remove wild animals and who is acting within the scope of the person's authority.
This subsection does not apply to food that may derive from landscaping or gardening including, but not limited to, shrubs, live crops, plants, flowers, vegetation, gardens, trees, and fruit or nuts that have fallen on the ground from trees.
The feeding of wildlife or feral animals does not apply to a person placing food on public or private property for the purpose of feeding domestic livestock, pets, or wild birds.
(Ord. 1459 § 1 (part), 1990; Ord. 3196 § 1, 2022)