Title 8 HEALTH AND SAFETY
Chapter 8.24 PROPERTY BLIGHT
8.24.010 Purpose of chapter.
8.24.020 Blighted property defined.
8.24.030 Time restriction--Parking.
8.24.040 General obligation.
8.24.050 Enforcement responsibility--Delegation of authority.
8.24.060 Abatement.
8.24.070 Restriction of use or occupancy--Dangerous condition.
8.24.080 Abatement procedures.
8.24.090 Procedures of this chapter--Cumulative.
8.24.100 Violation--Penalty.
8.24.010 Purpose of chapter.
The purpose of this chapter is to promote the health, safety, and general
welfare of the citizens by requiring a level of maintenance of residential,
commercial, and industrial property which will protect and preserve the
livability, appearance, and social and economic stability of the city and which
will also protect the public from the health and safety hazards and the
impairment of property values which results from the neglect and deterioration
of property. (Ord. 12046 § 1, 1998: prior code § 15-1.01)
8.24.020 Blighted property defined.
Any property on which there exists any one or more of the following
conditions or activities is a blighted property for the purpose of this
chapter:
A. Abandoned Building or Structure.
1. A building or structure
which is not occupied, inhabited, used, or secured. For purposes of this
chapter, a building or structure is unsecured when it is unlocked or the public
can gain entry without the consent of the owner,
2. Any partially
constructed, reconstructed or demolished building or structure upon which work
is abandoned. Work is deemed abandoned when there is no valid and current
building or demolition permit or when there has not been any substantial work on
the project for six months;
B. Attractive Nuisance. Property which is in an
unsecured state so as to potentially constitute an attraction to children, a
harbor for vagrants, criminals, or other unauthorized persons, or so as to
enable persons to resort thereto for the purpose of committing a nuisance or
unlawful act;
C. A Building or Structure Which is in a State of
Disrepair.
1. Any building or other structure which by reason of rot,
weakened joints, walls, floors, underpinning, roof, ceilings, or insecure
foundation, or other cause has become dilapidated or deteriorated,
2. Any
building or other structure with exterior walls and/or roof coverings which have
become so deteriorated as to not provide adequate weather protection and be
likely to, or have resulted in, termite infestation or dry rot,
3. Buildings
or structures with broken or missing windows or doors which constitute a
hazardous condition or a potential attraction to trespassers. For purposes of
this chapter “window” shall include any glazed opening, including
glazed doors, which upon a yard, court, or vent shaft open unobstructed to the
sky,
4. Buildings or structures including, but not limited to, walls,
windows, fences, signs, retaining walls, driveways, or walkways which are
obsolete, broken, deteriorated, or substantially defaced to the extent that the
disrepair visually impacts on neighboring property or presents a risk to public
safety. For purposes of this chapter “defaced” includes, but is not
limited to, writings, inscriptions, figures, scratches, or other markings
commonly referred to as “graffiti” and peeling, flaking, blistering,
or otherwise deteriorated paint.
D. Property Inadequately
Maintained.
1. Property which is not kept clean and sanitary and free from
all accumulations of offensive matter or odor including, but not limited to,
overgrown or dead or decayed trees, weeds or other vegetation, rank growth, dead
organic matter, rubbish, junk, garbage, animal intestinal waste and urine, and
toxic or otherwise hazardous liquids and substances and material. For the
purposes of this section the term “rubbish” shall include
combustible and noncombustible waste materials, except garbage; and the term
shall also include the residue from the burning of wood, coal, coke, and other
combustible material; and the term shall also include paper, rags, cartons,
boxes, wood, excelsior, rubber, leather, tree branches, yard trimmings, hay,
straw, tin cans, metal, mineral matter, glass, crockery, and dust; and the term
shall also include animal feed and the products of and residue from animal
quarters. For the purposes of this section, the terms “animal” and
“animal quarters” shall be as set forth in Chapter 6.04, Animal
Control Regulations Generally, of this code,
2. Property which constitutes a
fire hazard or a condition considered dangerous to the public health, safety,
and general welfare,
3. Property which is likely to or does harbor rats or
other vectors, vermin, feral pets, or other non-domesticated animal
nuisances,
4. Property which substantially detracts from the aesthetic and
economic values of neighboring properties including, but not limited to,
personal property and wares and foodstuffs, premises garbage and refuse
receptacles, and commercial and industrial business activities which are
inadequately buffered from any street, sidewalk, or other publicly trafficked
area or such buffering which is inadequately maintained. For the purposes of
this section, “buffered” shall apply to the provisions set forth in
Chapter 17.110 of the Oakland Planning Code,
5. Landscaping which is
inadequately maintained or which is not installed as required by city codes or
any permit issued in accordance with such codes,
6. Matter including, but
not limited to, smoke, odors, dust, dirt, debris, fumes, and sprays which is
permitted to be transported by wind or otherwise upon any street, course, alley,
sidewalk, yard, park, or other public or private property and which is
determined to be a violation of federal, state, regional, or local air quality
regulations,
7. Property including, but not limited to, building facade,
window, doorway, driveway, walkway, fence, wall, landscaped planter or area,
sidewalk, curb and gutter, and edge of street pavement on which dirt, litter,
vegetation, garbage, refuse, debris, flyers, or circulars have
accumulated,
8. Property on which a swimming pool, pond, stream, or other
body of water which is abandoned, unattended, unfiltered, or not otherwise
maintained, resulting in the water becoming polluted. “Polluted
water” is defined for the purpose of this chapter, as water which contains
bacterial growth, remains of garbage, refuse, debris, papers and any other
foreign matter or material which constitutes an unhealthy or unsafe
condition,
9. Parking lots, driveways, paths, and other areas used or
intended to be used for commercial and industrial business activities including,
but not limited to, selling, manufacturing, processing, packaging, fabricating,
treating, dismantling, processing, transferring, handling, transporting,
storing, compounding, or assembling which are inadequately maintained and pose a
risk of harm to public health or safety including, but not limited to, unpaved
surfaces which generate fugitive dust and paved surfaces with cracks, potholes,
or other breaks,
10. Property on which recyclable materials are openly
stored. For the purposes of this chapter, “open storage” means
storage on private property other than in a completely enclosed building.
Materials shall be deemed to be held in “open storage” even though
screened from public view, or view of residents of adjacent property, by a fence
or other such partition,
11. Property which is not securely fenced or
adequately lighted to prevent illegal access and activity related to the dumping
of garbage, waste, debris and litter.
“Recyclable materials”
includes any materials, goods, vehicles, machinery, appliances, product or
article, new or used, which is suitable for reuse;
E. Property Which Creates
a Dangerous Condition.
1. Property having a topography, geology, or
configuration which, as a result of grading operations, erosion control,
sedimentation control work, or other improvements to said property, causes
erosion, subsidence, unstable soil conditions, or surface or subsurface drainage
problems as to harm or pose a risk of harm to adjacent
properties,
2. Property whereon any condition or object obscures the
visibility of public street intersections to the public so as to constitute a
hazard, including but not limited to, landscaping, fencing, signs, posts, or
equipment,
3. Conditions which due to their accessibility to the public pose
a hazard including, but not limited to, unused and broken equipment, abandoned
wells, shafts, or basements, hazardous or unprotected pools, ponds, or
excavations, structurally unsound fences or structures, machinery which is
inadequately secured or protected, lumber, trash, fences or debris that may pose
a hazard to the public, storage of chemicals, gas, oil, or toxic or flammable
liquids;
F. Parking, Storage or Maintenance of the Following in Areas Zoned
for Residential Use.
1. Any construction or commercial equipment, machinery,
material, truck or tractor or trailer or other vehicle having a weight exceeding
seven thousand (7,000) pounds, or recyclable materials, as defined in this
chapter, except that such items may be temporarily kept within or upon
residential property for the time required for the construction of installation
of improvements or facilities on the property,
2. Trailers, campers,
recreational vehicles, boats, and other mobile equipment for a period of time in
excess of seventy-two (72) consecutive hours in front or side yard
areas.
a. Any parking, keeping or storing of these items in the side or rear
yard areas shall be either in an accessory building constructed in accordance
with the provisions of this code or in an area which provides for a five-foot
setback from any property line.
b. In addition to the setback requirement,
fifteen hundred (1,500) square feet or at least sixty (60) percent of the
remaining rear yard area, whichever is less, must be maintained as usable
outdoor recreational space.
c. No item shall be parked, stored or kept
within five feet of any required exit, including existing windows,
3. Any
motor vehicle which has been wrecked, dismantled or disassembled, or any part
thereof, or any motor vehicle which is disabled or which may not be operated
because of the need for repairs or for any other reason for a period of time in
excess of seventy-two (72) consecutive hours,
4. Any refrigerator, washing
machine, sink, stove, heater, boiler, tank or any other household equipment,
machinery, furniture, or other than furniture designed and used for outdoor
activities, appliance or appliances, or any parts of any of the listed items for
a period of time in excess of seventy-two (72) consecutive hours.
This
subsection does not prohibit the following:
a. Machinery installed in the
rear setback areas for household or recreational use,
b. Furniture designed
and used for outdoor activities,
c. Any item stored or kept within an
enclosed storage structure or unit. For the purpose of this subsection, a
storage unit is a prefabricated enclosure which is not required to have a
building permit and is not permanently affixed to the ground, but which is not
on wheels or mobile,
5. Storing or keeping packing boxes, lumber, dirt and
other debris, except as allowed by this code for the purpose of construction, in
any setback areas visible from public property or neighboring properties for a
period of time in excess of seventy-two (72) consecutive hours;
6. No item
covered by this section shall be parked, stored, or kept between the front lot
line and the front wall of the facility, including the projection of the front
wall across the residential property lot line, except where such item is located
in an approved driveway or approved parking space.
G. Activities Prohibited
in Areas Zoned for Residential Uses.
1. Wrecking, dismantling,
disassembling, manufacturing, fabricating, building, remodeling, assembling,
repairing, painting, washing, cleaning or servicing, in any setback area, of any
airplane, aircraft, motor vehicle, boat, trailer, machinery, equipment,
appliance or appliances, furniture or other personal property.
This chapter
shall not prohibit the following:
a. Any owner, lessee or occupant of
residential property may repair, wash, clean or service any personal property
which is owned, leased, or rented by such owner, lessee or occupant of such
property. Any such repairing or servicing performed in any such area shall be
completed within a seventy-two (72) consecutive hour period. The provisions of
this section shall apply to any truck, tractor, trailer, orother commercial
vehicle weighing more than seven thousand (7,000) pounds.
b. A vehicle or
part thereof which is completely enclosed within a building in a lawful manner
where it is not visible from the street or other public or private property,
or
c. A vehicle or part thereof which is stored or parked in a lawful manner
or private property in connection with the business of a licensed dismantler,
licensed vehicle dealer or a junkyard which is a legal nonconforming use. This
exception shall not authorize the maintenance of a public or private nuisance as
defined under provisions of law other than this chapter,
2. The use of any
trailer, camper, recreational vehicle or motor vehicle for living or sleeping
quarters in any place in the city, outside of a lawfully operated mobile home
park or travel trailer park, subject to the following:
a. Nothing contained
in this section shall be deemed to prohibit bona fide guests of a city resident
from occupying a trailer, camper, or recreational vehicle upon residential
premises with the consent of the resident for a period not to exceed seventy-two
(72) consecutive hours.
b. Any trailer, camper, or recreational vehicle so
used shall not discharge any waste or sewage into the city’s sewer system
except through the residential discharge connection of the residential premises
on which the trailer, camper or recreational vehicle is parked;
H. Permit
Requirement. Any use of property which does not have all required permits
pursuant to city codes or where such permits have expired or been
revoked;
I. General Conditions.
1. Any condition which is detrimental to
the public health, safety or general welfare or which constitutes a public
nuisance as defined in California Civil Code Section 3480,
2. Any condition
of deterioration or disrepair which substantially impacts on the aesthetic or
economic value of neighboring properties.
This chapter shall not prohibit
the following: any property owned or leased by the city or the Redevelopment
Agency which has been designated or acquired for the purpose of redevelopment or
rehabilitation. (Ord. 12046 § 2, 1998; prior code § 15-1.02)
8.24.030 Time restriction--Parking.
For purposes of this chapter an item is unlawfully parked, kept or stored
in any area for a period of time in excess of seventy-two (72) consecutive hours
when:
A. The item has not been removed from such area for an intervening
period of time in excess of seventy-two (72) consecutive hours; or
B. The
item has been parked, kept or stored during the intervening period of time upon
any public street. (Prior code § 15-1.03)
8.24.040 General obligation.
No person, firm, group, or corporation whether as owner, owner’s
agent or manager of the subject property, or as lessee, sublessee, or occupant
in possession of the property shall maintain any property in a blighted
condition or shall cause or permit the property to be blighted. No person, firm,
group, or corporation shall take any action or allow any action to be taken in
violation of any provision of this chapter or order issued pursuant thereto.
(Prior code § 15-1.04)
8.24.050 Enforcement responsibility--Delegation of authority.
The Building Official and his or her designees shall be responsible for
the enforcement of this chapter and shall make such inspections and take such
actions as may be required to enforce the provisions of this chapter. The
Building Official is authorized to establish guidelines and interpretations to
enforce the provisions of this chapter. (Ord. 12046 § 3, 1998: prior code
§ 15-1.05)
8.24.060 Abatement.
A. Any condition set forth in this chapter may be abated by the Building
Official, or his or her designee, in accordance with the procedures set forth in
Chapter 15.08 of this code.
B. Actions taken to abate conditions set forth
in this chapter may include, but are not limited to, assessment of fees,
charges, penalties, and interest; and/or repair or removal of the condition;
and/or installation and maintenance of physical barriers to deter the recurrence
of or illegal access to the condition; and/or any other abatement action
determined by the Building Official, or his or her designee, to be necessary.
(Ord. 12046 § 4, 1998: prior code § 15-2.01)
8.24.070 Restriction of use or occupancy--Dangerous condition.
Whenever any condition set forth in this chapter is determined by the
Building Official, or his or her designee, to be dangerous and imminently
hazardous to public health and safety, the use or occupancy of the blighted
property may be restricted in accordance with the procedures set forth in
Chapter 15.08 of this code. In addition to restricting the use or occupancy, the
Building Official may require other abatement actions to be taken including, but
not limited to, immediate repair or removal of the condition. (Ord. 12046 §
5, 1998: prior code § 15-2.02)
8.24.080 Abatement procedures.
The Building Official, or his or her designee, may institute procedures
for abatement of any conditions set forth in this chapter, except where such
conditions are otherwise authorized or permitted by law. The provisions as set
forth in Chapter 15.08 including, but not limited to, conditions of compliance
which assure expeditious abatement of conditions by the property owner and
Chapter 1.28 of this code shall apply to any such abatement. Fees, charges,
penalties, and interest assessed for any abatement action performed by, or on
behalf of, the city including, but not limited to, costs incurred in relocating
occupants of the blighted property shall be recovered by the city in accordance
with the provisions set forth in Chapter 15.08 of this code. The Building
Official may establish time durations for abating blighting conditions which
serve the best interests of the city and may subsequently limit or extend or
otherwise adjust such durations for good cause. (Ord. 12046 § 6, 1998: Ord.
11552 § 3, 1993; prior code § 15-2.03)
8.24.090 Procedures of this chapter--Cumulative.
A. Procedures used and actions taken for the abatement of property blight
are not limited by this chapter. Procedures and actions under this code may be
utilized in conjunction with, or in addition to, any other procedure applicable
to the regulation of buildings, structures, or property, including, but not
limited to, injunctive or other judicial relief, and the impositions of
administrative penalties pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 1.28 of this
code.
B. All property blight conditions which are required to be abated
pursuant to the provisions and permit requirements of this chapter shall be
subject to all provisions of this code including, but not limited to, building
construction, repair or demolition and to all housing, zoning, traffic and fire
code provisions, except that the provisions set forth in Title 12, Streets,
Sidewalks, and Public Places, Chapter 16, Improvements Generally, Section
12.16.030 of this code shall not apply. (Ord. 12046 § 7, 1998: prior code
§ 15-2.04)
8.24.100 Violation--Penalty.
Violation of this chapter shall constitute an infraction. (Prior code
§ 15-2.05)
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