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(A) The Zoning and Planning Department and the County Sheriff’s Department shall enforce the provisions of this chapter and shall notify the owner or person in control of any private property of any violation of this chapter.
(B) Owners or persons in control of private property shall store all inoperable vehicles in violation of this chapter in a completely enclosed building or location on the property or otherwise remove them from the property. Notice for violations of this chapter shall be given by an inspector of the Zoning and Planning Department or by a Deputy of the Sheriff’s Department. Service of the notice shall be made by means of personal service of a copy of the notice or by certified or registered mail of a copy of the notice which is addressed to the residence or usual place of business of the owner or person in control of the private property.
(C) The notice shall fairly apprise the owner or person in control of the nature of the nuisance, the duty to abate or remove the nuisance, the duty to comply with this chapter within seven days of service of the notice and the penalty for failure to abate or remove the nuisance.
(2010 Code, § 175.02)
Upon the failure of the owner or person in control of any property to comply with the notice to remove and dispose of the inoperable motor vehicle within seven days of service of the notice provided above, the Sheriff or his or her deputies are authorized by the Board to remove and dispense with the inoperable motor vehicle or parts of it. If the notice provided above is returned by the United States Post Office to the village because of an inability to deliver it, the village is authorized to remove and dispense with the inoperable motor vehicle.
(2010 Code, § 175.02)
(A) All costs and expenses of removing and dispensing of the inoperable motor vehicle from the private property shall be recoverable from the owner or person in control of the private property. These costs and expenses shall constitute a lien on the private property and shall be a superior lien to all prior existing liens and encumbrances, except taxes; provided that, within 90 days after completion of the removal and disposal of the inoperable motor vehicle, the village files a notice of lien with the county’s Recorder of Deeds. Upon payment in full of the costs and expenses, the lien shall be released by the village.
(B) The lien may be enforced by proceedings to foreclose as in the case of mortgages or mechanic’s liens. Suits to foreclose this lien shall be commenced by the village within three years after the date of filing the notice of lien.
(C) If payment to the village for these costs and expenses is not made within 15 days of the filing of the notice of lien, the village may commence proceedings in the Circuit Court seeking a personal judgment from the owner or person in control of the private property from which the inoperable motor vehicle was removed and disposed of at the time the proceedings were commenced. The action authorized by this chapter shall be in addition to, and without waiver of, any other remedies contained in this chapter.
(2010 Code, § 175.02)
Anyone convicted of violating this chapter shall be subject to a fine as set forth in § 10.99, for each day the violation shall continue.
(2010 Code, § 175.02)
Section
Health and Safety
92.01 Definitions
92.02 Placing offensive matter on property
92.03 Discharge of offensive matter; offensive cesspools; dumping
92.04 Privies
92.05 Obstructing water or drainage
92.06 Storing new or used lumber
92.07 Poisonous plants
92.08 Planting certain trees near sewers prohibited
92.09 Accumulation of garbage and debris prohibited
92.10 Abandoned property procedure
92.11 Deposits in containers
92.12 Collection, transportation and disposal
92.13 Public health violation ticket
Weeds
92.25 Weeds prohibited
92.26 Height
92.27 Removal; notice
92.28 Abatement
92.29 Lien for costs
92.30 Abandoned residential properties
Nuisances
92.45 Enumeration of particular nuisances
92.46 Enumeration not exclusive
92.47 Nuisances to be removed
92.48 Milk regulations
92.49 Litter
92.99 Penalty
HEALTH AND SAFETY
For the purpose of this subchapter, the following definitions shall apply unless the context clearly indicates or requires a different meaning.
ASHES. Residue from fire used for cooking and heating buildings.
DEBRIS REFUSE. Combustible trash including, but not limited to, paper, cartons, boxes, barrels, wood, excelsior, tree branches, yard trimmings, wood furniture, non-combustible trash including but not limited to metals, tin cans, metal furniture, dirt, small quantity of rock, pieces of concrete, glass, crockery or metal waste, steel.
DUMPSTER. A metal container, capable of being mechanically adapted to the loading equipment of a garbage truck.
GARBAGE. Waste resulting from the handling, preparation, cooking and consumption of food, waste from handling, storage and sale of produce.
REFUSE. Combustible trash including, but not limited to, paper, cartons, boxes, barrels, wood, excelsior, tree branches, yard trimmings, wood furniture, non-combustible trash including, but not limited to, metals, tin cans, metal furniture, dirt, small quantity of rock, pieces of concrete, glass, crockery or metal waste, steel.
(2010 Code, § 94.01)
No person shall deposit or place upon any lot, street, avenue or alley within the village, and no person owning a lot in the village shall permit to be deposited or placed on the lot any and all manner of rubbish, offensive substances, old fruit, vegetables or meat cans, boxes, old barrels, decayed fruit, manure, kitchen waste or anything that gives forth any disagreeable or noisome odor which is otherwise prejudicial to the public health.
(2010 Code, § 94.02) (Ord. 13-05-05, passed - -2013) Penalty, see § 92.99
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