closed #188770
Excessive Growth
718 E Hunter AVE
- Case Date:
- 6/4/2024
tree over hangs sidewalk, has poison ivy may be a case for encroachment into right of way (Engineering or Planning)
tree over hangs sidewalk, has poison ivy may be a case for encroachment into right of way (Engineering or Planning)
Grass is knee-high, degraded sidewalk is treacherous, nasty couch sitting on porch and trash bins laying around out front. The place is an eyesore.
The individual failed to maintain her yard last year and it got cut one time all summer. It has not been cut this year and is already high thigh/waist high. Making it hard to walk the sidewalk as it’s intended.
Bush honeysuckle growing out, mostly blocking sidewalk. Needs to be dug up, not just trimmed.
Not clear which address to use. City-created, grassy area in traffic-control sidewalk extension into the street needs mowing. SW corner of Grant/9th. Is this the responsibility of adjacent property owners? If so, would that be Plantation North Apartments, apparently now being referred to as "Campus Walk North" (CRE Rentals)?
Excessive growth of weeds, including poison ivy, hanging over the retainer wall onto the sidewalk, exposing pedestrians.
There are quite a few houses that have not cut the grass near the sidewalk and street all along South High St between Wimbleton and Childs Elementary (not just the location cited above). A lot of high grass is actually ragweed, and many people are allergic to this. It would be better for all if the grass and overgrowth were cut.
Overgrowth of invasives along the sidewalk bordering the electric substation at Rogers and 11th.
This is an apparently abandoned house, boarded up (except basement door is open) and yard is severely overgrown, encroaching on sidewalk.
The sidewalk plant growth gets in the way of walking at 703 W. 9th St. The yard at 712 West 8th has not been mown in months. The yard at 708 West 8th is full of invasives, and plants/ trees along the sidewalk facing west 9th are growing in the limestone block fence- Chinese Elm trees growing out of cracks in the wall.