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🏚️ Property Maintenance/Property Blight

Property Blight: Berkeley vs San Leandro

How do property blight rules compare between Berkeley, CA and San Leandro, CA?

Berkeley and San Leandro have similar restriction levels.

Berkeley, CA

Alameda County

Heavy Restrictions

Berkeley prohibits exterior property conditions that constitute blight, including accumulated trash, overgrown vegetation, dilapidated structures, and graffiti, enforced by Code Enforcement.

View full Berkeley rules β†’

San Leandro, CA

Alameda County

Heavy Restrictions

San Leandro Property Maintenance Ordinance prohibits blight conditions such as junk, graffiti, abandoned vehicles, and neglected structures.

View full San Leandro rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBerkeleySan Leandro
AuthorityBMC 14.48 Community Preservation-
Covered conditionsTrash, weeds, graffiti, dilapidation-
RemediesCitations, liens, summary abatement-
GraffitiOwner must remove after noticeMust be removed promptly
Report(510) 981-5450-
Code-Property Maintenance Ordinance
Fines-Escalating administrative
Liens-Abatement cost recovery
Vehicles-No inoperable in view

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Berkeley FAQ

What counts as blight in Berkeley?

Accumulated trash, overgrown vegetation, broken windows, inoperable vehicles on the lot, and graffiti left unabated are common examples.

Can the City charge me for cleanup?

Yes. If you fail to abate after notice, Berkeley can perform the work and record a lien on the property.

San Leandro FAQ

How long do I have to fix a violation?

Most notices give 10 to 30 days depending on severity and health and safety impact.

Can the city clean up the property?

Yes, after notice and hearing the city may abate and assess costs as a property tax lien.

Compare other topics

See how Berkeley and San Leandro compare on other ordinance categories.

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