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🏚️ Property Maintenance/Property Blight

Property Blight: Chino vs Ontario

How do property blight rules compare between Chino, CA and Ontario, CA?

Chino and Ontario have similar restriction levels.

Chino, CA

San Bernardino County

Heavy Restrictions

San Bernardino County Code Title 3 defines blight as debris, overgrown vegetation, inoperable vehicles, graffiti, or deterioration. Code Enforcement can abate with owner billed.

View full Chino rules β†’

Ontario, CA

San Bernardino County

Heavy Restrictions

Ontario prohibits overgrown vegetation, junk vehicles, graffiti, and deteriorated buildings as public nuisances under OMC Chapter 30 and California Health and Safety Code 17920.3.

View full Ontario rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactChinoOntario
Code SectionTitle 3, Division 3-
Compliance10-30 days typical-
Admin Fee25% on abatement-
Valley/Desert(909) 884-4056 / (760) 995-8140-
Code-OMC Chapter 30 Public Nuisance
Substandard housing-Health Safety Code 17920.3
Graffiti removal-72 hours from notice
Lien recovery-Cleanup costs plus admin fee
Contact-Code Enforcement (909) 395-2030

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chino FAQ

What qualifies as property blight in unincorporated San Bernardino County?

Accumulated debris, overgrown weeds, inoperable vehicles visible from the street, graffiti, broken windows, or severely deteriorated structures. Any of these trigger a Notice of Violation from Code Enforcement.

What happens if I don't clean up a blighted property?

Escalating citations ($100/$200/$500), then county-contracted abatement with costs billed to the owner plus a 25% administrative fee. Unpaid balances become property liens.

Ontario FAQ

Can I park a broken-down car in my driveway in Ontario?

Inoperable or wrecked vehicles visible from the public right-of-way are considered blight under OMC Chapter 30 and must be stored inside a garage, behind a solid fence, or removed.

Who pays if the City cleans up my property?

The property owner. The City records the abatement costs as a lien against the property under OMC Chapter 30, and the lien can be collected through the property tax bill.

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