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🏚️ Property Maintenance/Property Blight

Property Blight: Chino vs San Bernardino

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

Chino and San Bernardino 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†’

San Bernardino, CA

San Bernardino County

Heavy Restrictions

San Bernardino Municipal Code 8.30 defines blight to include junk, junk vehicles, overgrown weeds, graffiti, and failing structures. Code Enforcement cites owners and can lien properties for unpaid abatement costs.

View full San Bernardino rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactChinoSan Bernardino
Code SectionTitle 3, Division 3-
Compliance10-30 days typical-
Admin Fee25% on abatement-
Valley/Desert(909) 884-4056 / (760) 995-8140-
Legal basis-Municipal Code Chapter 8.30 and Civil Code 3479
Common blight items-Junk, weeds, graffiti, junk vehicles, peeling paint
First citation-Around 100 dollars, escalating to 500 dollars
Abatement lien-City may recover costs as a property lien
Appeal window-20 days from citation

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.

San Bernardino FAQ

How do I report a blighted property in San Bernardino?

Use the San Bernardino Connect app, call Code Enforcement at (909) 384-5122, or submit an online Service Request. Include photos and a description of what is visible from the right-of-way.

My neighbor has weeds over two feet tall, is that enforceable?

Yes. Municipal Code Chapter 8.30 sets a general limit around 6 inches for weeds and requires abatement of dead or overgrown vegetation that creates a fire or nuisance hazard.

What if I miss the abatement deadline?

The city can issue citations or proceed with summary abatement and bill you for the work. Unpaid costs can be added to the property tax roll as a special assessment.

Compare other topics

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