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🏚️ Property Maintenance/Property Blight

Property Blight: Vacaville vs Vallejo

How do property blight rules compare between Vacaville, CA and Vallejo, CA?

Vacaville and Vallejo have similar restriction levels.

Vacaville, CA

Solano County

Some Restrictions

Vacaville Municipal Code Chapter 8.10 (Abatement of Public Nuisance) declares a wide range of blight-producing conditions to be public nuisances, including unsecured vacant structures, exterior trash and debris, abandoned personal property, accumulated newspapers and flyers, unmaintained landscaping, and unmaintained pool barriers. The Code Enforcement Division (within the Vacaville Fire Department) administers abatement under Chapter 1.28, including administrative citations, abatement at the owner's expense, and cost recovery through liens or special assessments.

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Vallejo, CA

Solano County

Some Restrictions

Vallejo enforces property maintenance standards to prevent blight. Unmaintained properties with peeling paint, broken windows, or accumulated debris may face code violations.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactVacavilleVallejo
Code ChapterVacaville Municipal Code Ch. 8.10-
Abatement ProcessVacaville Municipal Code Ch. 1.28-
Effective Date (Expanded)August 22, 2008-
Owner DutiesSecure, maintain, remove debris, secure pool-
Cost RecoveryLien or special assessment-
Notice-10 to 30 day compliance
Fines-$100 to $1,000 per day
Abatement-City may clean up and bill
Lien-Costs added to property

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Vacaville FAQ

What counts as blight under the Vacaville municipal code?

Vacaville Municipal Code Chapter 8.10 lists a wide range of conditions as public nuisances, including unsecured structures, accumulated exterior trash and debris, abandoned personal property, unmaintained landscaping, unsecured pool barriers, stagnant pool water, and uncollected newspapers, circulars, and flyers. The standard is whether the condition disturbs nearby property or creates a hazard to the public.

What happens if I do not fix a blight violation in Vacaville?

After a Code Enforcement notice and compliance deadline, the City can abate the violation at the property owner's expense and recover its costs through an administrative process under Vacaville Municipal Code Chapter 1.28. Unpaid costs may become a lien or special assessment against the property, and continuing violations can result in stacking administrative fines.

Vallejo FAQ

What counts as property blight?

Peeling paint, broken windows, accumulated junk, overgrown vegetation, damaged roofing, and non-functioning vehicles visible from the street.

Can the city clean my property without permission?

Yes, Vallejo may abate nuisance conditions after proper notice and charge the cost to the property owner as a lien.

Compare other topics

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