Bellflower controls weeds and overgrowth through its Public Nuisances ordinance, Municipal Code Chapter 8.36, rather than a separate weed-abatement title. Section 8.36.030 declares overgrown vegetation (including lawns over six inches) and dead, decayed, diseased, or hazardous trees, weeds, and ground cover to be public nuisances. The City abates uncorrected conditions and recovers costs.
Because Bellflower is an incorporated city, weed and nuisance-vegetation enforcement is the City's responsibility under the Bellflower Municipal Code, not Los Angeles County's. The City's mechanism is Chapter 8.36 (Public Nuisances). Section 8.36.020 defines a public nuisance broadly as anything injurious or detrimental to health, safety, or welfare or offensive to the senses, and declares that any condition enumerated in the chapter (or otherwise contrary to the Code) is a public nuisance. Section 8.36.030 then lists nuisance conditions, including subsection (A)(11) on overgrown vegetation that harbors rats, vermin, and insects, promotes fire hazards, overhangs public property, or diminishes neighboring property values - with examples such as 'Lawns with grass in excess of six inches' - and subsection (A)(12) covering 'Dead, decayed, diseased or hazardous trees, weeds, ground cover, and other vegetation.' Subsection (A)(16) further addresses combustible plant cuttings, tree trimmings, or wood chips kept so as to create a fire hazard or render premises unsanitary. The City's Code Enforcement Division administers these standards and the nuisance-abatement and cost-recovery process, issuing notices and, where owners fail to comply, abating the condition and assessing costs. Vacant-property rules add that such parcels must be kept free of weeds and that dead or dying vegetation be replaced within a short window. Bellflower is fully urbanized and flat, so weed enforcement focuses on vermin, blight, and neighborhood fire safety rather than wildland brush.
Maintaining weeds, overgrown grass, or dead and diseased vegetation in violation of Bellflower Municipal Code 8.36.030 is a public nuisance. Code Enforcement issues a notice to abate; if the responsible party does not clear the condition, the City may abate it and recover the cost through the Code's enforcement and cost-recovery provisions, which can include a lien or special assessment against the property.
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