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West Palm Beach abandoned property war heats up

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- They're dirty, dangerous and costing you serious cash. Now city leaders are using a new tool to make abandoned and neglected property owners pay up.

For years the city of West Palm Beach has been cleaning up neglected and dangerous homes. Boarding them up and removing trash, which isn't free or cheap. So to recoup some of that cash they're hitting people on their property tax bills.

Douglas Wise/City of West Palm Beach: We pay for these negligent property owners..now we're shifting the cost and burden onto them.

There are hundreds of abandoned homes in West Palm Beach. But Northwood Hills neighbors say 937 39th Street is as bad as it gets.

"It's been like this for 15, 20 years. This house."
 
"Rats and bees and all sorts of things."

The house has a collapsed second floor, rotting wood, front and back doors busted open, trash spilling down the stairs and piling up in the backyard.

"It's dangerous. I'll put it that way. It's dangerous."

A miracle that it's avoided tragedy.

Bob Beaulieu/Northwood Hills Neighborhood Association: It's deplorable and embarrassing to the city.

The neighborhood association president says soon there could be fewer properties like this in West Palm Beach.

Bob Beaulieu/Northwood Hills Neighborhood Association: It's baby steps. But I think eventually it's going to have a tremendous affect on the neighborhood.

Beaulieu is talking about new rules approved by city hall this week, changing how they penalize the property owners. When city workers have to mows lawns, board up houses, and clean up trash at these abandoned homes they used to put a lien on the property.

"That money never came back to the city. The taxpayers basically footed the bill to fix somebody else's property."

Now the bill is going directly on the owner's property tax bill. City leaders came up with this idea a few years ago, modeling after a similar program working well in Milwaukee.

Bob Beaulieu/Northwood Hills Neighborhood Association: Now because it actually goes on the tax bill. Everybody has to pay their taxes because eventually if you don't you'll lose the property. So you're forced to pay the city back.

So far the city has spent more than $122,000 making sure these properties are safe. City leaders say this new program is to make sure the property owners are paying the bill not the taxpayers.West Palm Beach abandoned property war heats up

Friday, July 27 2012, 11:26 PM EDT

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