Politics & Government
City Demolition Ordinance Up for Final Approval
The council is making a choice on an ordinance that will help it fund demolition.

The New Port Richey City Council is poised to decide whether to give final approval to an ordinance that paves the way for the city to raze blighted or slum properties.
Council members are voting Tuesday on the ordinance.
The ordinance is modeled after a Pasco County ordinance, and it allows the city to access resources to help with demolition.
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Sherman Applegate, city public works director, has said the ordinance opens the way for the city to seek federal Neighborhood Stabilization funds disbursed by Pasco County to assist with demolition.
The city would bill the property owners for the full demolition cost and be able to place a lien on the property if the bill was wasn’t paid in 30 days.
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The property owner could appeal a demolition for a $400 fee.
Under the ordinance, the city building official or an inspector would inspect properties to see whether buildings meet one of the criteria for demolition.
This will be the second of two votes needed to adopt the ordinance. The first vote was taken earlier this month.
Also at Tuesday’s meeting, council members will cast the first of two votes needed to add an addendum to the West Pasco Historical Society’s lease for their headquarters nears Sims Park.
The council will also discuss whether to approve new pool fees for the youth swim team that uses the New Port Richey Recreation and Aquatic Center facilities.
The council meeting starts at 7 p.m. Tuesday at 5919 Main St, New Port Richey, FL 34652.
Details about demolition ordinance
Want to know what types of properties could be razed under the proposed demolition ordinance?
The ordinance sets the following definitions for slum structures and conditions:
Buildings or improvements, whether residential or nonresidential, which by reason of dilapidation, deterioration, age, or obsolescence cause inadequate provision for ventilation, light, air, sanitation or open spaces; the existence of condition(s) which endanger life or property by fire or other causes; or any combination of factors which contribute to ill health, transmission of disease, juvenile delinquency or crime, or are detrimental to the public health, safety, morals or welfare.
The ordinance defines a blighted structure and conditions as follows:
A deteriorated or deteriorating structure which endangers life or property by fire or other causes, unsanitary or unsafe condition(s) or deterioration of th site and its improvements, which condition(s) impair or arrest the sound growth of the City of New Port Richey or are a menace to the public health, safety, morals or welfare of the City of New Port Richey.
A property has to meet at least one of he following criteria as worded in the ordinance to be eligible for demolition.
1. The structure, or a portion thereof has been extensively damaged by fire, flood, wind, or other natural phenomena such that the building or structure is substantially destroyed or poses an immediate and manifest danger to the life, health, or safety of the general public or occupant.
2. The structure is so unsanitary or so utterly fails to provide the amenities essential to decent living that it is manifestly unfit for human habitation, or is likely to cause sickness or disease, so as to work injury to the life, health or safety of the general public or occupant. "Amenities essential to decent living" include, but are not limited to, the availability of potable water, at least one working toilet, and protection from exposure to the elements.
3. The structure, or a portion thereof, as a result of decay, deterioration, or dilapidation is likely to fully or partially collapse.
4. The condition of the structure, or a portion thereof, poses an immediate threat to life or propert by fire or other causes.
5. The site to be cleared by demolition consists of the remains, debris, wall, chimney, or floors of or left from a building or structure that has partially or completely collapsed, fallen, or been torn down.
6. There is a serious and substantial falling away, hanging loose, or loosening of the siding, block, brick or other building material creating a hazard for occupants or the public.
7. The structural parts have become so dilapidated, decayed, or deteriorated, or there is an unusual sagging or leaning out of plumb of the building or any part thereof caused by deterioration or over-stressing of the structure or structural parts, that the structure is manifestly unsafe.
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