Home City Directory Staff Directory Customer Service Request Job Openings GIS Maps News Releases Where do I find?
City Secretary
Community Center
Development Serivces
Victoria Tourism
Office of Emergency Management
Environmental Services
Finance
Fire
Human Resources
Legal
Library
Municipal Court
Parks and Recreation
Police
Public Works
Recycling
Recycling

Development Services

Common Violations :

Code Enforcement deals with many different types of code violations. The most common violations are listed below.

  High Grass
  • High Grass and Weeds - Grass/weeds over 12 inches high are a violation of Victoria City Code. Property owners and tenants are responsible for keeping their lawns mowed and clippings cleared from the adjacent sidewalk and street. Written notification is sent to the property owners or tenants who are allowed seven days to mow their property. If the violation is not corrected after the time has elapsed, the city will mow the high grass and weeds and send the owner an invoice. (City Code, Chapter 10-41)
   
Junk Vehicle
  • Junk Vehicles - A junk vehicle is defined as a vehicle that is self-propelled, has an expired registration or inspection sticker and is wrecked, dismantled, partially dismantled, inoperable for more than 72 hours on the public right-of-way or inoperable for more than 30 consecutive days on private property. (City Code, Chapter 10-51) (As defined in Chapter 683 of the Texas Transportation Code.)
  Debris and Junk
  • Trash and Debris - Homeowners and tenants are responsible for maintaining the area between the street and house free of junk, brush, trash and debris. This includes the storage of any furniture not intended for outdoor use, appliances, tires or similar item. (City Code, Chapter 10-41)
 

   Unsafe Structure

Substandard Building

  • Unsafe Buildings - An unsafe building complaint (e.g. a building built on substandard foundation, fire hazardous wiring, etc.) takes a minimum of 135 days to resolve and includes inspecting the property, identifying the owner, contacting the owner, allowing a thirty day period, by State law, for the owner to correct the problem, conducting up to two more inspections with time allowed for corrective action on the part of the owner, and scheduling the case to go before the Building & Standards Commission if the owner does not respond. The amount of time given to repair or demolish the structure is determined by the Building & Standards Commission. If the property issue is still not resolved, demolition proceedings will begin. (City Code, Chapter 5-161)

 

 

For more information, please see the City Code and Charter.


Spacer