Bill Text: MI HB4142 | 2009-2010 | 95th Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Property; other; requirements for maintenance of vacant property; enhance. Amends title & secs. 2a, 123, 125, 132, 134, 141 & 141a of 1917 PA 167 (MCL 125.402a et seq.).
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2009-02-05 - Printed Bill Filed 02/05/2009 [HB4142 Detail]
Download: Michigan-2009-HB4142-Introduced.html
HOUSE BILL No. 4142
February 4, 2009, Introduced by Rep. Jackson and referred to the Committee on Urban Policy.
A bill to amend 1917 PA 167, entitled
"Housing law of Michigan,"
by amending the title and sections 2a, 123, 125, 132, 134, 141, and
141a (MCL 125.402a, 125.523, 125.525, 125.532, 125.534, 125.541,
and 125.541a), the title as amended by 1992 PA 144, section 132 as
amended by 2000 PA 479, section 134 as amended by 2003 PA 80,
section 141 as amended by 2003 PA 55, and section 141a as added by
1992 PA 109.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
TITLE
An act to promote the health, safety and welfare of the people
by regulating the maintenance, alteration, health, safety, and
improvement of dwellings; to define the classes of dwellings
affected by the act, and to establish administrative requirements;
to prescribe procedures for the maintenance, improvement, or
demolition of certain commercial buildings; to establish remedies;
to provide for enforcement; to provide for certain duties of
certain state agencies and authorities; to provide for the
demolition of certain dwellings; and to fix penalties for the
violation of this act.
Sec.
2a. As used in this act, :
"Enforcing
"enforcing agency" means the designated officer or
agency charged with responsibility for administration and
enforcement of this act. In the case of a dangerous building under
section 139(i) or (j) that is located in an urban core city, the
enforcing agency includes the state housing development authority.
Sec. 123. The governing body of a municipality to which this
act by its terms applies, or the governing body of a municipality
which adopts the provisions of this act by reference, shall
designate a local officer or agency which shall administer the
provisions of the act, and if no such officer or agency is
designated then the local governing body shall be responsible for
administration of the act. Municipalities may provide, by
agreement, for the joint administration and enforcement of this act
where such joint enforcement is practicable. In the case of a
dangerous building under section 139(i) or (j) that is located in
an urban core city, the designated officer or agency charged with
responsibility for administration and enforcement of this act
includes the state housing development authority.
Sec. 125. (1) A registry of owners and premises shall be
maintained by the enforcing agency.
(2) The owners of a multiple dwelling or rooming house
containing units which will be offered to let, or to hire, for more
than 6 months of a calendar year, shall register their names and
places of residence or usual places of business and the location of
the premises regulated by this act with the enforcing agency. The
owners shall register within 60 days following the day on which any
part
of the premises is offered for occupancy. Owners of multiple
dwellings
or rooming houses containing units which are occupied or
offered
for occupancy at the time this act becomes effective shall
register
within 90 days after the effective date of this article.
(3) If the premises are managed or operated by an agent, the
agent's name and place of business shall be placed with the name of
the owner in the registry.
(4) If the premises are located in an urban core city, the
state housing development authority shall maintain a separate
registry for abandoned and vacant premises. Beginning on the
effective date of the amendatory act that added this subsection,
the owner of a premises that has remained vacant for longer than 30
days shall register the property as a vacant building with the
state housing development authority on a form provided by the state
housing development authority. The owner shall pay the state
housing development authority a vacant housing registry fee of
$100.00 for each building registered. Failure to register shall
mean that the property owner is responsible for a state civil
infraction and a $1,000.00 fine.
Sec. 132. (1) If, upon inspection, the premises or any part of
the premises are found to be in violation of any provision of this
act, the enforcing agency shall record the violation in the
registry of owners and premises.
(2) The owner, and, in the enforcing agency's discretion, the
occupant, shall be notified in writing of the violation. The notice
shall state the date of the inspection, the name of the inspector,
the nature of the violation, and the time within which the
correction shall be completed.
(3) If an inspector determines that a violation constitutes a
hazard to the occupant's health or safety, under circumstances
where the premises cannot be vacated, the enforcing agency shall
order the violation corrected within the shortest reasonable time.
The owner shall notify the enforcing agency of having begun
compliance within 3 days. All other violations shall be corrected
within a reasonable time.
(4) The enforcing agency shall reinspect after a reasonable
time to ascertain whether the violation has been corrected.
(5) If an inspector determines that a violation constitutes a
hazard to the health or safety of the occupants, the enforcing
agency shall notify the family independence agency within 48 hours.
The notice shall state the date of the inspection, the name of the
inspector, the nature of the violation, and the time within which
the correction shall be completed. The family independence agency
shall check the address of the premises against the list of rent-
vendored family independence program recipients.
(6) In urban core cities, the state housing development
authority shall establish a statewide toll-free hotline to accept
citizen information concerning dangerous buildings that constitute
a safety hazard under section 139(i) or (j) to neighborhood
residents. If information is received, the state housing
development authority shall determine whether the property has been
inspected by the enforcing agency under this act and is the subject
of proceedings under section 140. If the property has not been
inspected or is not the subject of proceedings under section 140,
the state housing development authority shall conduct an inspection
under this act to determine whether the property is dangerous under
section 139(i) or (j). If the authority determines that the
property is dangerous under section 139(i) or (j), the authority
may present the enforcing agency in the urban core city with the
opportunity to proceed to a hearing under section 140. If the
enforcing agency in the urban core city does not proceed with the
issuance of a notice of violation and a section 140 hearing within
30 days after the state housing development authority's inspection,
the state housing development authority shall proceed as the
enforcing agency under this act, with respect to the property
inspected, and shall proceed to a section 140 hearing and shall
pursue remedial action from the property owners. If the property
owners fail to provide remedial action, the state housing
development authority shall secure and remediate the property.
(7) If the state housing development authority requires the
owners to perform remedial action or secures and remediates the
property, the property shall be secured and remediated in
accordance with all of the following standards:
(a) The property shall be cleared so that there is no
accumulation of junk, trash, debris, boxes, lumber, scrap metal,
junk vehicles, or any other materials that may promote the threat
of fire, constitute a safety hazard, or provide harborage for
rodents or other animals on the premises.
(b) The state housing development authority shall determine
that every foundation, roof, floor, wall, stair, ceiling, and other
structural support is safe and capable of supporting the loads that
normal use may place upon them. If any structural support is not
safe, the state housing development authority shall carry out the
necessary remediation measures.
(c) Plumbing fixtures shall be maintained with no leaking
pipes.
(d) Every exit door shall be secured with an internal deadbolt
lock and shall be capable of being opened from the inside easily
and without a key or special knowledge.
(e) Interior stairs shall have treads and risers that have
uniform dimensions, are securely fastened, and have no rotting,
loose, or deteriorating supports.
(f) Insects, rodents, and other vermin shall be exterminated.
(g) All asbestos-containing materials on the premises shall be
maintained in good repair and remain free from defects, such as
holes, cracks, or tears that may allow the release of asbestos
fibers.
(h) All building openings shall be closed and secured, using
secure doors, glazed windows, commercial-quality steel security
panels, filled with like-kind material as the surrounding wall, as
applicable, to prevent entry by unauthorized persons, except as
specifically authorized in this subdivision or in subdivision (i).
Use of plywood is prohibited.
(i) Openings less than 1 square foot in area may be boarded
with plywood if the boarding is made weather-tight and finished
with varnish or paint of a similar color to the exterior wall and
cut to the inside dimensions of the exterior of the opening.
Openings greater than 1 square foot in area that are located less
than 20 feet above the ground, which are otherwise accessible from
ground level, or which are within 8 feet in any direction of an
exterior stairway, fire escape, or other means of access shall be
sealed with commercial-quality, 14-gauge rust-proof steel security
panels and doors.
(j) All windows shall have commercial-grade locking devices
that enable them to be securely locked from the inside, shall be
weather-tight and watertight, and shall be glazed.
Sec. 134. (1) If the owner or occupant fails to comply with
the order contained in the notice of violation, the enforcing
agency may bring an action to enforce this act and to abate or
enjoin the violation.
(2) An owner or occupant of the premises upon which a
violation exists may bring an action to enforce this act in his or
her own name. Upon application by the enforcing agency, or upon
motion of the party filing the complaint, the local enforcing
agency may be substituted for, or joined with, the complainant in
the discretion of the court. If the subject of the complaint is
that the property is located in an urban core city and is a
dangerous building under section 139(i) or (j), then the enforcing
agency may include the state housing development authority.
(3) If the violation is uncorrected and creates an imminent
danger to the health and safety of the occupants of the premises,
or if there are no occupants and the violation creates an imminent
danger to the health and safety of the public, the enforcing agency
shall file a motion for a preliminary injunction or other temporary
relief appropriate to remove the danger during the pendency of the
action.
(4) Owners and lienholders of record or owners and lienholders
ascertained by the complainant with the exercise of reasonable
diligence shall be served with a copy of the complaint and a
summons. The complainant shall also file a notice of the pendency
of the action with the appropriate county register of deeds office
where the premises are located.
(5) The court of jurisdiction shall make orders and
determinations consistent with the objectives of this act. The
court may enjoin the maintenance of unsafe, unhealthy, or
unsanitary conditions, or violations of this act, and may order the
defendant to make repairs or corrections necessary to abate the
conditions. The court may authorize the enforcing agency to repair
or to remove the building or structure. If the property is located
in an urban core city and is a dangerous property under section
139(i) or (j), and the owner of the property does not remedy the
condition of the property, the court shall order the enforcing
agency to repair or remove the building or structure. If an
occupant is not the cause of an unsafe, unhealthy, or unsanitary
condition, or a violation of this act, and is the complainant, the
court may authorize the occupant to correct the violation and
deduct the cost from the rent upon terms the court determines just.
If the court finds that the occupant is the cause of an unsafe,
unhealthy, or unsanitary condition, or a violation of this act, the
court may authorize the owner to correct the violation and assess
the cost against the occupant or the occupant's security deposit.
(6) A building or structure shall not be removed unless the
cost of repair of the building or structure will be greater than
the state equalized value of the building or structure except in
urban core cities or local units of government that are adjacent to
or contiguous to an urban core city that have adopted stricter
standards to expedite the rehabilitation or removal of a boarded or
abandoned building or structure that remains either vacant or
boarded, or both, and a significant attempt has not been made to
rehabilitate the building or structure for a period of 24
consecutive months.
(7) If the expense of repair or removal is not provided for,
the court may enter an order approving the expense and placing a
lien on the real property for the payment of the expense. The order
may establish and provide for the priority of the lien as a senior
lien, except as to tax and assessment liens, and except as to a
recorded mortgage of first priority, recorded prior to all other
liens of record if, at the time of recording of that mortgage or at
a time subsequent, a certificate of compliance as provided for in
this act is in effect on the subject property. The order may also
specify the time and manner for foreclosure of the lien if the lien
is not satisfied. A true copy of the order shall be filed with the
appropriate county register of deeds office where the real property
is located within 10 days after entry of the order to perfect the
lien granted in the order.
(8) This act does not preempt, preclude, or interfere with the
authority of a municipality to protect the health, safety, and
general welfare of the public through ordinance, charter, or other
means.
(9) As used in this section, "urban core cities" means
qualified local governmental units as that term is defined in
section 2 of the obsolete property rehabilitation act, 2000 PA 146,
MCL 125.2782.
Sec. 141. (1) At a hearing prescribed by section 140, the
hearing officer shall take testimony of the enforcing agency, the
owner of the property, and any interested party. Not more than 5
days after completion of the hearing, the hearing officer shall
render a decision either closing the proceedings or ordering the
building or structure demolished, otherwise made safe, or properly
maintained.
(2) If the hearing officer determines that the building or
structure should be demolished, otherwise made safe, or properly
maintained, the hearing officer shall enter an order that specifies
what action the owner, agent, or lessee shall take and sets a date
by which the owner, agent, or lessee shall comply with the order.
If the building is a dangerous building under section 139(j), the
order may require the owner or agent to maintain the exterior of
the building and adjoining grounds owned by the owner of the
building including, but not limited to, the maintenance of lawns,
trees, and shrubs.
(3) If the owner, agent, or lessee fails to appear or neglects
or refuses to comply with the order issued under subsection (2),
the hearing officer shall file a report of the findings and a copy
of the order with the legislative body of the city, village, or
township not more than 5 days after the date for compliance set in
the order and request that necessary action be taken to enforce the
order. If the legislative body of the city, village, or township
has established a board of appeals under section 141c, the hearing
officer shall file the report of the findings and a copy of the
order with the board of appeals and request that necessary action
be taken to enforce the order. A copy of the findings and order of
the hearing officer shall be served on the owner, agent, or lessee
in the manner prescribed in section 140. If the property that is
the subject of the order issued under subsection (2) is located in
an urban core city and is a dangerous building under section 139(i)
or (j), the hearing officer shall file an additional report of the
findings and a copy of the order with the state housing development
authority not more than 5 days after the date for compliance set in
the order and the state housing development authority shall take
necessary action to enforce and implement the order if the
legislative body of the city, village, or township does not enforce
or implement the order within 5 days of receiving the request under
this section.
(4) The legislative body or the board of appeals of the city,
village, or township, as applicable, shall set a date not less than
30 days after the hearing prescribed in section 140 for a hearing
on the findings and order of the hearing officer. The legislative
body or the board of appeals shall give notice to the owner, agent,
or lessee in the manner prescribed in section 140 of the time and
place of the hearing. At the hearing, the owner, agent, or lessee
shall be given the opportunity to show cause why the order should
not be enforced. The legislative body or the board of appeals of
the city, village, or township shall either approve, disapprove, or
modify the order. If the legislative body or board of appeals
approves or modifies the order, the legislative body shall take all
necessary action to enforce the order. If the order is approved or
modified, the owner, agent, or lessee shall comply with the order
within 60 days after the date of the hearing under this subsection.
For an order of demolition, if the legislative body or the board of
appeals of the city, village, or township determines that the
building or structure has been substantially destroyed by fire,
wind, flood, deterioration, neglect, abandonment, vandalism, or
other cause, and the cost of repair of the building or structure
will be greater than the state equalized value of the building or
structure, the owner, agent, or lessee shall comply with the order
of demolition within 21 days after the date of the hearing under
this subsection. If the estimated cost of repair exceeds the state
equalized value of the building or structure to be repaired, a
rebuttable presumption that the building or structure requires
immediate demolition exists.
(5) The cost of demolition includes, but is not limited to,
fees paid to hearing officers, costs of title searches or
commitments used to determine the parties in interest, recording
fees for notices and liens filed with the county register of deeds,
demolition and dumping charges, court reporter attendance fees, and
costs of the collection of the charges authorized under this act.
The cost of the demolition, of making the building safe, or of
maintaining the exterior of the building or structure or grounds
adjoining the building or structure incurred by the city, village,
or township to bring the property into conformance with this act
shall be reimbursed to the enforcing agency, city, village, or
township by the owner or party in interest in whose name the
property appears.
(6) The owner or party in interest in whose name the property
appears upon the last local tax assessment records shall be
notified by the assessor of the amount of the cost of the
demolition, of making the building safe, or of maintaining the
exterior of the building or structure or grounds adjoining the
building or structure by first class mail at the address shown on
the records. If the owner or party in interest fails to pay the
cost within 30 days after mailing by the assessor of the notice of
the amount of the cost, the city, village, or township shall have a
lien for the cost incurred by the enforcing agency, city, village,
or township to bring the property into conformance with this act.
The lien shall not take effect until notice of the lien has been
filed or recorded as provided by law. A lien provided for in this
subsection does not have priority over previously filed or recorded
liens and encumbrances. The lien for the cost shall be collected
and treated in the same manner as provided for property tax liens
under the general property tax act, 1893 PA 206, MCL 211.1 to
211.157.
(7) In addition to other remedies under this act, the city,
village, or township may bring an action against the owner of the
building or structure for the full cost of the demolition, of
making the building safe, or of maintaining the exterior of the
building or structure or grounds adjoining the building or
structure.
A An enforcing agency, city, village, or township shall
have a lien on the property for the amount of a judgment obtained
under this subsection. The lien provided for in this subsection
shall not take effect until notice of the lien is filed or recorded
as provided by law. The lien does not have priority over prior
filed or recorded liens and encumbrances.
Sec. 141a. (1) A judgment in an action brought pursuant to
section 141(7) may be enforced against assets of the owner other
than the building or structure.
(2)
A An enforcing agency, city, village, or township shall
have a lien for the amount of a judgment obtained pursuant to
section 141(7) against the owner's interest in all real property
located in this state that is owned in whole or in part by the
owner of the building or structure against whom the judgment is
obtained. A lien provided for in this section does not take effect
until notice of the lien is filed or recorded as provided by law,
and the lien does not have priority over prior filed or recorded
liens and encumbrances.