Zimmerman’s Blighted Properties Bill Advances

State Rep. Alex Zimmerman. (R-North Vernon)

(Statehouse) – State Rep. Alex Zimmerman (R-North Vernon) said his bill to help local communities better address blighted properties recently advanced out of the Indiana House of Representatives unanimously.

According to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, vacant or abandoned properties can have profound negative impacts on communities including hurting property values, attracting crime and nuisance pests, and presenting health and safety hazards. To tackle these issues, Indiana’s Unsafe Building law gives cities, town and counties the ability to order the repair or demolition of unsafe buildings. However, Zimmerman said local communities struggle to address derelict or abandoned mobile homes and are seeking the tools to do so via legislation.

“Blighted properties cause issue after issue for communities until they’re either repaired or torn down, and we’ve seen prolonged cases where locals don’t have the legal tools needed to resolve issues involving mobile or manufactured homes,” Zimmerman said. “Our goal is to close a gap in state law so that locals can address these problems, which present risks and dangers to the inhabitants and those around them.”

Zimmerman said the bill would not require local governments to take immediate action but would clarify what unsafe properties they can address, including manufactured and mobile homes. Specifically, the bill would make changes to the Unsafe Building Law by defining a building or structure as anything constructed with a roof and supported by columns or walls, an object that serves as a shelter or enclosure, or anything requiring to be attached to the ground.

Additionally, House Bill 1320 would raise the threshold at which local authorities may perform the work of repairing or demolishing an unsafe building themselves without having to hire a third-party contractor. Zimmerman said increasing the maximum estimated cost level from $10,000 to $25,000 would enable more communities to complete projects in-house.

“Hiring this work out can lead to increased costs and longer wait times until the job is done,” Zimmerman said. “If a local government has the tools to do the job within a reasonable budget, then they should have the ability to tackle these smaller projects themselves.”

House Bill 1320 now moves to the Indiana Senate for consideration. To learn more and follow legislative proceedings, visit iga.in.gov.

(State Representative Alex Zimmerman press release)