Maine 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Maine Senate Bill LD1417 Introduced / Bill

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132nd MAINE LEGISLATURE
FIRST SPECIAL SESSION-2025
Legislative Document	No. 1417S.P. 571	In Senate, April 1, 2025
An Act to Strengthen the Authority of Local Officials to Enforce 
Provisions Regarding Dangerous and Nuisance Properties that 
Constitute a Threat to Public Health and Safety
Reference to the Committee on State and Local Government suggested and ordered printed.
DAREK M. GRANT
Secretary of the Senate
Presented by Senator LIBBY of Cumberland.
Cosponsored by Representative: WADSWORTH of Hiram. Page 1 - 132LR1083(01)
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2 as enacted by PL 2013, c. 521, Pt. B, §1 and 
3 affected by §2, is amended to read:
4 D.  The mortgaged premises are deteriorating so as to constitute a threat to public health 
5 or safety as described in Title 22, section 461 or 1561;
6 as enacted by PL 2013, c. 521, Pt. B, §1 and 
7 affected by §2, is amended to read:
8 G.  A code enforcement officer, local health officer or other public official has made a 
9 determination or finding that the mortgaged premises are abandoned or unfit for 
10 occupancy;
11 as enacted by PL 2017, c. 136, §1, is amended 
12 to read:
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14 officers or county commissioners, acting through a building official, code enforcement 
15 officer, local health officer or fire chief, must find that the building is structurally unsafe, 
16 unstable or unsanitary; constitutes a fire hazard; is unsuitable or improper for the use or 
17 occupancy to which it is put; constitutes a hazard to health or safety because of inadequate 
18 maintenance, dilapidation, obsolescence or abandonment or a condition described in Title 
19 22, section 461 or 1561; or is otherwise dangerous to life or property.
20 as amended by PL 2019, c. 557, §4, is further 
21 amended to read:
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23 code enforcement officer, local health officer, fire chief or municipal officers, or the county 
24 commissioners shall file a verified complaint setting forth such facts as would justify a 
25 conclusion that a building is dangerous, as described in section 2851, and shall state in the 
26 complaint that the public health, safety or welfare requires the immediate removal of that 
27 building.  The municipality or the county may seek a writ of attachment of the property on 
28 which the building is located in accordance with Title 14, chapter 507 and the Maine Rules 
29 of Civil Procedure.
30 as amended by PL 2007, c. 598, §4, is further amended to 
31 read:
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33 A person who intentionally or knowingly violates any provision of section 451, 454‑A, 
34 461 or 462, or of rules adopted pursuant to those sections, or neglects or refuses to obey 
35 any order or direction of any local health officer authorized by those provisions, the penalty 
36 for which is not specifically provided, or intentionally or knowingly interferes with any 
37 person or thing to prevent the execution of those sections or of the rules, commits a civil 
38 violation for which a fine of not more than $500 may be adjudged. The District Court has 
39 jurisdiction of all offenses under these sections.  Enforcement of section 454-A and 461, 
40 including abatement of an unsafe or unhealthful condition of a property, must be in 
41 accordance with Title 17, chapter 91, subchapter 4 or Title 30-A, section 3106-B. Page 2 - 132LR1083(01)
1 as enacted by PL 2007, c. 598, §7, is 
2 amended to read:
3 F. After consulting with the commissioner or the commissioner's designee or the 
4 municipality, order the suppression and removal of nuisances and conditions suspected 
5 of posing or found to pose a public health threat;
6 as amended by PL 1989, c. 487, §9, is further amended to 
7 read:
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9 The local health officer, when satisfied upon due examination, that a cellar, room, 
10 tenement, property or building in the town, occupied as a dwelling place, has become, by 
11 reason of want of cleanliness or other cause, unfit for such purpose and a cause of sickness 
12 to the occupants or the public, may issue, in consultation with the municipality or 
13 department, a notice in writing to such occupants, or the owner or the owner's agent, or any 
14 one of them, requiring the premises to be put into a proper condition as to cleanliness, or, 
15 if they see fit, requiring the occupants to quit the premises within such time as the local 
16 health officer may deem determines reasonable. If the persons so notified, or any of them, 
17 neglect or refuse to comply with the terms of the notice, the local health officer may cause 
18 the premises to be properly cleansed at the expense of the owner, or may close the premises, 
19 and the same shall may not be again occupied as a dwelling place until put in a proper 
20 sanitary condition in accordance with Title 17, chapter 91, subchapter 4 or Title 30-A, 
21 section 3106-B. If the owner thereafter occupies or knowingly permits the same to be 
22 occupied without putting the same in proper sanitary condition, the owner shall forfeit not 
23 less than $10 nor more than $50 for each day that the premises remain unfit following 
24 written notification that the premises are unfit.
25 as corrected by RR 2021, c. 2, Pt. B, §93, is amended to 
26 read:
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28 When any source of filth whether or not the cause of sickness is found on private 
29 property and determined to be potentially injurious to health, the owner or occupant thereof 
30 shall, within 24 hours after notice from the local health officer, at the owner's or occupant's 
31 own expense, remove or discontinue it. If the owner or occupant neglects to do so or 
32 unreasonably delays doing so, the owner or occupant forfeits a sum not exceeding $300. 
33 The local health officer shall cause the nuisance to be removed or discontinued, and all 
34 expenses thereof must be repaid to the town by the owner or occupant or by the person who 
35 caused or permitted it.  Enforcement of this section must be in accordance with Title 17, 
36 chapter 91, subchapter 4 or Title 30-A, section 3106-B.
37 as amended by PL 2011, c. 365, §8, is further 
38 amended to read:
39
40 or their designees, municipal building officials and code enforcement officers, when 
41 authorized by their respective municipal employer, may use enforcement authority under 
42 Title 17, chapter 91, subchapter 4 or Title 30-A, section 3106-B or may bring a civil action 
43 in the name of the municipality to enforce any of the state laws, duly adopted state rules or 
44 local ordinances enacted pursuant to this Part and Title 10, chapter 1103; and Page 3 - 132LR1083(01)
1 as enacted by PL 2003, c. 312, §14, is 
2 amended to read:
3
4 provisions of this subchapter pursuant to:
5 A.  The enforcement of land use laws and ordinances under section 4452;
6 B.  The litter control provisions of Title 17, chapter 80; or
7 C.  The abatement of nuisance and dangerous buildings provisions of Title 17, chapter 
8 91. ;
9 D.  The cleanliness and source of filth provisions in Title 22, section 461 and 1561; or
10 E.  For subject property that is abandoned, the abandoned property provisions of section 
11 3106-B.
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13 This bill expands the authority of local municipal health and code enforcement officials 
14 to enforce laws pertaining to properties that are dangerous, a nuisance or abandoned and 
15 constitute a threat to public health or safety.
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