The municipality of Villa María in Córdoba has enacted an unprecedented ordinance allowing the declaration of public utility and expropriation of vacant lots whose owners repeatedly fail to comply with hygiene and cleaning standards.
In an innovative step to tackle urban health issues, Villa María's Deliberative Council recently approved an ordinance empowering the municipality to intervene in abandoned vacant lots. This regulation declares as public utility those plots where owners have been repeatedly notified for failing to maintain required cleaning standards, thereby allowing their expropriation for community purposes.
The ordinance aims to reduce sanitary risks and enhance living conditions in neighborhoods impacted by waste buildup and uncontrolled vegetation in these areas. According to the official text, repeated non-compliance is the key criterion to trigger the expropriation process, marking a significant advancement in municipal management of negligent private properties.
This initiative fits into broader efforts in Córdoba to regulate urban land use, though specific details on its immediate implementation have not been publicly disclosed.