Monkey Business
Member
Illinois
I would think that (building / drainage) code violations would need to be specific and detailed.
For example: The mayor of a municipality wants to issue violations on properties. The building / engineering director drafts a violation like " you built a wall without permits from this municipality...". This draft is sent to the municipal lawyer for review. The lawyer checks a bit and notices that you actually had a permit to build a wall. The municipal lawyer advises the building official to change the wording to "... altered the wall without permits... looking for more flexible language here"
Does a municipality (in Illinois) have a right to cloud the wording to the point where it could mean almost anything in order to record a violation?
I would think that (building / drainage) code violations would need to be specific and detailed.
For example: The mayor of a municipality wants to issue violations on properties. The building / engineering director drafts a violation like " you built a wall without permits from this municipality...". This draft is sent to the municipal lawyer for review. The lawyer checks a bit and notices that you actually had a permit to build a wall. The municipal lawyer advises the building official to change the wording to "... altered the wall without permits... looking for more flexible language here"
Does a municipality (in Illinois) have a right to cloud the wording to the point where it could mean almost anything in order to record a violation?