By:  Brimer                                                       S.B. No. 342
	(In the Senate - Filed February 3, 2005; February 7, 2005, 
read first time and referred to Committee on Intergovernmental 
Relations; March 7, 2005, reported adversely, with favorable 
Committee Substitute by the following vote:  Yeas 5, Nays 0; 
March 7, 2005, sent to printer.)


COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR S.B. No. 342                                    By:  Brimer

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
relating to the regulation of swimming pools in the unincorporated areas of certain counties as a public nuisance. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Subsection (c), Section 343.011, Health and Safety Code, is amended to read as follows: (c) A public nuisance is: (1) keeping, storing, or accumulating refuse on premises in a neighborhood unless the refuse is entirely contained in a closed receptacle; (2) keeping, storing, or accumulating rubbish, including newspapers, abandoned vehicles, refrigerators, stoves, furniture, tires, and cans, on premises in a neighborhood or within 300 feet of a public street for 10 days or more, unless the rubbish or object is completely enclosed in a building or is not visible from a public street; (3) maintaining premises in a manner that creates an unsanitary condition likely to attract or harbor mosquitoes, rodents, vermin, or disease-carrying pests; (4) allowing weeds to grow on premises in a neighborhood if the weeds are located within 300 feet of another residence or commercial establishment; (5) maintaining a building in a manner that is structurally unsafe or constitutes a hazard to safety, health, or public welfare because of inadequate maintenance, unsanitary conditions, dilapidation, obsolescence, disaster, damage, or abandonment or because it constitutes a fire hazard; (6) maintaining on abandoned and unoccupied property in a neighborhood, or maintaining on any property in a neighborhood in a county with a population of more than 1.1 million, a swimming pool that is not protected with: (A) a fence that is at least four feet high and that has a latched gate that cannot be opened by a child; or (B) a cover over the entire swimming pool that cannot be removed by a child; (7) maintaining a flea market in a manner that constitutes a fire hazard; (8) discarding refuse or creating a hazardous visual obstruction on: (A) county-owned land; or (B) land or easements owned or held by a special district that has the commissioners court of the county as its governing body; or (9) discarding refuse on the smaller of: (A) the area that spans 20 feet on each side of a utility line; or (B) the actual span of the utility easement. SECTION 2. This Act takes effect September 1, 2005.
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