- Recurring municipal mowing contracts — not one-time jobs
- Photo documentation required by city code enforcement
- Bush hogging for heavily overgrown parcels
- Same-day mobilization capability in most territories
- Service tied directly to Step 3 of the BLIGHT FORCE™ 14-step process
Service Overview
Lot mowing is often the first visible step in blight remediation — and one of the most consistent revenue streams for territory operators. Municipalities issue recurring contracts for vacant lot maintenance throughout the year, with volume per city ranging from dozens to thousands of parcels. BLIGHT FORCE™ operators access these contracts through our municipal relationship network and bid-support systems.
How It Works — Step by Step
Every project follows a defined execution process. Here's exactly how BLIGHT FORCE™ operators deliver this service:
Contract Award
Municipal or county contract issued through our bid system — typically covering 10–500+ lots per cycle.
Site Assessment
Crew assesses height, density, and hazardous materials (needles, chemicals) before mobilizing equipment.
Mowing Execution
High-cut commercial mowing or bush hogging depending on vegetation height. Clippings mulched or bagged per spec.
Documentation
GPS-stamped before/after photos uploaded to BLIGHT FORCE™ portal for code enforcement file submission.
Invoice & Close
Completion documentation submitted to contracting municipality. Typically net-30 payment terms.
Who Contracts This Service
- City and county code enforcement departments
- Municipal land banks and housing authorities
- State demolition and blight remediation programs
- HUD-funded neighborhood stabilization programs
- Private property owners and estate administrators
- Real estate developers and investors acquiring blighted parcels