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Can we get back to the original question? I live in Maryland. Two door up from me, there is an abandoned property with paperwork on the door saying Bank of America is the lienholder/owner of the property. We have had issues with property management since the owner abandoned the home, and as I am a neighbor on a nice street, all of us are concerned. Now there is a liability, with a large tree in need of pruning, with a limb hanging over another neighbor's roof. Neighbor wants the tree trimmed before winter storms start. How can we get B of A to focus some corporate attention on this property?
Can we get back to the original question? I live in Maryland. Two door up from me, there is an abandoned property with paperwork on the door saying Bank of America is the lienholder/owner of the property. We have had issues with property management since the owner abandoned the home, and as I am a neighbor on a nice street, all of us are concerned. Now there is a liability, with a large tree in need of pruning, with a limb hanging over another neighbor's roof. Neighbor wants the tree trimmed before winter storms start. How can we get B of A to focus some corporate attention on this property?
In most areas, if tree limbs are hanging over your property line, it is perfectly fine to cut them off, as long as you do it in a way that doesn't damage the three as a whole.
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