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These new rules could soon impact Stockton street vendors
These new rules could soon impact Stockton street vendors

CBS News

time25-03-2025

  • Business
  • CBS News

These new rules could soon impact Stockton street vendors

STOCKTON — A warm spring day typically means more sales for the dozens of street vendors around Stockton. But now, their business could soon take a hit with new rules and new fees. "The ordinance is to align with Senate Bill 946 and 972 so just to get in line with their guidelines when it comes to enforcement of street vendors," Stockton Police Services Manager Almarosa Vargas said. Monday, the city's Legislation and Environmental Committee heard from the Stockton Police Neighborhood Services Division on how to stay aligned with two state laws which could now force vendors to follow new rules and pay new fees. "It's going to provide a venue for licensing, so a path for our current street vendors to obtain a license with certain requirements, while also balancing the safety and health of the community," Vargas explained. Some of these new rules include where vendors can sell, hours of operation, sanitation and food handling. It will also require vendors to get new permits that include a $60 public property use fee. Fines for violating these new rules could range from $100 to $1,000. The city wants to emphasize they're not against food vendors, rather they want to keep them and the entire community safe. "The issue is that if we're going to have street vendors, we need to make sure that they're following the rules, the health standards and the rules of the city," Stockton City Council Member Michele Padilla said. Some of the main concerns for code enforcement and the city is traffic safety and the overall well-being of public parks. "We need to make sure that everyone's safe when it comes to traffic, everyone's safe when it comes to public health, the food, and then we need to make sure that our city infrastructure is being maintained," Padilla continued. No action was taken at Monday's meeting.

2 O.C. cities expand efforts to curb street vendors operating outside the law
2 O.C. cities expand efforts to curb street vendors operating outside the law

Los Angeles Times

time05-02-2025

  • Business
  • Los Angeles Times

2 O.C. cities expand efforts to curb street vendors operating outside the law

Good morning. It's Wednesday, Feb. 5, and rain is in the forecast for the next couple of days. So, if you still own an umbrella it might actually be of use to you this week. I'm Carol Cormaci, bringing you this week's TimesOC newsletter with a look at some of the latest local news and events. Anaheim and Buena Park, both homes to renowned attractions that bring in a whole lot of visitors, also draw in a host of street vendors, some permitted, others not. Up and down California, including other O.C. cities where such vendors set up shop, officials have wrestled with how best to deal with them since the California Street Vending Act (Senate Bill 946) decriminalizing the practice was signed into law by then-Gov. Jerry Brown in 2018. To gain more control over the fruit carts and taco stands that appear on its sidewalks, the Buena Park City Council last week voted to give code enforcement officers the ability to seize illicit street food vending equipment 'if a vendor appears to have abandoned it or if it poses an imminent safety or environmental hazard,' according to this TimesOC story. Further, the city can impose a $265 impound fee to the operators involved. The change in city law will give Buena Park code enforcement 'the power to confiscate tents, tables and grilling equipment for 90 days, while also dumping food,' the article states. 'We've kind of hit our limits,' Councilman Connor Traut, a proponent of the measure, said during last week's meeting. 'We need this extra stick. It's a necessary step and I think we should still work towards encouraging legal street vending and amending rules, because the demand is there for folks in our community.' In what may have been sheer coincidence, the Anaheim City Council at the same time approved two $250,000 contracts for consultants to assist its code officers with cracking down on the vendors that set up their small enterprises on sidewalks without required permits. 'Neither [consulting firm] is being hired just for street vending,' Mike Lyster, a city spokesman, told TimesOC. 'We've actually had tremendous success with street vending enforcement on our own. We still have issues at the stadium, at Honda Center and along Harbor Boulevard. These contracts will give us more flexibility.' • Students for Justice in Palestine, the group that organized a pro-Gaza encampment at Chapman University, was recognized Jan. 21 during the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Awards hosted by the university's Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. The very next day, the recognition was strongly criticized in an email sent out by the president of Chapman, Daniele Struppa, with an apology to Jewish students and others who might have been offended by it. The award was subsequently rescinded. • An experimental amateur-built small plane that crashed into a warehouse near Fullerton Airport Jan. 2 had defects in a door that appears to have contributed to the collision, the National Transportation Safety Board said in a preliminary report. The accident took the lives of the pilot, Pascal Reid of Huntington Beach, and his 16-year-old daughter, Kelly, sparked a fire and led to eight serious and 11 minor injuries. • After a portion of the private walkway that snakes along a cliff in Laguna Beach collapsed in a landslide Friday morning, sending about 500 cubic yards of earth down on 1,000 Steps Beach and damaging a path there, city officials reported. No injuries occurred during the 7:15 a.m. 'significant bluff collapse,' they said. • Officials with South Coast Repertory are assessing damages and any losses to its production building in Santa Ana caused by a partial roof collapse during a period of high winds and rain on Jan. 26. The roughly 4,500-square-foot area that comprised the paint shop has been red-tagged by building inspectors. • A man suspected of killing a woman in Menifee Saturday morning was shot to death about three hours later at the Newport Beach Pier fallowing a pursuit by Santa Ana police officers. • A Los Angeles police sergeant was arrested Saturday night after authorities say he hit and killed a pedestrian in Tustin while driving intoxicated and fled the scene. Tustin police identified the driver as Carlos Coronel. • Jurors began hearing opening statements last week in the case against Antonio Padilla, who faces one count of murder in connection with the death of 60-year-old Gina Marie Lockhart, whose body was unearthed by detectives in the yard of his parents' mobile home in Huntington Beach on July 17, 2022. • Investigation into a citizen's complaint culminated last week when Laguna Beach police seized several illegal substances and made multiple arrests of people alleged to have been involved in the sale of illegal drugs at Cinder Box Smoke Shop on South Coast Highway. • Newport Beach police announced this week the arrest Friday night of a 30-year-old Chilean national in connection with a residential burglary near East Coast Highway and Pelican Point. • Twice-convicted drunk driver Serene Francie Rosenberg, 48, has been charged with the murder of 88-year-old Melvin Joseph Weibel after allegedly plowing her Land Rover SUV into the transit van he was a passenger in. The crash took place at around 6:15 p.m. Friday at the intersection of Stonehill Drive and Golden Lantern in Dana Point, according to the reporting of City News Service. • Angels outfielder Mickey Moniak was awarded a raise to $2 million Friday instead of the team's offer of $1.5 million in salary arbitration. Moniak hit .219 with 14 homers and a career-high 49 RBIs last year. • The new Huntington Beach Sports Hall of Fame inducted its first class on Sunday. It included, among other honorees, members of the 2011 Ocean View Little League team that won the Little League World Series back in 2011. You can find the complete list of the inaugural class here. • The Newport Harbor High surf team captured the Sunset League All-Star Championships last Wednesday. The Sailors finished with 192 points, edging powerhouse Huntington Beach, which scored 185 points. • Laguna Beach High School's girls' basketball team won the Pacific Hills League crown by beating Irvine, 53-31. The CIF Southern Section will release its playoff pairings on Feb. 8. • More than 18,000 entrants turned out Sunday for the Surf City Marathon in Huntington Beach. Antoine Puglisi of Los Angeles was the men's champion and Temucula's Stephanie Cullingford was the women's champion. Registration is already open for the 30th annual Surf City Marathon, set for Feb. 1, 2026, at Beach. • There's a new art exhibit at the Great Park Gallery in Irvine, themed 'More Than You Can Chew.' One of the 17 artist installations featured is from Seattle-based artist Eriko Kobayashi and is called 'Sunny Side Up.' The gallery's address is 270 Corsair. The exhibit runs through April 20. • Peter Quilter's play 'End of the Rainbow' will be on stage at the Gem Theatre, 12852 Main St., Garden Grove beginning Friday night and running through Sunday, Feb. 23. Curtain time on Fridays and Saturdays is 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. The play with music delves into the final chapter of Judy Garland's life. • 'Echoes of Conflict: Remembering Vietnam,' a comprehensive exhibit of items related to the Vietnam War, opens Saturday, Feb. 15, in Heroes Hall Museum at the O.C. Fair & Event Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. The exhibit features items such as uniforms, weaponry, photographs and letters. On display through Dec. 21; admission and parking are free. Until next Wednesday,Carol I appreciate your help in making this the best newsletter it can be. Please send news tips, your memory of life in O.C. (photos welcome!) or comments to

What is now required of Sacramento County street vendors after recent vote?
What is now required of Sacramento County street vendors after recent vote?

Yahoo

time29-01-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

What is now required of Sacramento County street vendors after recent vote?

( — Street vendors across Sacramento County can expect an increase in rules and regulations around their operations following a decision by the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday. Tuesday's vote eliminated the county's decades-long legal prohibition of sidewalk vending and brought the county more in line with state laws regarding street vending. Sacramento County Code Chapter 4.55, effective in March, establishes a new 1-year sidewalk vendor license at a cost of $61 that will be required for all street vendors operating in Sacramento County. The new county code follows many of the regulations outlined in Senate Bill 946 – Sidewalk Vendors which was passed in 2019 and Senate Bill 972 – Compact Mobile Food Operations which was passed in 2023. As the county rolls out the new requirements, they do not plan on punishing uncompliant street vendors immediately. Inspectors will first educate vendors on the new county code and allow them time to acquire a street vendor license. 'Messaging that'll go out to these pop-up vendors, it'll be educational, it'll be friendly, it'll be really about what is in the best interest of the public and how to we protect the public,' District 4 Supervisor Rosario Rodriguez said. If vendors are still found to be out of compliance by not having a business license or a Compact Food Mobile Operations (CMFO) Health Permit they can be fined. Fines for operating without a business license: • First violation: $250• Second violation within one year of the first: $500• Following violations within a year of the first: $1,000 Along with requiring a license, vendors will also have specific guidelines of where they can set up for business and exactly how they are set up. These are the locations where vendors can not be set up:• Along sidewalks where it would hinder or obstruct the passage of pedestrians • At the entrance to a place of business• In the immediate vicinity of a construction zone or traffic-controlled area for construction• Where the visibility for/of drivers or pedestrians would be obstructed • Within the immediate area of a special event with areas designated for temporary use permits• Swap meets and farmer's markets These are the specific distances sidewalk vendors need to be from prohibited areas:• 100 feet from an outdoor dining or patio dining areas • 20 feet from marked or unmarked crosswalks • 15 feet from crosswalks with a curb extension• 15 feet from a fire hydrant• 15 feet from a driveway or driveway apron• 200 feet from a library, police station, government building, fire station or hospital• 10 feet from a business during operating hours• 10 feet from a bicycle rack• 18 inches from the edge of a curb Items prohibited for the set-up of street stall:• Lights, horns or music• Freestanding Signs • Seating area for customers • Elevated objects (umbrellas, flags, banners, etc.) that may obstruct the view of drivers and pedestrians• Gas-powered generators • Propane bottles Vendors are also prohibited from selling alcohol, lottery tickets, cannabis, tobacco, electronic cigarettes, adult-orientated materials, weapons, drugs of any kind or any merchandise prohibited by law. Street vendors must: • Have a trash receptacle and ensure that trash within a 10-foot radius of the stall is cleaned before leaving• Water and soap available for handwashing • Ability to wash utensils or rotate utensils after four hours of use• Refrigeration• Remain in attendance at the stand • Not lock or chain the stand to any pole, sign, tree or other objects• Ensure carts have a self-contained power source. Vendors may connect to county or private water or electricity sources with permission from the county or private property owner. A point of interest for the supervisors was how are inspectors going to ensure that street vendors are operating at appropriate hours. The new regulations state that vendors must maintain hours that are similar to other businesses in the surrounding area. 'So what if all the other businesses are closed including the restaurants, but there is one bar, say along Madison Avenue, in that area that is open until two o'clock in the morning?' District 3 Supervisor Rich Desmond asked. County staff said that each vendor's operating hours will be evaluated and established on a case-by-case basis. Rodriguez brought up the point that some vendors operate along roadways that may not have businesses around them to determine reasonable hours of operation. County staff said looking at what is driving customers to those vendors like a highly trafficked roadway or bridge may help determine what the hours of operation should be for vendors in that area. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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