Forum Discussion
Rice
Jun 09, 2018Explorer III
udidwht wrote:
Parking lot will do. Vehicles can not be towed from a lot until:
1. Parking notice issued
2. 96 hours have passed
The only exception to this would be fire lane violation. That is from the California vehicle code 22658
That is simply not true. The Vehicle Code says that vehicles may be towed "under any of the following circumstances," and your 96 hours after a notice is issued is just one of them. The others are:
If appropriate signage is posted, or
If the vehicle can't safely be driven on the highways (and other conditions have been met), or
If the vehicle is on property that is improved by a single family dwelling.
Those "vehicles will be towed at owner's expense" signs are everywhere in California, and allow towing to take place immediately and without notice, contrary to what you claim.
udidwht wrote:
Cities can not differentiate and/or make distinctions between surface streets/road/s and/or highways. The California vehicle code encompasses them all and is considered the 'Bible' in terms of what to refer to when an officer has a need to know.
I hope the officer does a better job of reading the code than you did.
But I think you are misunderstanding my point, partly because you're (wrongly) getting hung up on the word "oversized." Cities aren't legislating what an oversized vehicle is, or attempting to re-define what is considered an oversized vehicle in the Vehicle Code (and note that the Vehicle Code doesn't actually use that term). The cities are just using that term as a shorthand to describe the vehicles that aren't allowed to park on streets during certain hours, whether they're RVs, commercial buses, or a big van used as a daily driver by a family of 10.
There simply isn't a conflict between the city ordinances and the California Vehicle Code.
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