BILL NUMBER: AB 2067	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  JUNE 9, 2010

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Bonnie Lowenthal

                        FEBRUARY 18, 2010

   An act to amend Section 22502 of the Vehicle Code, relating to
vehicles.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 2067, as amended, Bonnie Lowenthal. Vehicles: parking.
   Existing law generally requires a vehicle, stopped or parked upon
a roadway where there are adjacent curbs, to be stopped or parked
with the right-hand wheels of the vehicle parallel with and within 18
inches of the right-hand curb, with specified exceptions, including
authorizing a vehicle to be stopped or parked with the left-hand
wheels parallel to and within 18 inches of the left-hand curb on a
one-way roadway.
   This bill would authorize the City of Long Beach to  implement
a pilot program to  permit vehicles to park on the left-hand
side of the roadway parallel to and within 18 inches of the left-hand
curb on  a   certain  two-way local
residential  street   streets  that
 dead-ends   dead-end  with no designated
area in which to turn around provided that the city makes a finding,
supported by a professional engineering study, that the ordinance or
resolution is justified by the need to facilitate the safe and
orderly movement of vehicles, and the applicable streets are
demarcated with signs or markings giving adequate notice of the
parking allowances.  The bill would require the city to submit to
the Legislature, 2 years from the date of the enactment of the local
  ordinance or resolution that establishes the pilot
program, a report that outlines the advantages and disadvantages of
the pilot program. The bill would require the pilot program to
terminate one year from the date that the report is submitted to the
Legislature, u   nless otherwise extended by the
Legislature. 
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Section 22502 of the Vehicle Code is amended to read:
   22502.  (a) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, a
vehicle stopped or parked upon a roadway where there are adjacent
curbs shall be stopped or parked with the right-hand wheels of the
vehicle parallel with and within 18 inches of the right-hand curb,
except that a motorcycle shall be parked with at least one wheel or
fender touching the right-hand curb. Where no curbs or barriers bound
a two-way roadway, right-hand parallel parking is required unless
otherwise indicated.
   (b) (1) The provisions of subdivision (a) or (e) do not apply to a
commercial vehicle if a variation from the requirements of
subdivision (a) or (e) is reasonably necessary to accomplish the
loading or unloading of merchandise or passengers on, or from, a
vehicle and while anything connected with the loading, or unloading,
is being executed.
   (2) This subdivision does not permit a vehicle to stop or park
upon a roadway in a direction opposite to that in which traffic
normally moves upon that half of the roadway on which the vehicle is
stopped or parked.
   (c) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), a local authority may, by
ordinance, prohibit a commercial vehicle from stopping, parking, or
standing on one side of a roadway in a business district with the
wheels of the vehicle more than 18 inches from the curb. The
ordinance shall be effective only if signs are placed in the areas to
which it is applicable clearly indicating the prohibition.
   (d) This section does not apply to vehicles of a public utility
when the vehicles are being used in connection with the operation,
maintenance, or repair of facilities of the public utility or are
being used in connection with providing public utility service.
   (e) (1) Upon a one-way roadway, a vehicle may be stopped or parked
as provided in subdivision (a) or with the left-hand wheels parallel
to and within 18 inches of the left-hand curb, except that a
motorcycle, if parked on the left-hand side, shall have either one
wheel or one fender touching the curb. Where no curb or barriers
bound a one-way roadway, parallel parking on either side is required
unless otherwise indicated.
   (2) This subdivision does not apply upon a roadway of a divided
highway.
   (f) The City of Long Beach may, by ordinance or resolution, 
implement a pilot program to  authorize vehicles to park on the
left-hand side of the roadway parallel to and within 18 inches of the
left-hand curb on two-way local residential streets that dead-end
with no cul-de-sac or other designated area in which to turn around,
if the City of Long Beach has first made a finding, supported by a
professional engineering study, that the ordinance or resolution is
justified by the need to facilitate the safe and orderly movement of
vehicles on the roadways affected by the resolution or ordinance.
 The ordinance or resolution may designate certain streets or
portions of streets on which the permission applies  
The area covered by the ordinance or resolution shall be limited to
the streets perpendicular to Ocean Boulevard beginning at Balboa
Place and ending at 72nd Place, but shall not   cover 62nd
Place  . The ordinance or resolution permitting that parking
shall not apply until signs or markings giving adequate notice have
been placed near the designated roadways.  The city shall submit
to the Legislature, two years from the date of the enactment of the
ordinance or resolution that establishes the pilot program, a report
that outlines the advantages and disadvantages of the pilot program.
The pilot program shall terminate one year from the date that the
report is submitted to the Legislature, unless the program is
extended by the Legislature. The report submitted pursuant to this
subdivision shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the
Government Code. 
  SEC. 2.  The Legislature finds and declares that a special law is
necessary and that a general law cannot be made applicable within the
meaning of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution
because Long Beach residents require safer access into and out of the
uniquely impacted streets, to decrease the potential for "fender
benders" and to give residents better access to their homes and
apartments.