Exciting enhancements are coming soon to eCode360! Learn more 🡪
Town of Brentwood, MD
Prince George's County
By using eCode360 you agree to be legally bound by the Terms of Use. If you do not agree to the Terms of Use, please do not use eCode360.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
[Adopted 1-6-1986 (Ch. 144, Art. II, of the 1986 Code)]
[Amended 3-16-1987]
The Mayor and Town Council are hereby authorized to designate by ordinance public highways and other areas within the Town on which the parking of vehicles may be restricted, beyond a consecutive three-hour period, on the days and times posted, to vehicles bearing a valid parking permit issued pursuant to this article. This authority shall be in addition to and may be exercised in conjunction with any other authority the Mayor and Town Council may have to regulate the times and conditions of motor vehicle parking.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
NONRESIDENTIAL VEHICLE
A motor vehicle parked in a residential area by a person who is not a resident thereof.
[Amended 3-16-1987]
PERMIT PARKING AREA
An area at least one block in length. A block shall be at least a 100 series of street numbers in length and need not be from one intersecting street to another.
RESIDENTIAL AREA
A contiguous or nearly contiguous area containing public highways, or parts thereof, primarily abutted by residential property or residential and nonbusiness property (such as schools, parks, churches, hospitals and nursing homes) and designated as such by the Mayor and Town Council.
[Amended 3-16-1987]
A residential area shall be deemed eligible for residential permit parking if, based on objective criteria established by the Mayor and Town Council, parking therein is or will be impacted by nonresidential vehicles on the days and times posted.
In determining whether an area identified as eligible for residential permit parking shall be designated as a residential permit parking area, the Mayor and Town Council shall take into consideration the following factors:
A. 
The desire and need of the residents for residential permit parking and their willingness to bear the administrative costs in connection therewith.
B. 
The protection of the residents of such areas from unreasonable burdens in obtaining adequate parking adjacent to or close by their places of residence and securing access to their residences.
C. 
The likelihood of alleviating traffic congestion, illegal parking and related health and safety hazards.
D. 
The probable reduction in hazardous traffic conditions resulting from use of streets in designated residential areas for the parking of vehicles by persons using other commercial, industrial, transit or other-than-residential areas.
E. 
The preservation of the safety of children and pedestrians in residential areas.
F. 
The protection of such residential areas from polluted air, excessive noise, the strewing of trash and refuse and other environmental degradations caused by parking of nonlocal vehicles.
G. 
The prevention of the excessive utilization of streets, roads and highways in residential areas.
H. 
The preservation of the residential nature of impacted areas.
I. 
The proximity of public transportation to the residential areas.
J. 
The need for parking in excess of three hours in proximity to establishments located therein and used by the general public for religious, health or educational purposes.
In order to determine whether a particular street, avenue, way or other location should be designated as a residential permit parking area, the Mayor and Town Council shall conduct, upon their own initiative or upon a petition of a majority of the households in such areas addressed to the Mayor and Town Council, a public hearing, prior to the designation of a parking permit area or prior to the withdrawal of such designation once it is established. The hearing shall be part of a regular or special meeting of the Mayor and Town Council and shall be no more than one month after the action is initiated or petitioned. Advance notice of this type of hearing shall be given in the Town newsletter or other newspaper of general circulation in the Town of Brentwood. The notice shall clearly state the purpose of the hearing, the exact location and boundaries of the residential permit parking under consideration, the reasons why such area is being proposed for designation as a residential permit parking area and, if applicable, the proposed permit parking fee that would be charged. In addition to the published notice, a similar notification shall be mailed to every household, the identity of which can reasonably be established, within the area under consideration. During such hearing, any interested person shall be entitled to appear and be heard. No hearing shall be held and no area designated if it is not found to be an impacted area under §§ 305-18 and 305-19 of this article.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the Mayor and Town Council shall decide, based on the record made at such hearing, whether or not to designate the area under consideration as a residential permit parking area or to remove the designation in the case of an established residential permit parking area. This action, if establishing or terminating a residential permit parking area, shall be taken in the form of a Town ordinance as provided for in Chapter 4, Section 404.0, of the Charter of the Town of Brentwood.
Following Mayor and Town Council approval of the designation of a residential permit parking area, the Mayor and Town Council, or a designated alternate, shall issue appropriate permits and shall cause parking signs to be erected in the area, indicating the times, locations and conditions under which unlimited parking shall be by permit only. A permit shall be issued, upon application and payment of the applicable fee, only to the owner or the operator of a motor vehicle who resides on property immediately adjacent to a street, avenue, way or other location within the residential permit parking area.
The application for a permit shall contain the name of the owner or operator of the motor vehicle and residential address, the motor vehicle's make, model and registration number and the number of the applicant's operator's permit. The motor vehicle's registration and operator's license may, in the discretion of the Mayor and Town Council, or designated alternate, be required to be presented at the time of making said application in order to verify the contents thereof. The owner or operator of any motor vehicle applying for a residential parking permit shall have valid Maryland motor vehicle license tags, unless not legally required to have them. The permit shall be renewed annually upon such conditions and procedures as the Mayor and Town Council shall specify. The permit shall identify the motor vehicle, the area authorized and the expiration date.
Notwithstanding any provision of this article to the contrary, the holder of a residential parking permit shall be permitted to stand or park a motor vehicle for which a residential parking permit has been issued in the designated residential parking permit area during such times as the parking of motor vehicles therein is permitted. While a vehicle for which a residential parking permit has been issued is so parked, such permit shall be displayed so as to be clearly visible on the vehicle in a place set by the Mayor and Town Council or designated alternate. A residential parking permit shall not guarantee or reserve to the holder a parking space or a specific parking space within a designated residential permit parking area.
A residential parking permit shall not authorize the holder thereof to stand or park a motor vehicle in such places or during such times as the stopping, standing or parking of motor vehicles is prohibited or set aside for specified types of vehicles, nor exempt the holder from the observance of any traffic regulation other than the three-hour parking limit in the area for which a permit is held.
No person other than the permittee named thereon shall use a residential parking permit or display it on a vehicle operated or parked, and any such use or display by a person other than the permittee shall constitute a violation of this article by the permittee and by the person who so used or displayed such parking permit.
It shall constitute a violation of this article for any person to falsely represent such person as eligible for a residential parking permit or to furnish any false information in an application to the Mayor and Town Council or designated alternate in order to obtain a residential parking permit.
The Mayor and Town Council or designated alternate is authorized to revoke the residential parking permit of any permittee found to be in violation of this article, and upon written notification thereof, the permittee shall surrender such permit to the Mayor and Town Council or designated alternate. Failure, when so requested, to surrender a residential parking permit so revoked shall constitute a violation of this article.
The Mayor and Town Council or designated alternate is authorized to establish an annual residential permit parking fee to cover the administrative costs of permits issued pursuant to this article.
The Mayor and Town Council or designated alternate is authorized to make provisions for:
A. 
The issuance of temporary parking permits for periods up to 30 days to bona fide visitors of residents of a designated residential parking permit area.
B. 
The issuance of exemption parking permits to handicapped persons.
Any person who shall violate any provisions of this article shall, upon conviction, be subject to punishment by a fine of not more than $100.
Residential permit parking areas shall be as follows:
Name of Street
Hours
Location
37th Street
[Added 4-19-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-04]
During designated hours
–––
41st Street
[Added 4-19-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-04]
–––
Between Utah Avenue and 4411 41st Street
Upshur Street
[Added 4-19-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-04]
–––
Between Veterans Park and 38th Street
Webster Street
[Added 4-19-2017 by Ord. No. 2017-04]
During designated hours
Between 34th Street and 37th Street