As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the
meanings indicated:
ACCIDENT
Any incident or occurrence in which one or more motor vehicles
contact each other or another object, thereby causing personal injury
and/or property damage.
AUTOMOBILE
Any private passenger motor vehicle or vehicle included in
the definition of "automobile" under the New York State Vehicle and
Traffic Law.
DISABLED VEHICLE
Any vehicle for which towing is necessary because of an accident
or for which towing is necessary because of the vehicle's inability
to proceed under its own motor power due to reasons other than an
accident.
FOR HIRE
Any instances where a fee, charge or other consideration
is directly or indirectly imposed for towing, carrying, impounding,
recovering or removing a vehicle.
GVWR
The gross vehicle weight rating of a tow truck, consisting
of the weight of the unladen tow truck plus the maximum carrying capacity
recommended by the vehicle's manufacturer.
IMPOUND/STORAGE FACILITY
An area where towed vehicles may be legally stored pursuant
to the laws of the Village of Ossining, including, but not limited
to, the Village's zoning code, and which facility is owned or leased
by the tow truck operator permittee.
OWNER
Includes a person owning, leasing or controlling one or more
tow trucks and operating or causing such tow trucks to be operated
on public highways for hire.
PERSON
Includes an individual, partnership, an unincorporated association,
corporation or other entity.
PUBLIC HIGHWAY
Any highway, road, street, avenue, alley, public place, public
driveway or any other public way.
ROTATIONAL TOW LIST
The list created and maintained by the Ossining Police Department
consisting of tow truck companies authorized to tow vehicles on behalf
of or at the request of the Ossining Police Department.
TOW TRUCK
A motor vehicle that tows or carries a disabled, illegally
parked, or abandoned vehicle or a vehicle involved in an accident.
TOW TRUCK DRIVER'S PERMIT
Permit issued by the Village of Ossining Clerk identifying
the individual as one who is licensed to drive a tow truck on behalf
of or at the request of the Ossining Police Department.
TOW TRUCK OPERATOR
A person who applies for and receives from the Village of
Ossining Clerk a permit to engage in the business of towing and/or
storage of vehicles.
TOW TRUCK OPERATOR PERMIT
Permit issued by the Village of Ossining Clerk identifying
the person as authorized to perform as a tow truck operator to tow
vehicles on behalf of or at the request of the Ossining Police Department.
TOWING
The moving, removing or recovering of a vehicle by another
vehicle for hire.
VEHICLE
A motor vehicle as defined in § 125 of the Vehicle
and Traffic Law, a tractor as defined in § 151-a of such
law or a trailer as defined in § 156 of such law.
WINCHING
The act of utilizing a motorized cable on a tow truck to
pull a vehicle for any purpose, including, but not limited to, aligning
a vehicle that is sideways, overturned, off road in a ditch or embankment,
a vehicle that is locked in a parking lot with no keys available or
a vehicle that has suspension or axle damage which will not allow
the vehicle to roll off a flatbed truck. Winching shall not apply
to vehicles being pulled onto a tow truck from the street.
The Ossining Police Department may direct that a vehicle be
towed from a public highway for the following nonexclusive reasons:
A. Public emergency when a vehicle is impeding emergency services that
require the public right-of-way to be unobstructed, such as firefighting,
emergency medical services, snow storm, flooding or flood remediation.
B. Abandoned or inoperable vehicles; vehicle operated by a driver who
is incapable of driving due to illness, injury, suspension, revocation,
driving while impaired from drugs or alcohol or having no license
and such vehicle is deemed by the responding police officer to be
a hazard to the public and no other appropriate driver has the consent
of the owner to drive the vehicle.
C. Illegally parked vehicles.
D. Vehicles which cannot be safely moved as a result of an accident.
E. Unattended vehicles causing an obstruction to traffic.
F. An abandoned vehicle with no discernable registration or identification.
G. A vehicle seized pursuant to Vehicle and Traffic Law § 511-b.
H. A stolen vehicle and/or a vehicle that is evidence in a criminal
proceeding.
I. A vehicle that obstructs street maintenance operations.
J. A vehicle that is determined to be illegally registered, defective
or unsafe to operate.
The Chief of Police is authorized to promulgate rules and regulations
for the proper and efficient administration of this chapter to supplement
the following requirements:
A. The tow truck operator shall be able and willing to dispose of abandoned
vehicles in accord with Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1224 and
to prepare the necessary documentation for signature by a Village
representative for mailing to the vehicle's owner and lien holders,
with the cost of such mailing to be borne by the tow truck operator.
B. The tow truck operator shall maintain records of tow truck calls
within the Village which records shall include the name and address
of the vehicle owner, the date and time of the notification call,
the location of the vehicle, the location of the storage facility
and the charge for towing and storage. These records shall be maintained
for 12 months and shall be available to the Police Chief or designee
when requested.
C. On each side of every tow truck shall display by painting, magnetic
sign or other similar means the name, address and phone number of
the permittee by letters and numbers of not less than three inches
in height and of contrasting color to the tow truck.
D. Allow for the retrieval of towed vehicles between the hours of 8:30
a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The tow truck operator may
make arrangements with the vehicle owner to retrieve the vehicle at
other times for an additional fee.
E. The tow truck operator shall accept cash, debit card and at least
two major credit cards (Visa, MasterCard, American Express or Discover)
for payment to retrieve vehicles.
F. Tow truck operators are not permitted to enter into any form of collusive
agreements with other permitted or nonpermitted tow truck operators
to cover for each other. A violation of this subsection shall be grounds
for revocation of the tow truck operator's permit(s) and removal from
rotational lists.
G. No vehicle towed at the request of the Police Department may be released
without the owner obtaining a Police Department release form to be
presented at the time the vehicle is retrieved.
H. Tow operators shall maintain equipment on the tow trucks for the
purpose of cleaning debris from the roadway and shall render such
service as required by Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1219(c).
All tow truck operators shall be responsible for reasonable environmental
cleanup of hazards, such as, but not limited to, motor oil, transmission
fluid, radiator fluid, etc. A tow truck operator called to the scene
of an accident involving serious injury or death or where a police
investigation is ongoing shall not remove or otherwise cause to be
disturbed any debris or move or reposition any vehicles until directed
by police personnel on scene to do so.
I. Tow truck operators must own or lease a tow truck having a manufacturer's
gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 10,000 pounds with dual wheels
and a four-ton minimum winching capacity. Each tow truck shall have:
(1) In the absence of having a ramp truck (flatbed), dolly wheels (tires
with legal tread reading), snatch blocks, chains and nylon straps
for towing.
(2) Broom shovel and a container to place debris into once it has been
picked up and such other items as necessary.
(3) A supply of Speedy Dry and/or sand which the tow truck driver will
place upon fluids at an accident scene or as otherwise directed.
J. The tow truck operator shall be responsible for the collection of
all fees for towing of any vehicle as requested by the Police Department.
Neither the Village of Ossining nor the Ossining Police Department
shall act as agent for the collection of any fees, nor shall the Village
or Police Department be held responsible in the event of nonpayment
of any moneys due to any tow truck operator as a result of services
performed under this chapter.
K. A tow truck shall be permitted to operate under this chapter only
after the tow truck has been thoroughly examined and inspected. Such
inspections may be conducted by any police officer who is trained
and certified by the New York State Department of Transportation as
a commercial vehicle inspector or by an independent New York State
Department of Transportation certified commercial vehicle inspector.
The officer or inspector conducting the inspection shall report to
the Chief of Police whether the tow truck is in a safe and sanitary
condition. The Chief of Police shall not approve a tow truck operator
permit or, if approved, shall suspend the permit for any tow truck
found to be unfit for operation as a tow truck. Operation of a tow
truck in violation of the inspection requirement shall be punishable
by a maximum fine of $250 for a first offense; $500 for a second offense
occurring within six months of the first offense; and $1,000 for a
third or additional offenses occurring within 12 months of the first
offense.
L. Each tow truck driver responding to a call from the Police Department
shall provide the owner or operator when on scene with a card with
the tow operator's business name, address, phone number, hours of
operation and a written summary of expected charges.
[Amended 8-21-2024 by L.L. No. 10-2024]
A. The Chief
of Police shall request from the State Division of Criminal Justice
Services and the Department of Motor Vehicles record checks as to
criminal and Vehicle and Traffic Law violations for applicants for
tow truck driver's permits. Every applicant for such permit shall
be fingerprinted at the request of the Ossining Police Department,
which fingerprints shall be forwarded by a third party vendor to the
State Division of Criminal Justice Services for processing. The applicant
shall tender the fee required by the State Division of Criminal Justice
Services and any third party vendor for such fingerprint processing.
B. If an
applicant for a tow truck driver’s permit has been convicted
of a crime, any decision by the Chief of Police regarding such applicant’s
fitness for a permit shall be made upon consideration of New York
Correction Law §§ 701 to 703-b, (Article 23) and §§ 751
to 753, (Article 23-A). Correction Law §§ 701 to 703-b
provide for certificates of relief from disability and certificates
of good conduct, and §§ 751 to 753 set forth New York’s
public policy to encourage the licensure and employment of persons
previously convicted of one or more criminal offenses and factors
that should be considered in making such licensing and employment
determinations.
Upon the completion of the investigation by the Police Department,
the Village Clerk shall issue a tow truck driver's permit to the applicant.
The tow truck driver shall display his/her permit upon arriving at
the location from where the vehicle is to be towed.
No tow truck operator's permit shall be assigned from one company
or person to another unless in connection with a bona fide sale of
the tow truck operator permit owner's business, in which case the
Police Chief shall have the power to approve an assignment of the
tow truck operator's permit.
With the exception of the fines listed in §
247-8K, any company or person who violates or refuses to comply with any of the provisions of this chapter shall be guilty of a violation and shall be punished by a fine of not less than $250, or more than $1,000, for each and every day a violation occurs or continues under this chapter, imprisonment for not more than 15 days, or both.
It shall be the duty of the Police Department to ascertain,
to the extent possible, the owner of the vehicle or the person in
charge of the vehicle and to notify that person of the removal and
disposition of such vehicle and of the amount which will be required
to redeem same. The Village shall also, without delay, report to the
Village Clerk the removal and disposition of any vehicle removed as
provided in this chapter.
No later than April 1, the Chief of Police or designee shall
report to the Board of Trustees on the rotational tow program from
the preceding calendar year. The report shall include the following
information:
A. The names of the tow companies on the rotation lists.
B. The number of permits issued for tow truck drivers.
C. The number of calls by the Police Department for towing/storage of
vehicle.
D. Reason for the call (accident, impound, criminal activity, etc.).
E. How many calls did each operator receive?
F. Number of times when a request for service was denied or when the
operator failed to timely respond. This should be broken down by operator.
G. Suspensions and/or revocations of permits during past calendar year.