It is unlawful for any person in a park to:
A. 
Wilfully mark, deface, disfigure, injure, tamper with, or displace or remove any building, bridges, tables, benches, fireplaces, railing, paving or paving material, water lines or other public utilities or parts or appurtenances thereof, signs, notices or placards, whether temporary or permanent, monuments, stakes, posts, or other boundary markers, or other structures or equipment, facilities or park property, or appurtenances whatsoever, either real or personal;
B. 
Possess, transport, purchase, sell, give away any alcoholic beverages or drink alcoholic beverages at any time in a park;
C. 
Sleep or protractedly lounge on the seats, benches, or other areas, or engage in loud, boisterous, threatening, abusive, insulting, or indecent language, or engage in any disorderly conduct or behavior tending to a breach of the public peace;
D. 
Possess, transport, purchase, sell, give away or consume any narcotic and/or dangerous drug not prescribed to the user.
(Ord. 116 § 1, 1975; Ord. 512 §§ 1, 2, 1995)
The parks within the city shall be open to the public from five a.m. to ten p.m. during Daylight Savings Time (excepting the Fourth of July) and from six a.m. to seven p.m. during Pacific Standard time. Thereafter, it shall be unlawful for anyone to be within the boundaries of park property.
(Ord. 492 § 1, 1993)
A. 
All public parks within the city are declared "drug-free zones" pursuant to California Health and Safety Code Section 11380.5.
B. 
This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 1998, and as of that date is repealed.
(Ord. 512 §§ 3, 4, 1995)
Any substantial or exclusive use of city parks or portions thereof by advance reservation or by organizations or by formal or informal groups on a regular basis shall require a park user permit. The city manager or his/her designee may grant a park user permit, in a form approved by the city council, and may at his/her discretion impose additional requirements and conditions in order to fulfill the general objectives stated in the standard park use permit. The city council may establish a resident and nonresident park use fee by resolution.
(Ord. 542 § 1, 1996)