A person who digs up, plows up, removes or breaks the earth,
soil, stone, pavement or other surface of, or otherwise injures any
highway or drainage facility or makes or causes to be made any excavation,
or constructs, places upon, maintains, or leaves any material or any
obstruction or impediment to travel in or upon a highway or obstructs
the flow in a drainage facility or installs or maintains or causes
to be installed or maintained any tank, pipes, conduit, duct, tunnel,
or any other installation of any nature across, upon, in, or under
any highway unless he shall have first obtained a permit hereunder
so to do shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
(Ord. 117 § 3, 1962)
Applications for permits required by this chapter shall be filed
with the public works department upon printed forms to be prescribed
and supplied by the department. The application shall be signed by
the applicant and shall state:
(1) The name and address of the applicant;
(2) The location, purpose, extent and nature of the proposed excavation,
fill or obstruction;
(3) The time during which it is estimated that the excavation, fill or
obstruction will exist;
(4) That the applicant agrees to indemnify, defend and save the city,
its authorized agents, officers, representatives and employees, harmless
from and against any and all penalties, liabilities or annoyances
or loss resulting from claims or court action arising out of any accident,
loss or damage to persons or property happening or occurring as approximate
result of any work undertaken under the permit granted pursuant to
the application;
(5) That the applicant agrees that if any tank, pipe, conduit, duct,
tunnel or other installation of any nature or kind placed in the excavation,
fill or obstruction for which the permit is issued which shall at
any time in the future interfere with the use, repair, improvement,
widening or change of grade of the highway, or drainage facilities
the applicant, or the applicant's successors or assigns, within ten
days after the receipt of a written notice from the city engineer
to do so, will at the applicant's own expense either remove such tank,
pipe, conduit, duct, tunnel or other installation, or, subject to
the approval of the city engineer, relocate them to a site which may
be designated by the city engineer;
(6) Any additional information which the engineer may deem necessary
for the proper disposition of the application.
(Ord. 117 § 3.01, 1962)
The city may, either at the time of the issuance of the permit
or at any time thereafter, require the applicant to do the resurfacing
or repair or elect to do the resurfacing or repair of any highway
surface or drainage facility removed or damaged by the proposed excavation
or obstruction pursuant to a permit hereunder.
(Ord. 117 § 3.02, 1962)
Each application for a permit shall be accompanied by an issuance
fee, which shall be set by a resolution of the city council, no part
of which shall be returned to the applicant regardless of the action
taken on the application. The inspection charge for an excavation
permit for the installation of a pipeline or conduit where the performance
of the work is such that the trenching can be accomplished with a
trenching machine shall be based upon a charge per linear foot. In
all cases the decision of the engineer shall be final in the method
of determination of the charges. For such permits the charge for inspection
shall be set forth by resolution of the city council.
(Ord. 117 § 3.03, 1962; Ord. 947 § 1, 1982; Ord. 1254 § 3, 1996)
Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections
13.12.010,
13.12.020 and
13.12.040, an annual public utility excavation and construction permit may be issued for emergency and routine small projects. For purposes of this section the phrase "routine small projects" means any excavation work requiring less than twenty-five square feet of excavation. The fee for the permit shall be determined by the director of public works based on cost to the city and shall be set forth by resolution of the city council. The permit shall be issued on a form approved by the director of public works which will provide that the applicant agrees to indemnify the city from all loss or liability arising out of work done pursuant to such permit.
(Ord. 947 § 2, 1982)
(a) Unless the engineer has authorized the applicant to perform the resurfacing
or repair of the surface of any highway or drainage facility which
may be removed in part or damaged by the proposed excavation, fill
or obstruction, each applicant shall, in addition to the issuance
fee, deposit with the city engineer the estimated cost of resurfacing
or repairing the surface of the highway or drainage facility which
may be damaged or destroyed. The special deposit required hereunder
shall in no event be less than three hundred dollars. The estimated
cost shall be determined by the engineer by multiplying the number
of square feet of surface which may be damaged, as shown by the application
by the minimum sum of one dollar and twenty cents per square foot
of surfacing.
(b) In cases where the applicant is granted authority to make the repairs
required under this title, the city engineer may, in order to insure
the completion of said repairs in a satisfactory manner, require the
applicant to furnish a surety bond. Such bond shall be executed by
a surety company authorized to transact business in the state of California
and shall be in an amount equal to twice the estimated cost of performing
the work authorized; provided, however, that the minimum amount of
said bond shall not be less than one thousand dollars, nor the minimum
period less than one year. The condition of said bond shall be that
the applicant will perform the work authorized by any permit issued
pursuant to this title in a good and workmanlike manner and to the
satisfaction of the engineer.
(Ord. 117 § 3.04, 1962; Ord. 947 § 3, 1982)
(a) In lieu of making the special deposit required by Section
13.12.050, the applicant may make and maintain with the engineer a general deposit in an amount estimated by the city engineer to be sufficient to pay for the cost of permit issuance fees and expected repairs occasioned by future excavations or obstructions, but not to exceed one thousand dollars.
(b) In lieu of the special deposit required by Section
13.12.050 or of making the general deposit as provided for in subsection
(a) of this section, the applicant may, with the approval of the city engineer, furnish a surety bond conforming in all respects to the requirements for surety bonds set forth in subsection
(b), Section
13.12.050, except that the condition of such bond shall be that the applicant will pay to the city upon demand all fees, costs, or charges incurred by or due to the city under the provisions of this title.
(Ord. 117 § 3.05, 1962; Ord. 947 § 4, 1982)
The permit shall be subject to the following conditions which
shall be stated thereon:
(1) The permit must be kept at the site of the work and be shown, on
demand, to any authorized representative of the city or any law enforcement
officer.
(2) The permit shall authorize work to be performed only as to such portion
of the highway or drainage facility over which the city has jurisdiction.
(3) All work shall be performed in accordance with the provisions of
this title and of all applicable laws, rules and regulations of the
city and any other public agency and to the satisfaction of the city
engineer.
(4) The permit shall be nontransferable.
(5) The city engineer may cancel the permit unless the work authorized
therein is commenced within sixty days of the issuance of the permit
and thereafter, in the opinion of the city engineer, is diligently
prosecuted to completion. Cancellation may be effected by giving written
notice thereof by sending the same to the applicant by ordinary mail
to the address shown on the application.
(6) The city engineer may, either at the time of the issuance of the
permit or at any time thereafter until the completion of the work,
prescribe such additional conditions as he may deem reasonably necessary
for the protection of the highway or for the prevention of undue interference
with traffic or to assure the safety of persons using the highway.
(Ord. 117 § 3.06, 1962)
A permittee shall not make or cause to be made any excavation,
or construct, place upon, maintain, or leave any obstruction or impediment
to travel, or pile or place any material in or upon any highway, or
install or maintain or cause to be installed or maintained any tank,
pipe, conduit, duct, or tunnel in, upon, or under the surface of any
highway, at any location, or in any manner other than that described
in the application as approved by the city engineer, or contrary to
the terms of the permit or of any provision of this title.
(Ord. 117 § 3.07, 1962)
Immediately upon completion of the work necessitating the excavation
or obstruction authorized by any permit issued pursuant to this title,
the permittee shall promptly and in a workmanlike manner refill the
excavation or remove the obstruction to the satisfaction of the engineer.
If any permittee fails or refuses to refill any excavation which
he has made or remove any obstruction which he has placed on any highway,
the city may do so and the applicant shall promptly reimburse the
city the cost thereof.
(Ord. 117 § 3.08, 1962)
(a) TEMPORARY PAVING. After completion of the refilling and compacting of the backfill material in the excavation as specified in Section
13.12.130 and the removal of the obstruction, the permittee shall promptly repair any portion of the highway surface removed or damaged by the excavation, obstruction or construction operations.
In the event the type of consolidation used in replacing the
backfill is not adequate to prevent further settling or the moisture
content is excessive, temporary resurfacing shall be provided. If
temporary surfacing is provided, the top surface of the backfill shall
be covered with one inch of bituminous material. Such temporary paving
material may be cold mix, or the permittee may use or the engineer
may require hot mix. All temporary paving material shall conform closely
enough to the level of the adjoining paving surface and shall be compacted
so that it is hard enough and smooth enough to be safe for pedestrian
travel over it as well as for vehicular traffic to pass safely over
it at a legal rate of speed. The permittee shall maintain temporary
paving for a period not exceeding ninety days after all backfilling
is completed, and shall keep same safe for pedestrian and vehicular
traffic until the excavation has been resurfaced with permanent paving,
except that if it is impracticable to maintain the surface of the
temporary paving in a safe condition for pedestrian travel or vehicular
traffic, then the permittee shall maintain barriers and lights.
Acceptance or approval of any excavation work by the engineer
shall not prevent the city from asserting a claim against the permittee
and his or its surety under the surety bond required hereunder for
incomplete or defective work if discovered within twenty-four months
from the completion of the excavation work. The engineer's presence
during the performance of any excavation work shall not relieve the
permittee of its responsibilities hereunder.
(b) PERMANENT REPAVING. Permanent resurfacing of excavations may be made
where the type of consolidation used in replacing the backfill is
adequate, in the opinion of the engineer to prevent settling and when
the moisture content of the backfill is not excessive.
Where the pavement (except Portland cement concrete pavement)
or surface has been removed, the permittee shall replace it with a
minimum standard repair consisting of either five inches of asphaltic
concrete surfacing or three inches of asphaltic concrete surfacing
over six inches aggregate base except that the standard repair shall
not be less in total thickness than the adjacent pavement or surfacing
and except that road-mixed surfacing may be repaired with three inches
of asphaltic concrete surfacing in lieu of the standard repair. Asphaltic
concrete surfacing shall consist of a mixture of mineral aggregate
and 150-200 penetration paving asphalt. If Portland cement concrete
pavement is removed, it shall first be sawed at the neat lines of
the excavation and or removed at existing breaks to the satisfaction
of the engineer subsequently replaced with Portland cement concrete,
to a thickness of one inch greater than the existing pavement.
(c) TUNNELING OR BORING. Excavation of pavement or surfacing on an arterial
highway (as shown on the master plan of highways) and determined by
the city engineer as having been improved with asphaltic concrete
surfacing or Portland cement concrete pavement, will be permitted
only when physical conditions make boring or tunneling impossible.
All boring and tunneling and placing conduits, casings and pipe lines
shall be done in such a manner that the existing driving lanes will
not be disturbed. If a casing is installed to receive the conduit
or pipe line, all voids between the casing conduit shall be filled
with grout or sand.
(d) REPLACING ENTIRE DRIVING LANE. If the surfacing or pavement within
the driving lanes of an arterial highway (as shown on the master plan
of highways) and determined by the engineer as having been improved
with asphaltic concrete surfacing or Portland cement concrete is removed
or damaged by parallel construction operations, the existing surfacing
or pavement of the width of the driving lane for the length of the
damaged surfacing shall be removed and replaced except that such a
removal and replacement shall in no case be less than one hundred
feet in length.
(Ord. 117 § 3.09, 1962)
If, after the refilling of an excavation the permittee fails or refuses to resurface or repair that portion of the surface of the highway damaged by him, or if the engineer has elected to do such resurfacing or repairing, the city shall do so and the permittee shall be charged with the cost thereof computed by the city engineer as provided in Section
13.08.100 or Section
13.12.050, whichever, in the judgment of the city engineer will most fairly compensate the city for the expenses incurred by it.
(Ord. 117 § 3.10, 1962)
If at any time subsequent to the first repair of a surface of a highway damaged or destroyed by an excavation or obstruction in such highway, it becomes necessary again to repair such surface due to settlement or any other cause directly attributable to such excavation or obstruction, the permittee shall pay to the city the cost of such additional repairs made by the engineer. The cost shall be computed by the engineer as provided in Section
13.08.100 or Section
13.12.050, whichever in the judgment of the engineer will most fairly compensate the city for the expenses incurred by it.
(Ord. 117 § 3.11, 1962)
(a) GENERAL COMPACTION REQUIREMENTS. All backfill and compaction shall
be in accordance with the applicable portions of Section 306 of the
Standard Specifications for Public Works Construction, latest edition.
Compaction Tests: In the event there is some question in the
engineer's mind concerning the degree of compaction, he may order
compaction tests to determine the quality of the work. The contractor
shall supply all tests as required or place a cash deposit with the
city, and the city will take the tests. All costs for the test shall
be deducted from the deposit posted by the contractor.
(b) COMPACTION OF CLAYEY SOILS. Clayey materials shall be defined as
a soil with a sand equivalent of less than thirty. Clayey material
replaced as backfill shall not be ponded or jetted but shall be compacted,
as specified under general compaction requirements, by any other suitable
method providing the material is first conditioned by wetting or drying
to within two percent of optimum moisture content.
In lieu of backfilling with clayey material, the permittee as
his option may elect to furnish sandy or granular material, with a
sand equivalent of thirty or greater in which case compaction may
be obtained as specified under general compaction requirements.
(c) FINISHING AND CLEAN UP. After the work has been completed, all debris
and excess material from excavation and backfill operations shall
be removed from the right-of-way and the roadway left in a neat and
orderly condition.
All roadside drainage ditches shall be restored to the original
grades and the inlet and outlet ends of all culverts shall be left
open, free and clear.
All approaches to private driveways and intersecting highways
and streets shall be kept open to normal traffic flow at all times.
Clay and earth which adhere to the paved surface of the roadway
shall be removed by hand scraping, washing, and sweeping, or by any
other method which will leave a clean nonskid surface without impairing,
injuring or loosening the surface.
Excess and nonsurfacing materials which adhere to roadway surfacing
as a result of construction operations not listed above shall be removed
by approved methods to the satisfaction of the engineer.
(Ord. 117 § 3.12, 1962; Ord. 512 § 10, 1968)
(a) Heavy duty pavement breakers may be prohibited by the engineer when
the use endangers existing substructures or other property.
(b) Saw cutting of Portland cement concrete may be required by the engineer
when the nature of the job or the condition of the street warrants.
When required, the depth of the cut shall be not less than one inch
in depth; however, depths greater than one inch may be required by
the engineer when circumstances warrant. Saw cutting may be required
by the engineer outside of the limits of the excavation over cave-outs,
overbreaks and small floating sections.
(c) Approved butting of bituminous pavement surface ahead of excavations
may be required by the engineer to confine pavement damage to the
limits of the trench.
(d) Sections of sidewalks shall be removed to the nearest score line
or saw-cut edge.
(e) Unstable pavement shall be removed over cave-outs and overbreaks
and the subgrade shall be treated as the main trench.
(f) Pavement edges shall be trimmed to a vertical face and neatly aligned
with the center line of the trench.
(g) Cutouts outside of the trench lines must be normal or parallel to
the trench line.
(h) Boring or other methods to prevent cutting of new pavement may be
required by the engineer.
(i) Permittee shall not be required to repair damage existing prior to
excavation unless his cut results in small floating sections that
may be unstable, in which case permittee shall remove and pave the
area.
(Ord. 117 § 3.13, 1962)
The city engineer may require all crossings of streets to be
performed by tunneling or boring if in his judgment a serious interruption
of traffic may occur. He may deny all applications to open trench
across streets. In the event such trenching is permitted, trenching
for installation across any intersecting roadway open to traffic shall
be progressive. Not more than one-half of the width of a traveled
way shall be disturbed at one time and the remaining width shall be
kept open to traffic by bridging or backfilling.
(Ord. 117 § 3.14, 1962)
All pipes and conduits laid parallel to the roadway shall be
placed at least five feet from the edge of the pavement or graded
traveled roadway, unless otherwise authorized in writing by the city
engineer. The shallowest portion of any pipe line or other facility
shall be installed not less than thirty inches below the ultimate
grade of the roadway. The applicant shall be responsible for obtaining
all information necessary to establish the ultimate roadway grade
in the event it is not coincidental with the existing roadway surface.
(Ord. 117 § 3.15, 1962)