The public works director is hereby authorized, subject to the provisions and limitations of this Chapter
10.10 Traffic Regulations, to place, and when required herein shall place, the following curb markings to indicate vehicle stopping, parking or standing regulations, and said curb markings shall have the meanings as herein set forth.
A. A "red"
curb means no stopping, standing or parking at any time, except as
permitted by the
Vehicle Code, and except that a bus may stop in a
red zone marked or signed as a bus zone.
B. A "yellow"
curb means no stopping, standing or parking at any time between seven-thirty
a.m. and six p.m. any day except Sundays (and holidays) for any purpose
other than the loading or unloading of passengers and personal baggage,
or commercial loading or unloading of materials, provided that the
loading or unloading of passengers and baggage shall not consume more
than three minutes, and the commercial loading or unloading of materials
may not last more than twenty minutes. Delivery or pickup of express
and parcel post packages and United States mail is included herein.
C. A "white"
curb means no stopping, standing or parking for any purpose other
than loading or unloading of passengers and personal baggage, which
shall not exceed three minutes, and such restrictions shall apply
at all times except when the businesses abutting said zone are closed.
D. A "green"
curb means no stopping, standing or parking between seven-thirty a.m.
and six p.m. of any day, except holidays, for a period of time longer
than is indicated by an appropriate sign or marking.
E. A "blue"
curb means that parking is limited exclusively to vehicles of disabled
persons.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
No provision of the
Vehicle Code or of this chapter, for which
signs are required shall be enforced against an alleged violator unless
appropriate signs are in place, giving notice of such provisions of
the traffic law.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
The public works director is hereby authorized to mark center
lines and lane lines upon the surface of the roadway, as determined
by the city engineer, to indicate the course to be traveled by vehicles.
As necessary, the public works director may place signs temporarily
designating lanes to be used by traffic moving in a particular direction,
regardless of the center line of the highway.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
Subject to city council direction, the public works director shall remove, relocate or discontinue the operation of any traffic control device not specifically required by state law or this Chapter
10.10 Traffic Regulations, whenever the city engineer determines in any particular case that the conditions which warranted or required this device no longer exist.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
In accordance with state law and the California
Vehicle Code, the city engineer shall determine the hours and days during which any traffic control device shall be in operation or be in effect, except in those cases where such hours or days are specified in this Chapter
10.10 Traffic Regulations, or by resolution of the city council.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
The public works director is authorized to place and maintain
distinctive roadway markings, as described in the
Vehicle Code, on
those streets or portions of streets where the volume of traffic or
the vertical or other curvature of the roadway renders it hazardous
to drive on the left side of such marking or signs and markings.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
No person or agency shall paint any street or curb surface unless authorized by the city engineer; provided, however, that this section shall not apply to the painting of numbers on a curb surface by any association, corporation or person who has complied with the provisions of this Chapter
10.10 Traffic Regulations, or resolution of this city pertaining thereto.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
In accordance with state law and the California
Vehicle Code,
the city engineer is authorized to regulate the timing of traffic
signals so as to permit the movement of traffic in an orderly and
safe manner at speeds slightly at variance from the speed otherwise
generally applicable within the district or at intersections, and
shall erect appropriate signs giving notice thereof.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
In accordance with state law and the California
Vehicle Code,
the city engineer is authorized to determine traffic control devices
within or adjacent to intersections to indicate the course to be traveled
by vehicles turning at such intersections, and is authorized to locate
and indicate more than one lane of traffic from which drivers of vehicles
may make right or left hand turns.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
In accordance with state law and the California
Vehicle Code,
the city engineer is hereby authorized to determine which intersections
the city shall preclude vehicles from making a right, left, or U-turn,
and the public works director shall place proper signs to indicate
such prohibition at all applicable intersections. The making of such
turns may also be prohibited only between certain hours of any day,
in which event such regulations shall be plainly indicated with approved
signage therefor.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
In accordance with state law and the California
Vehicle Code,
the city engineer determines where the making of right turns against
traffic signal "stop" indication would interfere with the safe and
orderly flow of traffic, and thereafter the public works director
shall post appropriate signs prohibiting right turns.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
In accordance with state law and the California
Vehicle Code,
and by a resolution of the city council, the city engineer may designate
any one-way streets and alleys. Thereafter the public works director
shall place and maintain appropriate signage therefor. Signs indicating
the direction of lawful traffic movement shall be placed at every
intersection where movement of traffic in the opposite direction is
prohibited. The regulation and enforcement shall not occur until such
signage is in place.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
In accordance with state law and the California
Vehicle Code,
the city engineer shall have authority to designate those entrances
to an intersection where stop signs are required. The public works
director shall install and maintain the stop signs at such intersections.
Signage shall conform with the Manual of Uniform Traffic Control and
the Caltrans Traffic Manual.
A. Arterial
and Collector Streets. The Manual of Uniform Traffic Controls and
the Caltrans Traffic Manual shall be used as the warrant guidelines
for multi-way stop sign control at intersections where the average
intersection traffic exceeds five hundred vehicles per hour during
the highest volume traffic period of eight hours of the day, with
two hundred vehicles per hour entering from the side streets. Additionally,
stop signs shall be placed at those intersections having five or more
correctable accidents within the latest twelve months period if other
less restrictive measures have been unsuccessful in preventing accidents.
B. Residential
Streets. The warrant guidelines as adopted and used by the Los Angeles
County department of public works shall be used for residential streets
adjacent to schools and local residential neighborhood streets.
1. A
residential intersection adjacent to a school, meeting the following
criteria below, is a candidate for multi-way stop controllers.
a. Volume. The combined pedestrian and vehicular unit volumes entering
the intersection from all approaches should average at least three
hundred fifty units per hour during any two hours of a school day,
and the combined pedestrian and vehicular unit volumes entering the
intersection from the minor or lower volume street should average
at least one hundred forty units per hour during the same two hours.
b. Pedestrian Volume. The pedestrian volume across the uncontrolled
leg(s) must average at least twenty pedestrians per hour during these
same two hours.
2. A
local residential neighborhood intersection meeting two of the criteria
below is a candidate for multiway stop controllers.
a. Volume. Total intersection volume is equal to or greater than three
hundred vehicles per hour average for any seven hours (may include
pedestrians), and side street volume is equal to or greater than one-third
of the total intersection volume for the same seven hours.
b. Collisions. Three or more accidents in a twelve-month period or four
accidents in a twenty-four month period.
c. Visibility. Intersection sight distance is less than one hundred
fifty feet.
d. Speed. The 85th percentile speed on the uncontrolled street is greater
than thirty-five miles per hour.
e. Volume Adjustment Factors. Volume criteria reduced to sixty percent
of the above volume threshold, if all the following are met: there
is residential frontage with a twenty-five mile per hour speed limit,
neither street is more than forty feet wide, no other stop signs or
traffic controls are located within six hundred feet of the proposed
location for the stop sign, and the intersection is located near an
activity center and twenty-five pedestrians cross through the intersection
during any consecutive two hour period.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
No person shall deface, mark, alter, damage, mar, draw on or
in any other way destroy, ruin, disfigure or impair any placed pavement
or freshly painted marking or traffic signage on any street or sidewalk
when a barrier, sign, delineation or any other traffic control device
is in place clearly marking off the area to pedestrian and/or vehicle
traffic.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
No person shall enter a street or portion of a street when a
sign or barrier is in place indicating that the street or any portion
thereof is closed to vehicular traffic.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
No person shall place, cause to be placed, leave, push or propel
in any manner any bicycle, motorcycle or any other vehicle upon any
pedestrian walkway, which the city council by resolution, has specifically
designated as reserved for pedestrian use only.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
Except where otherwise indicated by a crosswalk or other official
traffic control device, a pedestrian shall cross a roadway at right
angles to the curb or by the shortest route to the opposite curb.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)
No person or government agency shall operate any train in such
a manner as to prevent vehicular use of any roadway for a period of
time in excess of five consecutive minutes except:
A. When
necessary to comply with signals affecting the safety of the movement
of trains;
B. When
necessary to avoid striking any object or person on the track;
C. When
the train is in motion except while engaged in switching operations;
D. When
the train is disabled;
E. When
there is no vehicular traffic waiting to use the crossing; or
F. When
necessary to comply with a governmental safety regulation.
(Ord. 934-03 § 1)