The city council finds that the unauthorized use of certain areas for camping purposes and the storage of personal property interfere with the rights of others to use the areas for which they were intended and create a public health and safety hazard that adversely affects residential and commercial areas.
The city council further finds that camping or storing personal property near the high water mark of waterways poses a serious risk to the quality of the waterways and the health and safety of citizens using the waterways and results in abandoned, unattended, or unsecured property polluting the waterways during high water flows.
The city council further finds that camping or storing personal property on, upon, or within a fifty-foot clear zone of the landside toe of the levees that protect the city of Marysville and its residents from flooding poses a threat to the public health, safety, and welfare by compromising the integrity of the levee system which could result in a catastrophic failure of the levee protections.
The city council further finds that abandoned, unattended, or unsecured personal property, especially such property which is a biological or health hazard, creates pollution and adversely affects waterways, residential areas, and commercial areas and the health, safety and welfare of the people who live, work, and visit the city.
The city council further finds that unsanitary conditions and premises that contain an accumulation of junk, trash, debris, dead organic matter, offal, stagnant water, rodent harborages, or biological hazards are injurious to the health, safety, and welfare of the people who live, work, and visit the city and such conditions have a significant potential to cause economic or physical injury to persons and property.
The city council further finds that camping or storing personal property on private property without the consent of the owner adversely affects private property rights as well as the health, safety, and welfare of the owner and the public generally.
(Ord. 1421 § 2 (part), 2019)