A. 
Unless the contrary is stated or clearly appears from the context, the following definitions govern the construction of the words and phrases used in this chapter. Words and phrases not defined by this section have the meaning set forth elsewhere in this code, the California Business and Professions Code, California Vehicle Code, or California Government Code. If a term or phrase is not defined in this part, or elsewhere in this code, the most common dictionary definition is presumed to be correct.
B. 
For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions shall apply:
"Building"
means a structure of a permanent nature located or constructed on a parcel of land, and shall include but not be restricted to, dwelling, hotel, apartment house, apartment, court, rooming house, boarding home for the aged, motel, cottage, house trailer, commercial establishment, store, office, plant, factory, warehouse, and similar buildings.
"Certified farmers' market"
means a location operated in accordance with Chapter 10.5 (commencing with Section 47000) of Division 17 of the Food and Agricultural Code and any regulations adopted pursuant to that chapter.
"City"
means the city of Yucaipa.
"City council"
means the city council of the city of Yucaipa.
"Employ"
means retain, hire or engage.
"Fire station"
means any facility where fire engines and other equipment of the Yucaipa fire department are housed within the city.
"Food"
means any item provided in Health and Safety Code Section 113781, or any successor section.
"Food truck" or "truck"
means any vehicle or trailer, as those terms are defined in the California Vehicle Code, which is equipped or used for retail sales of produce and/or prepared, pre-packaged or unprepared, unpackaged food or foodstuffs of any kind on any public street, alley or highway or private street or alley within the city. The inventory of these vehicles is not necessarily limited to edible items and may include non-food sundries.
"Food truck activities" or "food truck activity"
means actions that qualify a person as a mobile food truck operator or actions done in anticipation of becoming a food truck operator such as, but not limited to, placement, or maintenance of any food truck.
"Food truck operator" or "operator"
means any entity and all person(s) that:
1. 
Owns, controls, manages, and/or leases a food truck ; and/or
2. 
Contracts with any person(s) to drive, operate, prepare food in, and/or vend from, a food truck; and/or
3. 
Drive, operate, vend and/or prepare food in or from a food truck.
"Immediate vicinity"
means the streets abutting an activity or event (and any contiguous parking areas), the sidewalks on either side of such streets, as well as any open or unoccupied space between the activity or event and the abutting streets and sidewalks.
"Park"
means a public park owned or operated by the city.
"Parkway(s)"
means that portion of a public street which is not improved for actual street, curb, gutter, or sidewalk use, and which is available for planting, landscaping, and/or maintaining street trees.
"Pathway"
means a paved path or walkway owned by the city or other public entity that is specifically designed for pedestrian travel, other than a sidewalk.
"Permit"
means a city of Yucaipa itinerant vendor permit issued and managed by the city department designated by the city manager in addition to any other required permits, including a general business license.
"Public property"
means any real property owned, leased, operated, or controlled by the city of Yucaipa other than a street alley, parkway, sidewalk or other area dedicated, identified or used as a public right-of-way.
"Public right-of-way"
means any public street, road, avenue, highway, named or unnamed alley, lane, court, place, trail, parkway, sidewalk or other public way, operated and/or controlled by the city or other public entity, or subject to an easement owned by or dedicated or granted to city. For purposes of this chapter, public right-of-way does not include parking lots owned, operated and/or controlled by the city or other public entity.
"Residential"
means any area zoned or used exclusively as residential in the city.
"Sidewalk"
means any portion of a highway, other than the street or roadway, set apart by curbs, barriers, markings or other delineation specifically designed for pedestrian travel and that is owned by the city or other public entity, excluding any parkway.
"Special event"
means a city-sponsored or city-permitted event including, but not limited to, carnivals, sporting events, fairs, art shows, and/or cultural events.
"Swap meet"
means a location operated in accordance with Article 6 commencing with Section 21660) of Chapter 9 of Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, and any regulations adopted pursuant to that chapter, or any successor chapter.
"Vend" or "vending"
shall mean any act of soliciting, displaying, offering for sale for monetary consideration, or sale, of any goods or merchandise to the public; offering produce, prepared food, prepackaged food or nonfood sundries of any kind for sale from a food truck on a public right-of-way and/or private property and includes the movement or parking of a food truck for the purpose of searching for, obtaining or soliciting retail sales of produce, prepared food, prepackaged food or nonfood sundries.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
A. 
The city council hereby finds that, to promote the health, safety and welfare, restrictions on food truck activity are necessary in part to:
1. 
Ensure no interference with the performance of public safety officers including, police, firefighter, lifeguard, security and emergency medical personnel services.
2. 
Ensure no interference with pedestrian or vehicular traffic including ingress into, or egress from, any residence, public building, or place of business, or from the street to the sidewalk, by persons exiting or entering parked or standing vehicles.
3. 
Ensure no interference with barriers (bollards, vehicles, cement or water) designed to stop vehicles and prevent injury to people.
4. 
Provide reasonable access for food truck activities in portions of the city while preserving the use and maintenance of public rights-of-way, poles, posts, traffic signs or signals, hydrants, restrooms, trash receptacles, firefighting apparatus, mailboxes, public benches and/or planters, as well as access to locations used for public transportation services.
5. 
Reduce exposure to the city for personal injury or property damage claims and litigation.
6. 
Ensure the safe sale of food and merchandise in the public right-of-way by providing the public a simple way to ensure food truck operators prepare food safely and according to San Bernardino department of public health requirements.
7. 
Prevent unsanitary conditions and ensure trash and debris in the areas where vending is taking place are removed by food truck operators.
8. 
Ensure that visibility, sight lines, and accessibility for vehicular and pedestrian traffic on sidewalks and other public rights-of-way are protected while accommodating food truck equipment.
9. 
Protect the flow of pedestrian or vehicular traffic including ingress into, or egress from, any residence, public building, or place of business, or from the street to the sidewalk, by persons exiting or entering parked or standing vehicles.
10. 
Ensure reasonable access for the use and maintenance of sidewalks, pathways, poles, posts, traffic signs or signals, hydrants, restrooms, trash receptacles, firefighting apparatus, mailboxes, public benches and/or planters, as well as access to locations used for public transportation services.
11. 
Mitigate the impacts of food truck activity and protect the unique characteristics of the city.
B. 
The city council hereby finds that the unique characteristics of the city require certain restrictions on food truck activities as follows:
1. 
The city council finds that food truck operators in the city seek and do draw patrons to their food and merchandise. This can create serious safety problems by impacting the ability of pedestrians to move safely on sidewalks and through crosswalks and impeding the response time of safety personnel, particularly in city parks and in residential areas. Food truck operators can also impact access to and egress from businesses. This chapter imposes reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions on food truck operators to the extent necessary to ensure the safety of food truck operators, their patrons, and the general public and to prevent unreasonable interference with residents' enjoyment of peace and quiet in the city;
2. 
The city's parks provide passive and active recreational opportunities; restrictions on food truck activity are necessary to protect the health, safety and welfare of those persons engaged in, and the spectators of, active sports activities, the recreational opportunities, as well as protect the scenic and natural character of these parks; and
3. 
The city seeks to preserve the peace and quiet of the residential zones of the city, by prohibiting commercial activities such as food truck activity.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
A. 
No person shall own, control, operate, manage, lease, or contract with any other person for the operation of a food truck in the city without an itinerant vendor permit. It is unlawful for any person to operate a food truck or allow food truck activities in the city without having a current and valid itinerant vendor permit obtained from the city. A copy of the itinerant vendor permit shall be displayed in conspicuous view on each food truck at all times business is conducted.
B. 
Every food truck shall have the name, address, and telephone number of the holder of the itinerant vendor permit permanently affixed on both the left and right sides of the food truck. Such information shall be in letters and numerals not less than four inches (4") in height and shall be in contrast to the color of the background upon which the letters are placed.
C. 
A written application for an itinerant vendor permit shall be filed with the city manager, or the city manager's designee, on a form provided by the city and shall contain the following information:
1. 
The name, address, and telephone number of the person applying to become a food truck operator;
2. 
If the operator is an agent of an individual, company, partnership, or corporation, the name and business address, phone number, and email address of the principal of such entity;
3. 
The name, address, and telephone number of the operator who will be in charge of any food truck activity and/or be responsible for the person(s) working at any food truck;
4. 
The name, address, and telephone number of all persons that will be employed as food truck operators;
5. 
The number of trucks the food truck operator will operate within the city under the itinerant vendor permit;
6. 
The location(s) in the city where the food truck operator intends to operate;
7. 
The day(s) and hours of operation the food truck operator intends to operate at such location(s);
8. 
Copies of valid driver's licenses for all individuals who will be driving the food truck(s);
9. 
A description of the type of food(s) to be sold from a food truck, whether such food(s) is prepared on site, whether such food will require a heating element inside or on the food truck for food preparation, and the type of heating element if any;
10. 
A copy of the county health permit for each food truck;
11. 
The address of the approved commissary where the food truck is stored overnight, and a copy of the lease or other documentation establishing storage at the commissary is authorized;
12. 
Proof that the food truck operator possesses a valid California Department of Tax and Fee Administration seller's permit which notes the city as a location or sublocation, which shall be maintained for the duration of the operator's itinerant vendor permit;
13. 
An acknowledgement that the food truck operator will obtain and maintain throughout the duration of any permit issued under this section public liability insurance and property damage insurance, including general commercial liability coverage in an amount not less than one million dollars ($1,000,000.00);
14. 
An acknowledgement that use of public property is at the food truck operator's own risk, and the city does not take any steps to ensure public property is safe or conducive to the food truck activities;
15. 
An acknowledgment that the food truck operator will comply with all other applicable local, state, and federal laws;
16. 
A certification that under penalty of perjury, to the applicant's knowledge and belief, the information contained within the application is true and correct;
17. 
A list of all other cities or other jurisdictions in which the food truck operator has operated a food truck within the past twelve (12) months, whether a permit was required to operate, and, if so, whether the permit has been revoked in the past twelve (12) months; and
18. 
Any other relevant information required by the city manager, or the city manager's designee.
D. 
Such application shall be accompanied by the nonrefundable itinerant vendor permit application fee as established by resolution of the city council.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
A. 
Within sixty (60) calendar days of receiving a complete application, the city manager, or the city manager's designee may issue an itinerant vendor permit to a food truck operator if he or she finds, based on all of the relevant information, that:
1. 
The conduct of such food truck activity will not unduly interfere with traffic or pedestrian movement, or tend to interfere with or endanger the public peace or rights of nearby residents to the quiet and peaceable enjoyment of their property, or otherwise be detrimental to the public peace, health, safety or general welfare or encourage loitering;
2. 
The conduct of such food truck activity will not unduly interfere with normal governmental or city operations, threaten to result in damage or detriment to public property, or result in the city incurring costs or expenditures in either money or personnel not reimbursed in advance by the food truck operator;
3. 
The conduct of such food truck activity will not constitute a fire hazard;
4. 
The conduct of such food truck activity will not require the diversion of police officers to properly police the area of such activity as to interfere with normal police protection for other areas of the city;
5. 
The food truck operator has paid any/all administrative fines associated with a previous violation of this chapter;
6. 
The food truck operator has not had a previous itinerant vendor permit for food truck activity revoked by the city within the past five (5) years;
7. 
The application for a food truck operator contains all required information and the food truck operator has not made a materially false, misleading or fraudulent statement of fact to the city in the application process;
8. 
The food truck operator has satisfied all the requirements of this chapter;
9. 
The food truck operator has paid the itinerant vendor permit fee;
10. 
The food truck operator's truck and proposed activities conform to the requirements of this chapter;
11. 
The food truck operator has provided adequate insurance to protect the city from liability associated with sidewalk vendor activities, as determined by the city manager or the city manager's designee;
12. 
The food truck operator has not had an individual or business permit or license with any agency, board, city, county, territory, or state denied, revoked, restricted, or suspended within the last five (5) years; and
13. 
The food truck operator has not been subject to an injunction for nuisance, as defined by state or local laws, within the last five (5) years.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
It is unlawful for any person to operate a food truck in the city without a current and valid permit, certificate, or other authorization as required by the County of San Bernardino department of environmental health. A copy of said health permit shall be kept in the food truck at all times and displayed in conspicuous view upon each food truck.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
All itinerant vendor permits for food truck operators issued under this chapter shall expire within a year from the date of issuance, unless earlier revoked in accordance with the provisions of this section. An application to renew an itinerant vendor permit shall be made not later than thirty (30) days before the expiration of the current itinerant vendor permit.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
Itinerant vendor permits for food truck operators are non-transferable. Any change in ownership or operation of a food truck requires a new itinerant vendor permit as set forth in this chapter.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
A. 
Special events. A food truck operating as part of a city-approved special event is exempt from the itinerant-vendor permit otherwise required by this chapter, provided the operator complies with all conditions of the special-event permit issued under Chapter 5.16.
B. 
Single truck on private property for private purposes. A single food truck may operate on private property without an itinerant-vendor permit when all of the following conditions are met:
1. 
Written permission. The property owner or lawful lessee/tenant has given written authorization to the truck operator. The written permission must specify the contracted vendor's business name and the dates and times which they are permitted to operate. The truck operator must maintain possession of the written permission at all times while operating within the city limits.
2. 
Location. The truck is parked entirely on that private property.
3. 
Guests only. Service is limited to the guests of the property owner or lawful lessee/tenant, and no sales are made to the general public.
4. 
Point-of-sale. Food truck operator must possess a valid California Department of Tax and Fee Administration seller's permit which notes the City of Yucaipa as a location or sublocation, which shall be maintained during the dates of operation within the City of Yucaipa.
C. 
City-sponsored events on city property. This chapter does not apply to a food truck operating at a city event or on city property when authorized by the City Manager or designee. The authorizing agreement must include conditions that satisfy the purposes of this chapter.
D. 
Public property/right-of-way adjacent to a qualifying business. A food truck may operate on public property or in the public right-of-way immediately adjacent to a qualifying brick-and-mortar business without an itinerant-vendor permit, subject to the following:
1. 
Qualifying host business. The adjacent business must be one whose primary activity involves on-premises consumption of beverages-such as a bar, brewery taproom, winery or distillery tasting room, or similar establishment.
2. 
License agreement/encroachment permit. The property owner or lawful lessee/tenant shall obtain a license agreement, in the case of public property, or an encroachment permit, in the case of public right-of-way, from the city. The permit is subject to all conditions imposed by the city manager or designee, which may include: general-liability and automobile insurance naming the city as an additional insured; indemnification and defense of the city; temporary traffic-control and parking-management measures; sanitation, grease-capture, and waste-disposal requirements; hours and manner of operation; noise-mitigation measures; and restoration of the right-of-way. The city manager is authorized to negotiate and enter into such license agreements and encroachment permits for the purposes of this section.
3. 
Point-of-sale. Food truck operator must possess a valid California Department of Tax and Fee Administration seller's permit which notes the City of Yucaipa as a location or sublocation, which shall be maintained during the dates of operation within the City of Yucaipa.
4. 
Records. The host business shall maintain records of the dates and names of food truck businesses that serve their subject site. Such records shall be furnished to the city manager or their designee on a monthly basis.
5. 
Appearance limit. A food truck operating under this subsection may appear no more than ten (10) days in any calendar year city-wide without first obtaining an itinerant-vendor permit.
6. 
Compliance and removal. The host business must ensure continuous compliance with all encroachment-permit conditions and shall cause the truck to relocate or cease operations immediately upon order of the city for public-safety or operational reasons.
E. 
County health permit. Notwithstanding the above, any person operating a food truck must comply with the provisions of Section 5.13.050. It is the responsibility of the qualifying host business to ensure their contracted food vendors comply and maintain compliance with all applicable state and county health standards and permits.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024; Ord. 461 § 2, 2025)
All operators shall comply with the following regulations:
A. 
The food truck shall be in full compliance with all parking and vehicle code provisions which apply to the location at which it is parked from time to time, including the maximum allowed parking time limit for the parking space(s) occupied.
B. 
No additional lighting other than that required by the California Vehicle Code may be installed or operated on a food truck. No food truck that is stopped, parked or standing on any public right-of-way shall display flashing neon or electronic display signs or visual displays that are intended to, or do in fact, distract drivers and draw attention to the food truck.
C. 
No food truck operator shall operate any sound amplification systems or other sound making devices or music systems to advertise, draw attention to, or announce the presence of any such vehicle while such vehicle is moving, stopped, standing, or parked upon any public right-of-way or private street.
D. 
No food truck shall operate before 7:00 a.m. or after 10:00 p.m., including set-up and cleanup, except for private catering functions on private property or special events.
E. 
Food trucks may only operate on a public right-of-way while parked in a legal parking space.
F. 
Food trucks may only operate on private property with the written authorization of the property owner or lawful lessee/tenant.
G. 
No food truck may operate in the public right-of-way on the same block for longer than six (6) hours. The time period is cumulative for all time that the food truck is operating on the same block in each twenty-four (24)-hour period, and does not start over by moving the food truck to another parking space on the same block or closing the sales window between sales. The time limit does not include set-up or clean-up time, provided that the food truck is not vending or not ready to serve customers during set-up or clean-up.
H. 
No operator shall operate on the public right-of-way within one (1) block of a school, park, community center or public playground facility; provided, however, that operation at or near a city park is permissible when it has been approved by the city in conjunction with a special event.
I. 
No operator shall permit the food truck to vend within one hundred (100) feet of a marked or unmarked crosswalk.
J. 
Food trucks on the public right-of-way shall be parked directly adjacent to a paved sidewalk, free and clear for pedestrian passage. Food service shall be limited solely to that side of the food truck facing the adjacent sidewalk. No food truck may dispense food street side. Under no circumstances may vending occur from the left side of a food truck. Notwithstanding the above provisions, no person shall vend to any customer whose location creates a traffic hazard.
K. 
No food truck shall be parked, stopped, or left standing in any manner which blocks or impedes vehicular access to any driveway or restricts the free movement of other vehicles upon any public right-of-way. Vending shall only be permitted where the food truck has been brought to a complete stop and parked adjacent to the curb in a lawful manner.
L. 
All food trucks shall be equipped with conspicuous refuse containers clearly marked with a sign requesting their use by patrons. The refuse containers must be large enough to contain all trash and refuse generated by the operation of the food truck. The operator of the food truck shall pick up all trash and refuse generated by the operator's vending during the time the food truck is stopped, that is within no less than a one hundred (100) foot radius of the food truck vehicle, before such food truck is moved. The food truck shall take all bags with them when vacating an area. Trash is to include all materials originally dispensed from the food truck as well as any other items left by patrons, such as cigarette butts.
M. 
Restocking of a food truck is prohibited while the food truck is on any public right-of-way.
N. 
No food truck shall attach to or receive any electrical power or other utilities from any public or private property while the food truck is located on any public right-of-way.
O. 
Vending is prohibited from a food truck that is parked, stopped, or standing on any public right-of-way where the posted speed limit on the public street, alley, or highway is forty (40) miles per hour or greater.
P. 
No food truck shall operate in such a way so as to cause an unacceptable reduction in sight distance for any cross street, crosswalk, driveway or any other similar location where traffic, be it vehicular, pedestrian or bicycle, can be expected to enter the roadway.
Q. 
No operator of a food truck shall permit objects, including but not limited to tables, chairs, or other furniture, trash receptacles, generators or equipment, to be placed into that portion of the street, alley or highway which is open to vehicular traffic, nor shall any object, including but not limited to tables, chairs, other furniture, trash receptacles, generators or equipment, be placed within or upon the parkway or sidewalk.
R. 
The food truck operations shall not obstruct pedestrian or vehicular traffic.
S. 
The food truck shall not encroach onto a public sidewalk with any part of the vehicle or any other equipment or furniture related to the operation of its business, except for required refuse and recycling receptacles, provided they maintain a clear four-foot pedestrian walkway.
T. 
The food truck shall be operated within five hundred (500) feet travel distance of an approved and readily available toilet and handwashing facility, or as otherwise approved by the city manager, or the city manager's designee, to ensure that restroom facilities are available to facility employees whenever the food truck is stopped to conduct business for more than a one-hour period.
U. 
In conformance with the California Retail Food Code, food trucks shall be stored at or within an approved commissary in order to have protection from unsanitary conditions. Food trucks shall not be stored overnight outside of an approved commissary.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
Any food truck operator permit may be revoked by the city manager, or the city manager's designee for good cause shown, including but not necessarily limited to any of the following reasons:
A. 
Citation for operator's third or subsequent violation of the requirements set forth in this chapter.
B. 
Falsification of any information supplied by the food truck operator upon which issuance of the permit was based.
C. 
Failure of the food truck operator, or any employees or subcontractors of the operator, to comply with the regulations set forth in this chapter.
D. 
Conviction of a violation, or plea of guilty or nolo contendere, by the food truck operator, or any employee, subcontractor or independent contractor of the permittee, of any federal or state law, or municipal ordinance while in the course of conducting food truck activity pursuant to the city itinerant vendor permit.
E. 
Conviction of a violation, or a plea of guilty or nolo contendere, by the food truck operator of any applicable provision or requirement of this section.
F. 
Conviction of, or a plea of guilty or nolo contendere, by the food truck operator of any misdemeanor, or conspiracy to commit, or attempt to commit, the same, which is a crime of moral turpitude or a crime that is violent or sexual in nature, as defined by state and/or local law.
G. 
No food truck operator whose permit is revoked shall be eligible to apply for a new permit for a period of one (1) year following such revocation.
H. 
In the event of a food truck operator who owns more than one (1) truck, the revocation shall apply to the permit for each truck.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
Any food truck operator applicant or permittee who is aggrieved by any decision of the city manager regarding the issuance, conditioning, denial, suspension or revocation of food truck operator permit may contest the decision in accordance with the procedures set forth in Chapter 1.13 of Title 1 of this code.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
The city council finds and declares that food truck activity conducted in violation of the provisions of this chapter constitutes a public nuisance subject to abatement.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
A. 
Any person who violates any provision of this chapter, or who fails to comply with any obligation or requirement of this chapter, is guilty of a misdemeanor unless the offense is charged as an infraction by a prosecuting attorney.
B. 
Each person shall be guilty of a separate offense for each and every day, or part thereof, during which a violation of this chapter, or of any law or regulation referenced on this chapter, is allowed, committed, continued, maintained or permitted by such person, and shall be punishable accordingly.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
Any person violating the provisions of this code may be issued an administrative citation by an enforcement officer as provided in Chapter 1.13 of Title 1 of this code.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
Any administrative citation pursuant to this chapter shall not prejudice or adversely affect any other civil, administrative or criminal action that may be brought to abate a nuisance food truck or to seek compensation for damages suffered. A civil or criminal action may be brought concurrently with any other process regarding the same violation.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)
If any section, subsection, paragraph, sentence, clause or phrase of this chapter is declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be unconstitutional or otherwise invalid, such decision shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this chapter. The city council declares that it would have adopted this chapter, and each section, subsection, paragraph, sentence, clause, phrase or portion thereof, irrespective of the fact that any one or more sections, subsections, phrases, clauses or portions be declared invalid or unconstitutional.
(Ord. 444 § 2, 2024)