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🚗 Parking Rules/Abandoned Vehicles

Abandoned Vehicles: Jurupa Valley vs Palm Springs

How do abandoned vehicles rules compare between Jurupa Valley, CA and Palm Springs, CA?

Palm Springs has fewer restrictions than Jurupa Valley.

Jurupa Valley, CA

Riverside County

Heavy Restrictions

Jurupa Valley enforces abandoned-vehicle abatement under its Title 10 (Vehicles and Traffic) authority, exercising the power granted by California Vehicle Code §22660 for cities to declare wrecked, dismantled, inoperative, or abandoned vehicles a public nuisance on both public and private property. Vehicles left on a public street 72+ hours may be towed under CVC §22651(k).

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Palm Springs, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Palm Springs enforces California Vehicle Code §22651 and §22669 and Palm Springs Municipal Code Chapter 12 to remove abandoned vehicles from streets and private property. A vehicle left on a public street more than 72 hours, or left on private property without the owner's consent, may be marked, cited, and towed. Reports go to Palm Springs Police non-emergency line or the city's online reporting portal.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactJurupa ValleyPalm Springs
State authorityCVC §22660 - cities may abate abandoned vehicles as public nuisances-
72-hour rulePublic street: tow after 72 consecutive hours (CVC §22651(k))-
Expired registrationTow after registration expired 6+ months (CVC §22651(o))-
FundingRiverside County SAAV ($1 DMV surcharge per CVC §9250.7)-
Report toRiverside County Sheriff Jurupa Valley Station + City Code Enforcement-
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Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Jurupa Valley FAQ

How do I report an abandoned vehicle in Jurupa Valley?

Call the Riverside County Sheriff's Department non-emergency line for vehicles on public streets, or contact Jurupa Valley Code Enforcement (951-332-6464) for vehicles on private property. Provide the vehicle description, license plate (if any), and location.

What makes a vehicle 'abandoned' under California law?

Under CVC §22660 and §22669, an 'abandoned, wrecked, dismantled, or inoperative' vehicle on public or private property may be treated as a public nuisance. The classic indicators are flat tires, missing parts, expired registration, and no movement over an extended period.

Can my own car on my own driveway be abated?

Yes, if it qualifies as inoperative and is visible from public view, it can be subject to a Title 10 / nuisance abatement notice under CVC §22660. Storing the car behind a solid fence or in a garage typically avoids the issue.

Palm Springs FAQ

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