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πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules/Sit-Lie Rules

Long Beach vs Norwalk

How do sit-lie rules rules compare between Long Beach, CA and Norwalk, CA?

Long Beach and Norwalk have similar restriction levels.

Long Beach, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Long Beach Municipal Code Title 10 and Title 14 prohibit obstructing public sidewalks with personal property or seated bodies that block the pedestrian right-of-way, applied with offers of services through the city Health and Human Services Department.

View full Long Beach rules β†’

Norwalk, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

LA County Code Title 13.36 restricts sitting or lying on unincorporated public sidewalks during specified hours, but Martin v. Boise and Jones v. City of Los Angeles bar enforcement when adequate shelter beds are unavailable.

View full Norwalk rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLong BeachNorwalk
CodesLBMC Titles 10, 11, 14-
Federal limitMartin v. Boise-
First stepOutreach offer-
HubMulti-Service Center-
Code section-LACO Title 13.36
Restricted hours-Typically 6 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Constitutional cases-Jones, Martin, Johnson
Enforcement-LA County Sheriff's Department
Shelter referral-LA-HOP system

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Long Beach FAQ

Is sitting on the sidewalk illegal?

Not by itself; only when seating or property fully blocks the pedestrian path, ADA route, transit stop, or business entrance does Long Beach enforce sidewalk-clearance provisions.

Does Martin v. Boise apply here?

Yes, the Ninth Circuit decision restricts citations for sleeping in public when no shelter bed is available, and Long Beach pairs enforcement with offers from its Multi-Service Center.

Norwalk FAQ

Can a deputy cite me for sitting on a sidewalk in Marina del Rey?

Only if shelter is verified available through LA-HOP, the location is during restricted hours, and no disability accommodation applies. Otherwise the citation likely violates Jones and Martin.

Does the rule apply to wheelchairs and disability resting?

No. ADA accommodations override Title 13.36 sit-lie restrictions. Resting due to a disability or medical need is protected, and deputies must allow reasonable pause without citation.

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