SCCC Chapter 9.57 prohibits abandoning a vehicle on a public street or highway. A vehicle left 72+ hours without moving 1,000 feet is deemed abandoned; the Sheriff issues a 10-day abatement notice before towing. Inoperable, stripped vehicles can be removed immediately, and recovery requires a $50 minimum administrative fee plus costs.
Santa Cruz County Code Section 9.57.050 makes it unlawful to abandon a vehicle on a public highway or street. Under SCCC 9.57.020 an 'abandoned vehicle' is one left in such inoperable or neglected condition that the owner's intent to relinquish it may reasonably be concluded, or one left for 72 hours without being moved more than 1,000 feet that appears deserted. For an operable but deserted vehicle, SCCC 9.57.070 directs the Sheriff to wait for the 72-hour period, then issue a 10-day notice of intention to abate and remove before towing. SCCC 9.57.080 allows immediate removal, without the 10-day notice, of vehicles that lack an engine, transmission, wheels, tires, doors, or windshield and are declared a public-health hazard. After removal, SCCC 9.57.090 requires written notice to the registered and legal owners within 48 hours, with a right to a post-storage hearing. To recover a vehicle, SCCC 9.57.110 requires the owner to pay removal costs plus an administrative fee of $50.00 (or the Unified Fee Schedule amount, whichever is greater), plus storage paid directly to the tow company. SCCC 9.57.060 presumes the last registered owner is responsible. The chapter rests on California Vehicle Code Sections 22669 and 22651.
Towing and storage at the owner's expense, a $50.00 (or greater) administrative fee, and citations issued by the Sheriff under California Penal Code Section 836.5 (SCCC 9.57.120).
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Santa Cruz, CA
Beyond the nighttime curfew, Santa Cruz prohibits at any hour any noise that is unreasonably disturbing or physically annoying to people of ordinary sensitiv...
Santa Cruz, CA
No Santa Cruz-specific ordinance directly regulates aircraft noise in flight; such regulation is federally preempted by the FAA, and California PUC 21669 set...
Santa Cruz, CA
California's Good Neighbor Fence Act presumes adjoining Santa Cruz landowners share equally in the cost of building, maintaining, or replacing a boundary fen...
Santa Cruz, CA
Santa Cruz treats hedges like fences: hedges or dense plantings over three feet six inches may not be grown within the required front or exterior side yard s...
Santa Cruz, CA
In the exterior side yard, a Santa Cruz fence must be set back at least three feet from the property line to reach six feet; fences nearer the line or in the...
Santa Cruz, CA
Santa Cruz prohibits barbed-wire fences, electrified or not, without a conditional fence permit, and bars any fence that creates a fire or traffic hazard. Ca...
See how Santa Cruz's abandoned vehicles rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.