Unincorporated Shasta County has no special ordinance restricting oversized vehicles such as motorhomes, large trucks, or trailers on residential streets. The California Vehicle Code controls; the county may restrict oversized parking only on signed roads, and oversized vehicles left too long can be abated as abandoned.
Shasta County's code does not contain a height-, length-, or weight-based street parking restriction targeting oversized vehicles in residential neighborhoods. Under California Vehicle Code Section 22507, a county may, by ordinance or resolution, prohibit or restrict parking of vehicles - including large commercial or oversized vehicles - on specified roads or within 100 feet of an intersection, but the restriction takes effect only after signs or markings giving adequate notice are posted. On unsigned county roads, an oversized vehicle is governed by the general Vehicle Code, including the prohibited-location list in CVC Section 22500 (no parking on sidewalks, crosswalks, in front of driveways, etc.). The county does not require a permit to keep a personal motorhome or large trailer on a county road for ordinary periods. The main enforcement lever is the abandoned-vehicle chapter: under Code Section 10.04.020, any vehicle - including an oversized one - left standing on a highway for 120 or more consecutive hours becomes an 'abandoned vehicle' subject to Sheriff abatement under Chapter 10.04. On private property, zoning Section 17.86.070 keeps required residential parking out of front and street-side yards.
An oversized vehicle violates parking rules on a county road only where a signed restriction exists (CVC Section 22507) or where it sits in a prohibited spot under CVC Section 22500. Otherwise, the principal exposure is abatement as an abandoned vehicle after 120 consecutive hours under Code Chapter 10.04, enforced by the Sheriff. Report stranded oversized vehicles to Code Enforcement at (530) 225-5761.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Redding, CA
Redding requires every outdoor residential pool to be enclosed by a permanent barrier at least 60 inches (5 feet) tall, with a maximum 2-inch bottom clearanc...
Redding, CA
Redding's Zoning Code §18.40.180 governs allowed fence materials in residential and other districts, while RMC §18.51.040(D) outright prohibits fences and wa...
Redding, CA
Redding's Zoning Code (RMC §18.40.180) regulates fence height, location, and materials, but private boundary-fence disputes are governed by California Civil ...
Redding, CA
Redding does not require a building permit for fences seven feet or shorter located at least 10 feet from a public right-of-way, per California Building Code...
Redding, CA
Redding does not impose an absolute numerical cap on the number of dogs or cats per household. Title 7 of the Redding Municipal Code regulates licensing, vac...
Redding, CA
Redding does not have a dedicated wildlife-feeding ordinance, but feeding wildlife in ways that draw nuisance conditions is reachable under Zoning Ordinance ...
See how Redding's oversized vehicle parking rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.