In the high-country snow areas (Twain Harte, Mi-Wuk, Pinecrest, Long Barn, Strawberry), Ordinance Code Section 10.28 prohibits parking on the pavement or shoulder during snow-removal operations. The shoulder is defined as 10 feet from the pavement edge. Vehicles left in the way are towed at the owner's expense; the fine is $50 first, $100 second.
Tuolumne County Ordinance Code Section 10.28 ('Snow Removal') prohibits parking on the pavement or road shoulder during snow-removal operations. The county's official Snow Removal Policy states that for purposes of snow storage 'the shoulder is ten feet from the edge of pavement,' and that snow removal is complete only when all snow has been crowded off the pavement onto the shoulder. The policy's warning is explicit: 'VEHICLES LEFT PARKED ON THE PAVEMENT OR SHOULDER WILL BE TOWED AND STORED AT THE OWNER'S EXPENSE,' and 'Parking restrictions in the county right-of-way during snow removal season are strictly enforced; your car will be towed.' Signs noting the policy are posted on roadways near subdivision entrances/exits and on major and minor collectors. Other items left in the right-of-way - boat trailers, wood splitters, basketball hoops, garbage cans - can prevent a road from being plowed and may earn a neon-pink warning card. Under the penalty schedule in Section 10.24.080, a snow-removal-area violation (Section 10.28.010) carries a $50 penalty for a first violation and $100 for a second within one year. The county aims to keep paved county roads below 5,000-foot elevation open; snowplowing typically affects areas such as Twain Harte/Cedar Ridge (above ~3,000 ft), Mi-Wuk (above ~4,000 ft), and Pinecrest (above ~5,000 ft). Caltrans, not the county, plows State Routes 108, 120, and 49.
Parking on the pavement or road shoulder (within 10 feet of the pavement edge) during snow-removal operations violates Section 10.28; the vehicle is towed and stored at the owner's expense. The fine is $50 for a first violation and $100 for a second within one year (Section 10.24.080). Leaving other items (trailers, splitters, cans) in the right-of-way can stop a road from being plowed.
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