On unincorporated Trinity County roads, street parking is governed by Title 10 of the County Code together with the California Vehicle Code. Trinity County Code Chapter 10.48 sets time limits and specific no-parking locations in Weaverville and Lewiston, with fines up to $250 for repeat offenders.
Because all of Trinity County is unincorporated, county roads are governed by Trinity County Code Title 10, Chapter 10.48 (Standing, Stopping and Parking) and the California Vehicle Code. The County's published street rules are location-specific. Code §10.48.010 sets a two-hour limit (9 a.m.-6 p.m., Sundays and holidays excepted) on Main Street in Weaverville between Garden Gulch and Oregon Street, and §10.48.020 sets a four-hour limit on the west side of Forest Avenue. Code §10.48.025 imposes a ten-minute limit in front of the South Miner Street post office. Code §10.48.030 lists outright no-parking stretches, including near the Lewiston Fire Hall, on Victory Lane by Trinity High School, on Browns Mountain Road by Bucktail Bridge, and on Highway 299 near Big Flat Campground. Code §10.48.051 also lets the road commissioner prohibit stopping or parking at any place 'determined... to constitute a hazard to traffic, life or property, or an obstruction to vehicular or pedestrian traffic.' Statewide CVC §22500 backstops these rules, barring parking in front of driveways, in crosswalks, within intersections and within 15 feet of fire hydrants. Parking is enforced by the Trinity County Sheriff and the CHP.
Violations of Chapter 10.48 are infractions punishable under Code §10.48.060 by a fine not exceeding $50 for a first violation, $100 for a second within one year, and $250 for each additional violation within one year. Vehicle Code parking rules (CVC §22500) also apply on county roads.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
trinity-county-ca
Trinity County has no ordinance banning backyard composting; home composting of yard and food scraps is allowed. California's SB 1383 organic-waste recycling...
trinity-county-ca
Trinity County has no ordinance prohibiting or specially regulating artificial turf. Synthetic lawns are allowed on residential property, subject only to gen...
trinity-county-ca
Trinity County does not mandate native-plant landscaping for ordinary homes. However, the county cannabis-cultivation rules (Code Ch. 17.43G) require biologi...
trinity-county-ca
Trinity County has no ordinance restricting rooftop rainwater harvesting. Capturing rainwater in barrels and cisterns for outdoor, non-potable use is allowed...
trinity-county-ca
Trinity County has no countywide lawn-watering day/time schedule. Outdoor water use is shaped by the county Water Quality Control Ordinance (Code Ch. 8.60), ...
trinity-county-ca
Trinity County's Vegetation Management Ordinance (Code Ch. 8.68, Ord. No. 1300) declares excessive dry grass, brush, dead trees and other flammable vegetatio...
See how Trinity County's street parking limits rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.