A curb on RV parking?
Ellen McCarty
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- Perry Goldstein was alarmed when he noticed an RV’s
power cord draped across his sidewalk in August -- right in the path of
where children play and ride their bikes.
“At best case, the children trip on it,” he said. “At worst, a bicycle
chain pierces the cord and the child gets electrocuted.”
The recreational vehicle also blocks the view of children playing in the
street, he said. Goldstein called police and City Hall to report the
problem, but learned there are no laws restricting recreational vehicles
in Fountain Valley.
Although the city’s parking code does not allow overnight parking for
trailers and boats because they block visibility, RVs, often much larger,
are subject to the same law as cars. They must be moved every 72 hours.
While running power cords or other items across streets and sidewalks
violates city code, parking an RV on residential streets is perfectly
legal.
But some say it shouldn’t be.
In 1985, the City Council tried to amend the law to force RV owners to
store their vehicles on parking lots. Storage could have cost owners up
to $100, and “It turned into a fiasco,” said City Manager Ray Kromer.
“Those that owned RVs were extremely adamant that the reason they bought
homes in Fountain Valley was because they could park in the street. Those
who didn’t own RVs said the vehicles pose safety and aesthetic problems.”
The city grappled with the problem for a year, he said, and after no
resolution, everyone stepped back from the issue.
“It still raises its head every few years during the summer months,” he
said.
This summer Goldstein threw down the gauntlet.
“I resent the fact that people bought these vehicles knowing there was a
financial obligation to maintain them, yet they take advantage of a
loophole in the law that allows them to park for free,” Goldstein said
this week. “It’s unsafe and unattractive.”
Some city officials empathize with Goldstein.
“If you’re pulling out at an intersection, it’s tough looking around
those things,” Kromer said.
Because there are so many people on both sides of the issue, it lends
itself to a ballot initiative, he added.
But Goldstein said he doesn’t have time to collect the required 4,500
signatures to get it on the ballot.
“I have two 18-month-old twins and a full-time job,” he said. “I don’t
have time to stand in front of Ralphs on weeknights and weekends.”
Last week, he attacked City Council, saying elected representatives
should resolve the problem.
“Politicians stopped people from smoking in the workplace,” he said. “It
took political courage, and that’s something you lack. Before any child
is hurt, before any blood is lost, do something to put teeth into this
law.”
Goldstein said he will continue to protest RVs at upcoming City Council
meetings until the law changes. He said securing his children’s long-term
safety is a bigger priority.
“I’m paid to be a salesman, and I’m very persistent,” he said. “I’m not
afraid to be outspoken.”
Goldstein added that, at the very least, he wants to talk with city
officials and RV owners about creating a city lot where RVs can be parked
at a discounted rate.
Betty Blank, a member of the Fountain Valley Recreational Vehicle Assn.,
said storage doesn’t protect the RVs, some worth $700,000, from
vandalism. And owners have a right to park on city streets.
“Why are the children playing in the street?” she said. “That’s not where
they’re supposed to be playing.”
She added that a few of the association’s 1,000 members will attend the
next City Council meeting to make sure both sides of the issue are
represented.
“I hate to have to fight with them,” she said. “People get so irate about
this issue. But if they’re going to make noise, we’re going to make
noise.”
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