(A) It shall be unlawful for any person to enter or remain within any parking garage or parking lot owned by the city or within a public parking section of any privately-owned parking garage or parking lot located within the city’s corporate boundaries at a time or in a manner that warrants a justifiable and reasonable alarm or immediate concern for the safety of persons or property in the parking garage, parking lot, or surrounding area.
(B) It shall be unlawful for any person to enter or remain within any parking garage or parking lot owned by the city or within a public parking section of any privately-owned parking garage or parking lot located within the city’s corporate boundaries if such person would create or cause to be created any of the following:
(1) Actual or danger of a breach of the peace;
(2) The unreasonable danger of a disturbance to the safety of any person in a parking garage, parking lot, public way, street, highway, place or alley;
(3) The obstruction or attempted obstruction of the free normal flow of vehicular traffic or the normal passage of pedestrian traffic in or upon any parking garage, parking lot, public way, street, highway, place or alley;
(4) The obstruction or interference or attempt to obstruct or interfere with any person lawfully on or in a public way, street, highway, place or alley, in a manner that would cause a reasonable person or pedestrian of a parking garage, parking lot, public way, street, highway, place or alley to fear for his or her safety; or
(5) The obstruction or interference of patrons in the normal course of business.
(C) It shall be unlawful for any person to remain within any parking garage or parking lot owned by the city or within a public parking section a privately-owned parking garage or parking lot located within the city’s corporate boundaries, after being directed by a uniformed or otherwise properly identified city police officer to leave the premises.
(Ord. 031824, passed 3-18-24) Penalty, see § 132.99