303.01 COMPLIANCE WITH POLICE ORDERS; FLEEING; EMERGENCIES; SCHOOL GUARDS. (RECODIFIED IN PART)
   (a)    (EDITOR'S NOTE: Subsection (a) hereof was recodified as part of the 1990 updating and revision of these Codified Ordinances. See Section 606.165 of the General Offenses Code.)
   (b)    (EDITOR'S NOTE: Subsection (b) hereof was recodified as part of the 1990 updating and revision of these Codified Ordinances. See Section 606.165 of the General Offenses Code.)
   (c)    Police officers may direct or regulate traffic in accordance with the provisions of this Traffic Code, provided that in the event of fire or other emergency or to expedite traffic or safeguard pedestrians, they are authorized to direct traffic as conditions may require notwithstanding the provisions of this Traffic Code. Firemen, when at the scene of a fire, may direct or assist the police in directing traffic thereat or in the immediate vicinity. The direction of traffic may be by word or audible signal, by gesture or visible signal or by any combination thereof. No person shall fail to comply with any lawful order or direction of any police officer or fireman issued pursuant this subsection.
   (d)    Whenever any police officer or fireman, during a fire or other emergency, finds a vehicle that is hindering the emergency operations, such police officer or fireman may move such vehicle, or require the driver or other person in charge of such vehicle to move the same, to a position where such vehicle will not be an obstruction to such emergency operations.
   (e)    No person shall fail to comply with any lawful order or direction of any school crossing guard invested with authority to direct, control or regulate traffic in the vicinity of the school to which such guard may be assigned.
(Ord. 1979-19. Passed 4-10-79.)
   (f)    (EDITOR'S NOTE: Subsection (f) hereof was recodified as part of the 1990 updating and revision of these Codified Ordinances. See Section 606.165 of the General Offenses Code.)
   (g)   Whoever violates any provision of this section is guilty of a minor misdemeanor on a first offense; on a second offense within one year after the first offense, the person is guilty of a misdemeanor of the fourth degree; on each subsequent offense within one year after the first offense, the person is guilty of a misdemeanor of the third degree.