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(A) A permit shall not be required to conduct a funeral procession.
(B) The procession shall proceed to the place of interment by the most direct route which is both legal and practicable.
(C) The procession shall be accompanied by adequate escort vehicles for traffic control purposes.
(D) All motor vehicles in the procession shall be operated with their lights turned on.
(E) No person shall unreasonably interfere with a funeral procession.
(F) No person shall operate a vehicle that is not a part of the procession between the vehicles of a funeral procession.
(G) Parades on any city street are required to have a certificate of insurance by a certified agency. A copy of the certificate will be provided to the city prior to the event.
(H) Parades on Main Street - Highway 203 or 237 are required to have an Oregon Department of Transportation permit. ODOT permits will be provided to the city prior to the event.
(Ord. 523, passed 9-13-2010) Penalty, see § 10.99
PARKING CITATIONS AND OWNER RESPONSIBILITY
Whenever a vehicle without an operator is found parked in violation of a restriction imposed by this chapter, the officer finding the vehicle shall take its license number and any other information displayed on the vehicle which may identify its owner, and shall conspicuously affix to the vehicle a traffic citation for the operator to answer to the charge against him or her or pay the penalty imposed within 72 hours during the hours and at a place specified in the citation.
(Ord. 378, passed 3-11-1985; Ord. 523, passed 9-13-2010)
If the operator does not respond to a traffic citation affixed to the vehicle within a period of five days, the City Recorder may send to the owner of the vehicle to which the traffic citation was affixed a letter, informing him or her of the violation and warning him or her that, in the event that the letter is disregarded for a period of five days, a warrant for his or her arrest will be issued.
(Ord. 523, passed 9-13-2010)
In a prosecution of a vehicle owner, charging a violation of a restriction on parking, proof that the vehicle at the time of the violation was registered to the defendant shall constitute a presumption that he or she was then the owner in fact.
(Ord. 523, passed 9-13-2010)
IMPOUNDMENT AND PENALTIES
(A) Whenever a vehicle is placed in a manner or location that constitutes an obstruction to traffic or a hazard to public safety, law enforcement shall order the owner or operator of the vehicle to remove it. If the vehicle is unattended, the officer may cause the vehicle to be towed and stored at the owner’s expense. The owner shall be liable for the costs of towing and storing, notwithstanding that the vehicle was parked by another, or that the vehicle was initially parked in a safe manner but subsequently became an obstruction or hazard.
(B) The disposition of a vehicle towed and stored under authority of this section shall be in accordance with the provisions relating to impoundment and disposition of vehicles abandoned on the city streets.
(C) The impoundment of a vehicle will not preclude the issuance of a citation for violation of a provision of this chapter.
(D) Stolen vehicles may be towed from public or private property and stored at the expense of the vehicle owner.
(E) Whenever a law enforcement observes a vehicle parked in violation of a provision of this chapter, if the vehicle has four or more unpaid parking violations outstanding against it, the officer may, in addition to issuing a citation, cause the vehicle to be impounded. A vehicle so impounded shall not be released until all outstanding fines and charges have been paid. Vehicles impounded under authority of this section shall be disposed of in the same manner as provided in division (B) above.
(Ord. 523, passed 9-13-2010)