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CASE <br /> <br />DISCUSSION REGARDING ENFORCEMENT OF CITY CODE PERTAINING TO <br />STORAGE ~OF COMMERCIAL VEHICLES IN RESIDENTIAL DISTRICTS <br /> By: Zoning Administrator Sylvia Frolik <br /> <br />Background: <br /> <br />Section 9.11.10 of City Code states as follows: <br /> <br />"No mom than one (1) one-ton motor vehicle bearing a commercial license and no <br />commerciiflly licensed trailer shall be parked or stored in a residential district except when <br />loading, ualoading or rendering a service. No commemial vehicle shall be parked or stored <br />in a residential district except for short-term (two hours or less) when unloading, loading or <br />rendering a service." <br /> <br />As a result of th, code enforcement sweeps initiated this past Spring at the direction of City <br />Council, numerous violations of the above code were cited and numerous more were anticipated. <br />The violators were instructed to either make' other arrangements for storing their commercial <br />vehicles and equil~ment or apply for a conditional use permit to store these items on their residential <br />properties. <br /> <br />Given Council's oction to deny a similar case in 1994 (with a one year grace period) and the <br />Planning CommisSion's recommendation for denial on two 1995 applicants resulting from the code <br />sweep, Staff posed, the following question to Council. If they are going to be consistent with their <br />action in 1994, !their intent behind the order for a code enforcement sweep, and the <br />recommendations~of the Planning Commission thus far, then it doesn't seem justifiable to instruct <br />these current violators to spend $375 on a conditional use permit application just to find out how <br />long of a grace period Council is going to give them to get into compliance. <br /> <br />When this information was brought to Council on June 13, Staff was instructed to research what <br />other communitios allow for the storage of commercial vehicles and equipment in residential <br />districts. The following information was presented to Council on June 27, 1995: <br /> <br />And0vcr residents are allowed to store only one truck with a gross capacity of 12,000 pounds or <br />less at their residehces. In the R-1 and R-2 single family districts, they can store a truck-tractor in <br />an accessory buil~ling if the lot is at least 3 acres in size. There is no storage of semi-trailers <br />allowed on residefitial properties. <br /> <br />Anoka residents are allowed to keep any size track on their property if it can be stored indoors. <br /> <br />Brooklyn Park residents cannot store vehicles larger than 9,000 pounds gross weight at their <br />residences. <br /> <br />Coon Rapids residents are restricted from storing any vehicle larger than 9,000 pounds gross <br />weight on their property. There is also no parking of track-tractors, semi-trailers or special mobile <br />equipment allowed, except one truck over 9,000 lbs or one truck-tractor if the vehicle is owned and <br />operated by the property owner, is parked on a paved driveway or private parking lot on the <br />property, and is not allowed to idle for more than 1 hour in any 6 hour Period. <br /> <br />Elk River residems cannot park vehicles larger than 7,000 pounds on public property in the <br />residential district ~i.e. they are permitted to park vehicles larger than 7,000 pounds on their private <br />property). Truck-tractors and/or semi trailers may be parked in the rural residential district but not <br />in the urban residential district. <br /> <br /> <br />