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CC Regular Session 7.3. <br />Meeting Date: 11/07/2022 <br />By: Todd Larson, Community Development <br />Information <br />Title: <br />Adopt Ordinance #22-25 Pertaining to Mobile Food Units <br />Purpose/Background: <br />The City Council approved the introduction of the ordinance on October 11. At the Council meeting on October <br />25, the Council requested modifications to the ordinance. Those modifications have been made. The term <br />"trash/recycling recepticals" was replaced with a broader "waste recepticals." The term "established parking area" <br />was added to encompass businesses with gravel parking lots while "asphalt or concrete surface" was kept in the <br />event a business has a patio or plaza area that the mobile food unit could park on. The 100-foot separation and <br />"closed business" provisions were removed. An allowance of flags and banners attached directly to the unit was <br />added. <br />Food trucks have been growing in popularity in recent years. Some operators start out as a food truck then grow <br />into a traditional brick -and -mortar restaurant space since independent restaurants are difficult businesses to start. <br />Some trucks are offshoots of established restaurants taking their fares on the road. Some food trucks generally <br />only operate at community events, fairs, and festivals, where some like to partner with other business types, such <br />as brewery taprooms. <br />Currently, the City treats mobile food units (a broader term for food trucks) the same as transient merchants. <br />Operationally, they are quite different from vendors that go door-to-door. Staff feels that amendments to City <br />Code are necessary so that these businesses are treated fairly according to their use. This Code amendment is <br />intended to regulate food trucks that are open to the general public. Other than the proposed licensing <br />requirements, private food trucks can still be hired as catered events, such as a business' employee appreciation <br />lunch or a home celebrating a high school graduation. <br />Proposed are two ordinance sections. The first section creates a mobile food unit as an accessory use to an <br />existing primary business use in Chapter 117 (Zoning Code). Upon adoption, a food truck could locate on most <br />business properties with the consent of the landowner (nothing is prohibiting the landowner from charging the <br />operator a fee to locate there). As an accessory use, the truck could not operate on vacant property. The food <br />truck must leave the site at the end of its business day as well. Exceptions can be made in conjunction with the <br />host business' multi -day special event permit. <br />The second section establishes business licensing procedures in Chapter 26. Since Anoka County has heath <br />jurisdiction, a County heath license is required to obtain the City's license ensuring proper food safety and <br />handling techniques. The bulk of the licensing requirements are the same or similar to other business license <br />types. <br />The City invites mobile food units to vend at various City events in parks throughout the year. This ordinance <br />does not affect those events, though the operators will need to get a City license for their unit. <br />This ordinance does not authorize food trucks parking on public roadways to conduct business. Additional <br />sections of City Code will need to be modified to allow that. Ice cream trucks and carts that traditionally drive up <br />and down streets, only stopping when flagged down, are still being considered peddlers. <br />