Politics & Government

City Council Meeting Tonight

The Council will consider overturning a law that targets street side solicitors.

The Calabasas City Council meeting is on tonight at 7 p.m. at the City Hall council chambers.

Among the items on the agenda

A law that bars day laborers from asking for work and other solicitors from Calabasas roadways and street corners will go back before the City Council for possible repeal.

Find out what's happening in Calabasasfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The ordinance states:

Solicitation of persons traveling in vehicles on public right-of-way prohibited.

Find out what's happening in Calabasasfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

It is unlawful for any person, while standing in any portion of the public right-of-way, including but not limited to public streets, highways, sidewalks and driveways, to solicit, or attempt to solicit, employment, business, or contributions of money or other property, from any person traveling in a vehicle along a public right-of-way, including, but not limited to, public streets, highways or driveways.

The city received a letter on March 20, along with a number of other cities, from the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund asking for the repeal of street side solicitation regulations, according to a city staff report prepared by Calabasas City Attorney Scott Howard. 

A recent court case on a similar Redondo Beach ordinance was ruled an unconstitutional restriction on day laborers' and other persons’ First Amendment rights.

"The court noted the city had failed to provide sufficient evidence of problems caused by day laborers or other street side solicitors to justify either a city-wide ban," Howard wrote in the report.

According to Howard, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, which contracts with Calabasas for its policing services, reported "there is no significant problem associated with street side solicitors in the city."

He recommended that the council repeal the law.

Calabasas City Manager Tony Coroalles said the law was originally adopted in 1995 and most likely mirrored a section of the Los Angeles County code.

 

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