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NJ S290

NJ S290
Allows municipality to establish reserved parking zone on property adjacent to disabled person's residence.


summary

Introduced
01/12/2016
In Committee
01/12/2016
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/08/2018

Introduced Session

2016-2017 Regular Session

Bill Summary

Under current law, municipalities are authorized to establish restricted parking zones in front of the home of a resident with a disability who has been issued a wheel chair license plate or hanging placard. This bill permits a municipality to establish a restricted parking zone in front of a neighboring residence if the placement of a parking zone in front of the disabled resident's home is prohibited by law or would interfere with the flow of traffic. The municipality is required to receive the neighboring property owner's consent prior to establishing the parking zone. The bill requires the Chief Administrator of the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission to prescribe a standard consent form which may be submitted by the neighboring property owner to the governing body prior to the establishment of a restricted parking zone. The consent form is set to expire every two years from the date of approval by the chief administrator or upon the sale of the adjacent property, at which time the restricted parking zone may be converted back to regular parking. The bill grants the adjacent property owner the option to renew the consent form and reinstate the restricted parking zone every two years. In addition this bill amends section 1 of P.L.1977, c.309 (C.39:4-197.6) to replace the outdated term "handicapped" with the preferred phrase, "person with a disability."

AI Summary

This bill permits a municipality to establish a reserved parking zone in front of a neighboring residence if placing the parking zone in front of the disabled resident's home is prohibited by law or would interfere with traffic flow. The municipality must receive consent from the neighboring property owner before establishing the parking zone. The consent form expires every two years or upon sale of the adjacent property, at which point the reserved parking zone can be converted back to regular parking. The bill also replaces the outdated term "handicapped" with the preferred phrase "person with a disability" in the existing law.

Committee Categories

Transportation and Infrastructure

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Transportation Committee (on 01/12/2016)

bill text


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