City StreetsConstruction and Maintenance
Section § 1800
This law allows city officials to take necessary actions to plan, obtain, and build parts of streets or highways as freeways. They can also convert current streets or highways into freeways.
Section § 1801
This law allows a city's legislative body to close streets or highways where they intersect with freeways. They can also create routes that go over, under, or connect to the freeway, and perform any necessary construction work. However, converting a public highway into a freeway requires the consent of nearby landowners or the purchase of their access rights.
Section § 1802
Any action that impacts a state highway, as allowed under Section 1801, must first get approval from the Department of Transportation.
Section § 1803
This law allows a city to make a deal with a county to either rent the county's equipment or have the county take over maintenance, construction, or repair of the city's streets and roads. This is aimed at making these tasks more efficient for the city.
Section § 1804
This law allows cities in California to build, maintain, and run tunnels for streets and highways both inside and outside their city limits. However, if these tunnels are on state highways, the city must first get approval from the Department of Transportation.
Section § 1805
This law requires city streets to be at least 40 feet wide, though city officials can vote to make them narrower if necessary. Private roads need to be at least 20 feet wide. Streets that existed before September 15, 1935, don't need to be changed.
Section § 1805.5
Section § 1806
This law explains that a city isn't responsible for maintaining a road until it officially accepts the road into its street system. A road can only become part of the city streets if the city's governing body formally agrees to it through a resolution, unless certain exceptions apply. Alternatively, the city can appoint an official, through an ordinance, to accept roads into the system. This official must certify and record the acceptance correctly.
Section § 1807
This law allows two neighboring cities to make an agreement if their boundary line runs along a street. They can work together to improve and maintain this street, and each city can use its own funds for these activities. This is only possible if both cities' governing bodies give their approval.
Section § 1808
In California, when a city's road or highway projects require the removal of trees, the city should try to replace those trees if it's practical or beneficial. The city can use funds from the Highway Users Tax Fund, which is usually meant for road widening, to plant new trees on these streets or highways.
Section § 1809
If a city plans to build a bridge over a navigable river, the city leaders must first study and hold a public hearing to decide whether it's possible and sensible to create a way for the public to access the river for recreational activities.
They need to prepare a report about whether or not such access will be provided.
Section § 1810
This law allows a city to buy or use eminent domain to acquire land outside its borders, but within the same county's unincorporated areas. This can only happen if the land is needed to connect or widen the city's streets and the county agrees to it. Once the land is acquired and used for streets, it becomes part of the city's street system.
Section § 1810.5
This law requires that survey markers, which are important for identifying property boundaries, must be maintained, documented, or replaced following specific guidelines in another set of rules.
Section § 1812
This law allows the City of South Lake Tahoe to use its own funds to construct the loop road. This includes creating environmental impact reports and getting necessary approvals from the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.
Section § 1813
This law section explains that cities in California can apply the same rules that counties use for building and maintaining roads to city streets. It means that references to counties and county resources in the law can be interpreted as references to cities and their resources.
It also allows city councils to agree to have their city streets included in a county's permanent road division. In such cases, the county board of supervisors will handle matters related to those city streets as if they were county roads.
This approach is optional and can be used instead of other laws for building or maintaining city streets.