2019 New York Laws
VAT - Vehicle and Traffic
Title 8 - Respective Powers of State and Local Authorities
Article 41 - Regulation of Traffic by Towns
1660 - Traffic Regulation in All Towns.

Universal Citation: NY Veh & Traf L § 1660 (2019)
§ 1660. Traffic  regulation  in  all  towns. (a) The town board of any
town with respect to highways outside of villages in any such town,  but
not including state highways maintained by the state except with respect
to  subdivisions  six,  eight,  nine and ten, subject to the limitations
imposed by section sixteen hundred eighty-four may by ordinance,  order,
rule or regulation:
  1.  Designate  county  roads and town highways as through highways and
order stop signs, flashing signals or  yield  signs  erected  on  county
roads  or  town highways at specified entrances to such through highways
or designate any intersection except those where one  or  more  entering
highways  is  a  state  highway  maintained  by  the  state  as  a  stop
intersection or a yield intersection and order like signs or signals  at
one or more entrances to such intersections.
  2.  Upon  a  roadway  which  is divided into three lanes, allocate the
center lane exclusively for traffic moving in a specified direction.
  3. Order signs erected directing slow-moving traffic, trucks, buses or
specified types of vehicles to use a designated  lane,  or  with  signs,
signals  or  markings designate those lanes to be used by traffic moving
in a particular direction regardless of the center of the roadway.
  4. Determine those highways or portions of  highways  which  shall  be
marked  to  indicate where overtaking and passing or driving to the left
of or crossing such markings would be especially hazardous in accordance
with the standards, minimum warrants and sign or marking  specifications
established by the department of transportation.
  5. Regulate traffic by means of traffic-control signals.
  6.   (i)   License,   regulate  or  prohibit  speed  contests,  races,
exhibitions of speed, processions,  assemblages,  or  parades.  Whenever
such  a speed contest, race, exhibition of speed, procession, assemblage
or parade authorized by a local authority will  block  the  movement  of
traffic  on  a  state  highway  maintained by the state, or on a highway
which connects two state highways maintained by  the  state  to  make  a
through  route,  for  a  period in excess of ten minutes, such authority
must, prior to such blocking, provide  and  designate  with  conspicuous
signs a detour adequate to prevent unreasonable delay in the movement of
traffic on said state highway maintained by the state.

(ii) Prohibit vehicles engaged in retail sales of frozen desserts as that term is defined in subdivision thirty-seven of section three hundred seventy-five of this chapter directly to pedestrians from stopping for the purpose of such sales on any highway within such town or on all such highways. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the operator of such vehicle from stopping such vehicle off of such highway, in a safe manner, for the sole purpose of delivering such retail product directly to the residence of a consumer or to the business address of a customer of such retailer. 7. Prohibit or regulate the operation and the stopping, standing or parking of vehicles in cemeteries and in public parks. 8. Provide for the removal and storage of vehicles parked or abandoned on highways during snowstorms, floods, fires or other public emergencies, or found unattended where they constitute an obstruction to traffic or any place where stopping, standing or parking is prohibited and for the payment of reasonable charges for such removal and storage by the owner or operator of any such vehicle. 9. Provide for the installation, operation, maintenance, policing and supervision of parking meters, establish parking time limits at such meters, designate hours of operation of such meters, and, except as provided in section twelve hundred three-h of this chapter, fix and require the payment of a fee applicable to parking where such meters are in operation. The town board of any town may exercise these powers on behalf and at the expense of a public parking district with respect to highways outside of villages but within such public parking district, in which event the fees from such parking meters shall belong to such district, and the cost of operation and maintenance thereof shall thereafter be borne by such public parking district. 10. Establish a system of truck routes upon which all trucks, tractors, and tractor-trailer combinations having a total gross weight in excess of ten thousand pounds are permitted to travel and operate and excluding such vehicles and combinations from all highways except those which constitute such truck route system. Such exclusion shall not be construed to prevent the delivery or pickup of merchandise or other property along the highways from which such vehicles and combinations are otherwise excluded. Any such system of truck routes shall provide suitable connection with all state routes entering or leaving such town. 11. Temporarily exclude from any portion of any town highway any vehicle with a gross weight of over four or more tons or any vehicle with a gross weight in excess of any designated weight on any wheel, axle, any number of axles, or per inch width of tire when in its opinion such highway would be materially injured by the operation of any such vehicle thereon. Such exclusion shall take effect upon the erection of signs on the section of highway from which such vehicles are excluded, and a notice that such vehicles are excluded shall be published in a newspaper in the county where the highway is situated. The exclusion shall remain in effect until the removal of the signs as directed by the town board. Upon written application by any operator of a vehicle subject to this section, the town board may issue a permit providing appropriate exemption to such vehicle, if it is deemed that said vehicle is performing essential local pickup or delivery service and that a failure to grant such permit would create hardship. Every such permit may designate the route to be traversed and contain other reasonable restrictions or conditions deemed necessary. Every such permit shall be carried on the vehicle to which it refers and shall be open to inspection of any peace officer, acting pursuant to his special duties, or police officer. Such permits shall be for the duration of the restriction imposed under this section. 12. Prohibit, restrict or regulate the operation of vehicles on any controlled-access highway or the use of any controlled-access highway by any vehicle, device moved by human power or pedestrian. 13. Prohibit or regulate the turning of vehicles or specified types of vehicles at intersections or other designated locations. 14. Regulate the crossing of any roadway by pedestrians. 15. Authorize angle parking on any roadway. 16. Designate any highway or any separate roadway thereof for one-way traffic. 17. Exclude trucks, commercial vehicles, tractors, tractor-trailer combinations, tractor-semitrailer combinations, or tractor-trailer-semitrailer combinations from highways specified by such town board. Such exclusion shall not be construed to prevent the delivery or pickup of merchandise or other property along the highways from which such vehicles and combinations are otherwise excluded. 18. Prohibit, restrict or limit the stopping, standing or parking of vehicles. 19. Designate safety zones. 21. Designate a portion of a slope as a path for the use of bicycles. 22. Order signs or markings to identify the portion of the highway to be used for bicycle travel. 23. Designate preferential use lanes for specified types or classes of vehicles. 24. Prohibit, restrict or regulate the operation of limited use vehicles on any street or highway. 25. Adopt such additional reasonable ordinances, orders, rules and regulations with respect to traffic as local conditions may require subject to the limitations contained in the various laws of this state. 26. Make special provisions with relation to stopping, standing or parking of vehicles registered pursuant to section four hundred four-a of this chapter or those possessing a special vehicle identification parking permit issued in accordance with section one thousand two hundred three-a of this chapter. 27. Declare a snow emergency and designate any highway or portion thereof as a snow emergency route. 28. Exclude trucks, commercial vehicles, tractors, tractor-trailer combinations, tractor-semitrailer combinations, or tractor-trailer-semitrailer combinations in excess of any designated weight, designated length, designated height, or eight feet in width, from highways or set limits on hours of operation of such vehicles on particular town highways or segments of such highways. Such exclusion shall not be construed to prevent the delivery or pickup of merchandise or other property along the highways from which such vehicles or combinations are otherwise excluded.

(b) Each such town board shall cause to be determined, for all bridges and elevated structures under its jurisdiction, the capacity in tons of two thousand pounds which the bridge or structure will safely carry. Upon bridges or structures of insufficient strength to carry safely the legal loads permissible by section three hundred eighty-five of this chapter, the town board shall cause signs to be erected to inform persons of the safe capacity.

(c) Each such town board shall cause signs to be erected to inform persons of the legal overhead clearance for all bridges and elevated structures on highways under its jurisdiction. The legal clearance shall be one foot less than the measured clearance. The measured clearance shall be the minimum height to the bridge or structure measured vertically from the traveled portion of the roadway. On bridges or structures having fourteen feet or more of measured clearance, no such signs shall be required.

(d) Such a town board also may by ordinance, order, rule or regulation prohibit, restrict or limit the stopping, standing or parking of vehicles upon property owned or leased by such town.

(e) Any town with a population of seven hundred thousand or more may by local law or ordinance, provide for the removal and storage of vehicles parked on private property upon request of the owner of such private property, where such vehicles constitute an obstruction to the private property owner's right of ingress and egress, and for the payment of reasonable charges for such removal and storage by the owner or operator of any such vehicle. Such local law or ordinance shall be applicable only in the unincorporated areas of such town.

(f) No town shall enact any local law or ordinance to prohibit the use of sidewalks by persons with disabilities who use either a wheelchair or an electrically-driven mobility assistance device being operated or driven by such person.

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