Date: Tue, 20 May 2008 09:20:20 -0700
Reply-To: David Kao <dtkao0205@YAHOO.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: David Kao <dtkao0205@YAHOO.COM>
Subject: Re: Does anyone know if you can get a ticket for staying
overnight in a NJ walmart lot?
In-Reply-To: <86476e250805200813r5b547477r6d0b0a02a06b3b76@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
To avoid being accused of trespassing, you can walk into the store (Walmart)
and buy something, such as a cup of coffee, and keep the receipt. That ought
be enough to prove that you are there to give them a business although small.
David
--- Loren Busch <starwagen@GMAIL.COM> wrote:
> RE: Wallmart Parking
> This original message seems to have been split into several threads but I'll
> respond on the original. This is based on several responses from the past.
> First, check with the Wallmart you are stopping at.
> Second, based on the experience of one Westy driver, that may not always be
> enough. One driver was hassled (threatened with a 'trespassing' ticket) in
> the morning even after being told by the Wallmart management that it was
> okay to park. Seemed to be a local ordnance thing in that city.
> Third, several list members over the last couple of years have mentioned
> lobbying by local commercial RV parks to outlaw any on street OR Wallmart
> 'stealth' camping because they thought they were losing business. In fact
> right now the city council in Olympia Wa (the State capitol no less) are
> discussing just such an ordinance (though I have no info that the RV parks
> owners have anything to do with that), they want to ban the parking of ANY
> RV on the street overnight.
> And last, and I hope there is a legal expert out there that will correct me
> if I'm wrong on this, trespass is a civil issue between the property owner
> (or owners agent) and the RV owner. The property owner would have to
> complain to the police before the police could issue a ticket for trespass.
> The police can't just drive up and start writing. I suppose a local
> ordinance could be written in such a manner as to allow this but I don't see
> how. Then again, a property owner could leave standing instructions with
> the police stating that any vehicle in their parking lot was assumed to be
> trespassing.
>
> BTW, and this is from a discussion about a year or two ago, one of the
> Canadian provinces has a provincial law that states that no RV can be parked
> overnight anywhere other than an approved park, public or private. The
> catch on that one is that a dozen or so list members pointed out that they
> have NEVER heard of that law being enforced.
>
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