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Item #15 <br />CITY OF COLTON <br />AGENDA REPORT <br />FOR COUNCIL MEETING OF March 26,2002 <br />Honorable Mayor and City Council <br />City Attorney <br />UBJECT: Request for Amicus Curiae Support in California Dump Truck Owners <br />Association v. Gray Davis, et al. <br />2002 <br />BACKGROUND: <br />From time to time, public agencies seek the City's support as an amicus curiae (a friend of the <br />court). There is no cost to the City to participate as an amicus curiae. The League of California <br />Cities is urging all cities to join the amicus brief being drafted by the City of San Francisco for the <br />above case. The issue in California Dump Truck Owners Association v. Gray Davis, et al. is whether <br />federal law preempts state laws authorizing local agencies to regulate dump trucks and construction <br />trucking companies. <br />DISCUSSION/ANALYSIS: <br />The California Dump Truck Owners Association ("DTOA"), a state-wide dump and construction <br />trucking organization, sued the Governor and Attorney General of California on the premise that the <br />Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act ("FAAAA!') preempts local laws affecting the price, <br />route or service of any motor carder of property. Specifically, the DTOA claimed that certain statutes <br />in the Government Code, Vehicle Code and Streets and Highways Code which authorize cities to <br />enact regulations related to motor carriers were preempted by Section 14501 (c)(1) of the FAAAA. <br />This section states, in part, that: <br />"...a State, [or] local political subdivision of a State ... may not enact or enforce a law, <br />regulation, or other provision having the force and effect of law related to a price, <br />route, or service of any motor carrier ... with respect to the transportation of property..." <br />The DTOA argued that truck route regulations adopted by cities affect the "routes" used by motor <br />carriers of property and were thus preempted by this section of the FAAAA. As an example, the <br />DTOA argued that a San Diego ordinance restricting five miles of Gopher Canyon Road to truck <br />traffic under seven tons in weight was such a regulation. <br />The trial court rejected the Attorney General's argument that cities exercise authority directly from <br />the State for the safety of California's streets and highways. Instead the trial court found that federal <br />law preempted the State statutes referenced above. As a result of the trial court's decision, the <br />authority that the State may grant to cities in the area of motor carrier regulation is now severely <br />limited. <br />