§ 6.32.020. Municipal auditorium—Area regulations.  


Latest version.
  • A.

    The sale or offering for sale of personal property, including but not limited to food, candy, confections, programs, books, pictures, records, tee shirts, lights and other novelties, or any and all other articles of personal property whatsoever by any person, is prohibited between the hours of eight a.m. and eleven p.m. on any date whereon a performance or event has been duly scheduled in the municipal auditorium through a lease agreement executed by both the lessee and the municipal auditorium building manager, under authority granted to the manager by the metropolitan auditorium commission, and such executed lease has been filed in the office of the metropolitan clerk. Such sale or offering for sale is prohibited upon the streets and sidewalks in an area of the metropolitan government surrounding the municipal auditorium, and more particularly described as follows:

    Beginning at the southeast corner of the metropolitan courthouse located at the intersection of Third Avenue and Deadrick Street, proceeding in a northwesterly direction along this avenue to the intersection of Third Avenue and Jo Johnston Street, then proceeding in a southwesterly direction along Jo Johnston Street to the intersection of Jo Johnston Street and James Robertson Parkway, thence proceeding in a northwesterly, westerly and southwesterly and southerly direction along the route of James Robertson Parkway to the intersection of James Robertson Parkway and Union Street, thence proceeding along Union Street in a northeasterly direction to the intersection of Union Street and Fourth Avenue, thence proceeding in a northwesterly direction along Fourth Avenue to the intersection of Deadrick Street and Fourth Avenue, thence proceeding in a northeasterly direction along Deadrick Street to the intersection of Deadrick Street and Third Avenue.

    Provided, however, that the provisions of this section shall not apply to individuals or organizations soliciting for a bona fide charitable or religious purpose when such individual or organization shall have been approved and granted either a charitable solicitations permit or a religious registration by the metropolitan charitable solicitations board, or when such individual or organization shall have been exempted from any such requirements.

    B.

    The provisions of this section shall not be construed to limit, abridge or otherwise abrogate any other requirement established by any other ordinance concerning licenses or permits which may be required to be obtained before any such sale or offering for sale of any of the articles enumerated in subsection A of this section may take place. Should the requirements of this section be more stringent than the requirements of any other ordinance which may relate to the sale or offering for sale of the goods enumerated in subsection A of this section, and within the area in which such sale or offering for sale is proscribed, then the provision of this section shall prevail.

    C.

    Any person violating any of the provision of this section shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than fifty dollars. Each sale or offering for sale which occurs in violation of this section shall be deemed a separate offense.

(Ord. 96-338 § 1, 1996; prior code § 23-1-1)