Alabaster considering food truck ordinance

Published 2:02 pm Thursday, October 27, 2016

By NEAL WAGNER / Managing Editor

ALABASTER – The Alabaster City Council will hold a public hearing on Nov. 27 and likely will vote on an ordinance to allow food trucks to operate in the city after the City Council approved the hearing during an Oct. 24 meeting.

The public hearing will be held during the council’s regular meeting on Nov. 27, which will begin at 7 p.m. at Alabaster City Hall.

Council members are considering adding a provision to the city’s business license ordinance allowing multiple types of “mobile food units” to obtain licenses to operate in the city. If passed, the provision would allow licenses for four types of food truck vendors in the city:

-Meal stops: No more than two hours each day, and the food truck must be located on private property off public rights of way unless the vendor has prior written approval from the city to operate on public property. Meal stop food trucks would not be allowed to operate within 200 feet of a brick-and-mortar restaurant.

-Traveling food vendors: May operate on the roads throughout the city, but are not allowed to stop to service customers for more than 10 minutes. Traveling food vendors would not be allowed to stop on the right-of-way on U.S. 31, Alabama 119 or Thompson Road. Sound coming from the trucks would not be allowed to exceed 65 decibels.

-Event food vendors: Must operate on property owned or solely controlled by the sponsor of an event, and with the written permission of the event sponsor. Food trucks may only operate from a fixed location during the official hours of the event.

-Park food vendors: May operate in city parks only during the park’s official hours, and only during times the park’s concession stand is not open unless they have written permission from the concession stand operators.

Food trucks wishing to apply for business license must complete an application and pay a $50 fee. After acquiring a business license and selling food in the city, food trucks must pay sales tax based on what they sold.