California Promised Street Vendors More Freedom. Instead They Got More Rules.
The state’s “reforms” have saddled merchants with oppressively expensive permitting demands.

This week, the Los Angeles Times published an excellent editorial on Los Angeles County's continued and outrageous mistreatment of the city's "iconic" street-food vendors.
The editorial centers on the county's failure to implement California's Safe Sidewalk Vending Act. The much-touted, statewide law, which I touched on after then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed it into law in September 2018, was supposed to decriminalize and legalize street vending for the estimated 10,000 underground food vendors in Los Angeles County—and others across the state. As the Times editors detail, that hasn't happened in Los Angeles.
"Street vending may be legal in California, but for the vendors selling sliced fruit, tacos and other food items it's nearly impossible to get a permit to operate without fear of penalty, particularly in Los Angeles County," reads the lede. They blame "state and county public health regulations for selling food from a street cart [that] remain so complicated, impractical and expensive that the vast majority of vendors have not—and cannot—get permitted."
Hence, years after the law was passed, L.A. County has only issued permits to around two-percent of the underground vendors who sell there. One of the most onerous requirements to obtain a permit, the Times explains, is the rule that vendors must spend thousands of dollars to buy a needlessly fancy food cart that features "four sink compartments, multiple water tanks for washing cookware and hands, and mechanical exhaust ventilation… which is just not practical for vendors who earn $15,000 a year, on average."
Ya think?
Some of problems implementing the law aren't unique to Los Angeles. California's state food code "bars slicing fruit or reheating previously prepared food at the vending cart, making it impossible for two of the most iconic sidewalk sellers—the fruit cart and the taco stand—from becoming licensed, legal operators," the Times explains. "And vendors are required to contract with a commissary, which is a commercial facility where mobile sellers prepare their food and store their equipment. But the commissaries in the region are designed and priced to accommodate food trucks and they rarely have the kitchen space that street vendors need."
So a vendor could either spend thousands of dollars to secure a permit to sell, say, tacos they make at an expensive or unavailable commissary or, alternately, just skip the permitting process, cook the meat for the tacos at home, and prepare and sell them on the street. Given the Safe Sidewalk Vending Act also rightly reduced criminal penalties for selling food without a permit, there's little incentive for vendors to secure a permit.
What a mess.
As Steven Greenhut wrote in 2018, both advocates for street-food vendors and fans of tacos (and people such as me, who live in both camps) were excited about the Safe Sidewalk Vending Act.
"I was appalled at new stories of a police officer shutting down a street vendor and taking his cash. This should stop such nonsense," Greenhut wrote. He also issued a mild caution, noting "the law gives the locals a lot of power to inspect, permit and limit vending carts, but people who sell and buy street tacos should be happy."
But by the time the law took effect in 2019, its failure in Los Angeles was predictable.
"Los Angeles' ban on street vending officially ends tomorrow," Reason's Scott Shackford wrote in 2019. "But thanks to the way the city is handling the transition, there still will be lots of illegal vendors."
Shackford was right! He compares high permit fees and the bureaucrats who are "almost comically unprepared" to issue them to Los Angeles's ham-handed approach to permitting recreational cannabis dispensaries.
That's a great analogy. But there's an even better one. Indeed, the way the vending law has failed to work is remarkably similar to the fate of the state's Microenterprise Home Kitchen ordinance (MEHKO) law, A.B. 626, which Gov. Brown also signed into law in September 2018. This one was supposed to allow people to sell home-cooked meals to willing customers—either to take away from the cook's home or as part of a sit-down supper club experience. But the requirement that local governments opt in to the law has neutered its potential.
"The lack of appropriate regulations still leaves many experienced cooks in California unable to make and sell food legally," I wrote last year. Even now, only Berkeley and a handful of California counties have opted in.
The taco makers and home cooks who were supposed to benefit from the MEHKO law and the Safe Sidewalk Vending Act are often immigrants, people who are out of work (including chefs who've lost their jobs during the pandemic), stay-at-home parents, and/or people of color. They're the ones who were supposed to benefit most from these laws. Instead, they're the ones who bear the brunt of these laws' failures.
"We need equitable public health standards that promote economic and racial justice," says a lengthy August 2021 report on Los Angeles's failure to implement the street-food law by legal-aid group Public Counsel. "That means prioritizing the needs of low-income entrepreneurs and finally finishing the work of legalizing sidewalk food vending."
In 2018, I lamented the fact "real food freedom in California is still an elusive goal." Three years later, the state may be no closer to that goal.
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There is nothing so bad that more government intervention can't make worse.
We need a permit process for issuing permits.
On the other hand, to be sure, it doesn't seem a lot more complicated or expensive than getting a second amendment permit.
An onerous, physically painful licensing process to become a city official or bureaucrat may help.
With publicly posted results.
But if the food cart permitting process is disproportionately disadvantageous to minorities, it must be thrown out.
I lead a street vendor advocacy group in NYC, ARTIST. They passed a similar law here last year, Intro #1116. It pretended to be all about helping immigrant unlicensed food vendors become "legitimate." A fake vendor advocacy group funded by the City Council, The Street Vendor Project, spent years getting the law passed, promising their vendor members readily available licenses, removing the police from vending enforcement and a new accepting attitude from city officials. Instead, they got much more enforcement, a requirement to have very expensive vending stands ($50,000 typical price), a commisary, putting the BIDs (Business Improvement Districts) in charge of vending policy and other requirements which ended up putting these food vendors in an even worse situation.
You poor man. You got me at 'NYC.'
No sympathy for those who stay - - - - - - - - - -
So cute that anyone believed that California would do anything that would reduce regulation.
Regulations are the deck chairs of California.
Welllll...... ackshually, if you had read the story, you'd have learned the California did do something to reduce regulation, or at least its affects. Direct your ire in this case at Los Angeles.
Nope, California still fucked it up. They could have written the law to prevent cities/counties from pre-empting the new regs and they didn't.
Or even Opt-Out instead of Opt-In in the case of the supper club laws cited in the story.
But I don't want to excuse LA. There's nothing California can do that LA can't fuck up even worse anymore.
Reducing regulation would be rescinding the laws.
They just made more laws to deal with other laws and wonder why it's a complicated mess.
California really needs some laws prevention agents.
"The most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from the government and I'm here to help."
Ronald Reagan
You must really be tired of getting it to the face for being a flaming progshit if you're quoting Ronald Raygun to try to find a new friend.
Honestly, you'll have better luck making a new sock and praying nobody figures out your beer-braised flavor of stupid too quickly.
You should see how CS 'legalized' weed!
Black market stuff is cheaper.
But does it come with cancer warnings?
In California, even the air comes with a cancer warning.
I have taken to leaving the warning stickers on everything. My GOLF BAG has a cancer warning tag, which I still fly proudly from the zipper 3 years after buying it.
CA not CS
But, CSing CA's govt sounds about right
"Toughest sentence yet for any Capitol rioter: over 5 years"
Gee, must have gotten him for trying to overthrow democracy or something, right?
Nope, assaulting a police officer, which never happened during the constant BLM riots /s/.
Oh, and we can't cover news about that particular protest without some gratuitous lies:
"...Scores of police were beaten and bloodied, five people died..."
Bullshit; one person died, murdered by a cop.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/toughest-sentence-yet-for-any-capitol-rioter-over-5-years/ar-AARVQiH?ocid=msedgntp
Another dividing line for humanity: those who prefer to see people afraid of their government vs those who prefer to see a government afraid of its people.
A few other protesters died, supposedly from "medical emergencies", but more likely as a complication of being tear-gassed by cops.
I would support street vendors, but the government already gives me streets for free.
*BA-BOOM-BOOM! Sssssss...*
I'll be here all week! Try the Government Issue Bug and Tofu Veal!
Are you a fan of roadeos too? I here Beverly Hills has a nice one.
'High permit fees and the bureaucrats who are "almost comically unprepared"' erm, this is the norm, career administrators, especially the left-leaning 'good idea' types, are not capable of envisioning beyond 1st tier impacts or consequences. They are remarkably ill-suited for any type of planning position, yet, due to the low physical and education requirements, this is where these sorts pool. And, they tend to see themselves as changing the community they are destroying, for the better -with zero oversight as likely as not.
Trump promise
"Take regulations so far back, so many years back
Because of the regulations and the problems, we’re gonna take regulations so far back so many years back. We’ll keep some good ones. We’ll bring regulations back so far you won’t even believe it."
[Springfield, IL, 11/9/15]
Trump reduced regulations you lying fuck.
And he delivered in a big way.
That's one of the reasons progressives hated him so much.
If he never reduced or removed a single f'ing regulation, that would still only put him at "mid-level Dem". You mad?
I was astounded. Trump kept more campaign promises than any presidential candidate in history.
"people who are out of work (including chefs who've lost their jobs during the pandemic)...They're the ones who were supposed to benefit most"
Covid wasn't released in 2018 and so shouldn't be invoked as a reason for anything in this article.
Yeah. As long as they can create culinary masterpieces on an electric stove they'll prosper.
Just act like you're homeless, they let you get away almost anything....
or an illegal alien.
A POC LGBTQ+ homeless illegal alien!
I identify as an elderly heterosexual white male. My preferred pronouns include he, him and hey old dude. What are my odds of getting a food cart license?
In a strange coincidence, the new street vendor license fee is now $450,000.
Biden promised not to tax the first 400k.
110 tips for learn English(s)
Tip #1: Use normal form of verb in place of gerund sound like foreigner. Tip #2: Not know plural of -sh word look like foreigner.
If you really want to look like a furriner in the movies, never speak with apostrophes. "Do not" never "don't." "Will not" never "won't."
Meant to say English (es). Turns out the Brits and Canadians also speak the language. Or claim to.
I dunno, if you ask a Newfie what language he's speaking, pretty sure he'd be stumped.
There are multiple Englishes?
CA Reforms Curb Street Merchants
It’s Gutter Fascism I tell you! Damn the profs who paved the way for this!
It's Highway Robbery!
Freedom is slavery.
Quit making fun of our state flag motto!
And we're getting freer every day.
I don't have a lot of love for street vendors. The public pays for sidewalks so people can walk down them and they pay for streets so people can drive down them.
I find it hard to believe that street vendors are, on average net tax contributors over their lives. I suspect that most of them are net drains.
I'd rather that street vendors be told to conduct commerce on private property, where they can do whatever they want (within certain limits).
I don't have a lot of love for people who judge others based upon how much taxes they pay.
Fine, but the people who are paying the taxes should have the predominant say in the usage of the public good, and I'm only judgemental about the tax brackets of street vendors because *they are monopolizing a public good* probably contrary to the wishes of real taxpayers.
And other thing: I'd like to understand why libertarians are so obsessed with street vendors in particular? What it is about libertarians and street vendors?
"the people who are paying the taxes should have the predominant say in the usage of the public good"
Great point! There's no reason why poor people or young people who weren't born rich should have any say in the public good. Only the wealthy who pay the bulk of the taxes should have any say. Why not get all originalist and limit decisions to white, male landowners?
I'm not obsessed with street vendors. On the other hand if the taxpayers didn't buy what they're selling they wouldn't be there. Live and let live. Give it a try. You'll feel better.
Well, for one thing, street vendors offer people goods wnd services that they want in exchange for currency. Sounds like a winner (and a weiner) to me. 🙂
Sorry , wiener. Weiner is the real last name of Michael Savage, though he has a hissy-fit if anyone points that out.
Well, homeowners and apartment and condo owners don't "contribute" i.e. forccibly pay property taxes near as much as brick-and-mortar businesses. And after 2007, they were prolly net tax eaters. So, by your "logic" qnd Ken's "logic," maybe jurisdictions should ban homes. And post a sign outside of town or at the County line that says:
"Welcome to Year Zero New Kampuchea! To keep you is no benefit! To destroy you is no loss!"
...where do you even begin here?
Hey, Spiggot was the one dissing street vendors and Ken was the one dissing food trucks. And both did it on the grounds that the businesses supposedly either pay less property taxes than brick-and-mortar businesses or pay no property taxes at all.
All I did was take their premise to it's logical and absurd conclusion.
Fuck off, they're the most convenient lunch option for construction.
And if street vendors set up at a static location on a piece of their own property, it's typically called a restaurant.
They're also a low-investment way to start a business compared to a fixed restaurant. This offers entrepreneurial opportunity for more people and a fundamental problem with the regulatory state if California is that the hurdle is so high entrenched and large businesses are the only ones who can get over it.
I am not someone who cares much about hot dog carts, but I do have a soft spot for the notion that new businesses should be easy to start and offer economic opportunity for someone willing to work hard and take risk. If you don't have that you end up with nothing but chain stores and entrenched businesses, everyone else is a wage-slave employee. Haves and never-will-haves.
Don't you think street vendors might be paying for the streets the same way the rest of us are? In addition to the taxes and fees they pay as street vendors?
You're correct. Anyone who either owns or rents a home or apartment still pays propeety taxes either way.. It's just fhat if they rent, the tax is figured into the cost of the rent.
Yet to hear Spiggot and Ken talk, street vendors and food trucks are tax scofflaws. WTF, man?
If you really think about it, what is the purpose of regulation? It's to stop people from making money. Because what's the usual cry when someone or some company tries to skirt regulation? "They only care about profits! Profits before safety! They're making too much money!"
And you voted for the guy who gave us more regulations, go fuck yourself.
Also Fuck Joe Biden.
I heard the Big Guy decided to lower his cut because times are hard. Good strategic vote, liquorschnapper.
Critical distinction: the law has not failed, the law IS the failure.
It's incredible how Reason writers howl and wail about onerous rules and regulations and then advocate to implement different ones like it was only the source of the tyranny that chafed. Big state is the problem.
Rescind. Delete. Make shit simpler. Stop voting for Dems.
Almost always. Reason cedes the Statist ground, then quibbles over the details.
I live in California and the premise of this article is bull. The story should be about what is "really" happening. First thing, street vendors should be required to follow every rule that a regular restaurant follows. Then they shouldn't get a free ride that gives them an advantage. I know of several of these in my area. One example, is a sidewalk taco cart that sets up every evening. The cart was first blocking the sidewalk with no assessable path or travel remaining because if the cart and that doesn't include factoring in the line of patrons. Then because of Covid people were pulling up along the sidewalk, blocking traffic to pick up their food. Then the guy parked a van in the parking lane to stop patrons parking there and it messed up traffic again. So he set up his stuff off the sidewalk at the edge of a business' parking lot, of course without any approval. A taco truck near me, sets up outside of Taco Bell every day. I'm no Taco Bell fan, but I refuse to buy tacos from the guy because it is an ass move; and I love a good taco. If vendor can't follow basic rules of conduct, how safe for your gut do you think their food is?
Look, I fully agree that street vendors shouldn't block freedom of movement and should ideally use private property by the consent of the original owner with owmers' consent.
.However, that is a far cry from categorically banning them.