DIVISION 4. DESIGN, CONSTRUCTION, AND MAINTENANCE

Sec. 146-1509. Parking Area Design.

10. Shopping cart management. All retail uses larger than 30,000 sq. ft. gross leasable area shall be provided with a cart control system to ensure that required parking spaces and movement corridors are not encroached on by haphazardly placed shopping carts. Additionally, all carts must have wheel locking devices and site perimeter controls to prevent carts from being taken off-site. The planning director may require cart corrals for all parking lots serving retail or commercial uses where the slope of the parking lot exceeds three percent.

About Shopping Cart Ordinances

Retailers can struggle to stop cart abandonment, often paying up to $15,000 a year on replacement carts and municipal fines and fees due imposed by communities. These cart regulations and laws are put in place to not only control the environmental impact of abandoned carts, but also to keep towns and cities clean.

Most shopping cart ordinances fall into three categories: The first category is regulations requiring retailers to have a plan to contain and collect errant shopping carts. Secondly, those that define the fines and penalties a city may impose on retailers for abandoned or errant shopping carts. Finally, the third category of rules generally requires retailers to have a system to contain shopping carts, preventing abandonment.