Arizona 2023 2023 Regular Session

Arizona House Bill HB2094 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/24/2023

                    Assigned to GOV 	AS PASSED BY COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Sixth Legislature, First Regular Session 
 
AMENDED 
FACT SHEET FOR H.B. 2094 
 
technical correction; tax debt; enforcement 
(NOW: mobile food vendor; operation; rules) 
Purpose 
Allows a mobile food vendor to operate on private residential property in a residential area 
if it meets prescribed requirements. 
Background 
A city or town, by ordinance or resolution, may prohibit or restrict a mobile food vendor 
from operating in an area zoned for residential use or within 250 feet of an area zoned for 
residential use. A city or town may not require a mobile food vendor, property owner or lessee of 
a property to apply for any special permit that is not required for other temporary or mobile vending 
businesses in the same district (A.R.S. § 9-485.01). 
The county board of supervisors (county BOS), by ordinance or resolution, may: 1) restrict or 
prohibit the operation of a mobile food unit in an area that is zoned as residential only;  
2) prohibit a mobile food unit that is operating on private property from blocking ingress to and egress 
from the property; and 3) require a mobile food vendor to obtain consent from a private property owner 
before operating on the property. The county BOS may not restrict how long a mobile food unit may 
operate at a private property location, except that a mobile food vendor may not operate at a private 
property for more than 96 consecutive hours (A.R.S. § 11-269.24). 
The Director of the Department of Health Services (DHS) must adopt rules that establish 
the health and safety licensing standards for mobile food vendors and mobile food units, including 
the health and safety licensing standards for necessary commissary or other servicing area 
agreements. The Director of DHS must also establish a licensing process for mobile food units that 
delegates to the county health department in the county where the mobile food vendors 
commissary is located the licensing and health and safety inspection standards. A city, town or 
county may require a mobile food vendor to have a fingerprint clearance card (A.R.S.  
§ 36-1761).  
A mobile food vendor is any person who owns, controls, manages or leases a mobile food 
unit or contracts with a person to prepare foods and vend from, drive or operate a mobile food unit 
(A.R.S. § 11-269.24). 
There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this 
legislation. 
   FACT SHEET – Amended  
H.B. 2094 
Page 2 
 
 
Provisions 
1. Allows a mobile food vendor to operate on private residential property in a residential area if: 
a) the mobile food vendor obtains written permission from the property owner and the 
property owner remains on the property while the mobile food vendor is operating; 
b) the mobile food vendor does not serve members of the general public;  
c) the mobile food vendor and the property owner, the spouse of the property owner or, in the 
case of a living trust, the trustee are not the same person; 
d) the mobile food vendor does not serve food between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.; 
and 
e) the mobile food vendor removes the food waste, cooking grease and other trash from the 
residential property in compliance with applicable laws and regulations. 
2. Caps the fee a city or town may require a mobile food vendor to pay to operate on private 
residential property within the city or town at $150 per year. 
3. Prohibits the county BOS from requiring generators to be permanently affixed to the mobile 
food unit. 
4. Requires the DHS licensing standards to allow a mobile food unit to request an exemption 
from the commissary or other servicing area requirements if the mobile food unit is sufficiently 
equipped to meet health and safety standards without the use of a commissary or other 
servicing area. 
5. Requires, for a mobile food vendor that does not require commissary, DHS to delegate the 
licensing and health and safety inspection for state licensure to the county health department 
in which the mobile food vendor resides. 
6. Specifies that the newly prescribed requirements relating to a mobile food vendor do not 
preclude a city, town or county from requiring a mobile food vendor to be licensed if the 
licensing system includes a fingerprint clearance card issued by the Department of Public 
Safety (DPS).  
7. Makes technical changes. 
8. Becomes effective on the general effective date. 
Amendments Adopted by Committee 
1. Modifies the requirements that a mobile food vendor must meet in order to operate on private 
residential property in a residential area by adding: 
a) the requirement that the residential property is the primary residence of the property owner, 
a tenant with a lease term of one year or longer or a trustee of the living trust that owns the 
residential property; 
b) the requirement that the owner who provides the written permission must be on the 
property while the mobile food vendor is operating; 
   FACT SHEET – Amended  
H.B. 2094 
Page 3 
 
 
c) the requirement that the mobile food vendor does not serve food between the hours of  
10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.; and 
d) the requirement that the mobile food vendor removes the food waste, cooking grease and 
other trash from the residential property in compliance with applicable laws and 
regulations. 
 
2. Caps the fee a city or town may require a mobile food vendor to pay to operate on private 
residential property within the city or town at $150 per year. 
 
3. Allows a city, town or county to require a mobile food vendor to be licensed if the licensing 
system includes a background check or identification and fingerprinting of the owner of the 
mobile food vending operation or a fingerprint clearance card issued by the DPS. 
 
4. Removes the $50 per year cap on the fee a city or town may require a mobile food vendor to 
pay to operate within that city or town. 
House Action                                                            Senate Action 
RA 2/15/23 DPA/SE 5-2-0-0          GOV 3/22/23 DPA 5-3-0 
3
rd
 Read 2/28/23  31-26-3 
Prepared by Senate Research 
March 24, 2023 
AN/SB/slp