Berkeley and Oakland, California cupcake truck Cupkates has been in the news this week over a permit dispute. Owner Kate McEachern posted on her site on Tuesday:
In August of 2009, I was issued a permit to operate my cupcake truck in the city of Berkeley. During the permitting process, I submitted a route map and explained that I would be operating in commercial zones on public streets. A week after I opened, a code enforcement officer located me in a yellow parking zone and instructed me to park in a legal, metered space at all times—I complied. Two months later, on Friday, November 13th, the same code enforcement officer and his supervisor approached me in a legal, metered space and informed me that—according to a city municipal code—it is illegal to vend from a metered parking space and that I was to shut down immediately or be issued a $500 citation. I showed him my permits and documentation and referenced our earlier conversation, but he insisted I close.
On Monday, I met with two departments: one who assured me my permit is still valid and I am authorized to vend in legal parking spaces, and another who told me that it is against city law to do so. The deputy city manager assured me that she would resolve the discrepancy and get back to me on Tuesday. Today, I went to meet with her and was informed that she was too busy to see me; Berkeley Police then escorted me out of the building.
I stressed to the city that I quit my job and invested my life savings building a business that the City of Berkeley permitted and endorsed just three months ago. The city’s response to my crisis has been to continually ignore me and to have an armed officer escort me out of city hall.
Therefore, we will be operating tomorrow according to our normal, approved route. Please check our Facebookand Twitter pages for continued updates. We’re asking supporters to contact the Mayor’s office at 510-981-7102 or email Mayor@ci.berkeley.ca.us to voice their disapproval of the city’s actions.
Here's something from California Taco Trucks on Wednesday:
Update (2:11 pm, November 18):
I just got off the phone with Julie Sinai, chief of staff to Mayor Tom Bates to inquire as to the status of this dispute with Cupkates.
“According to us, we’re not in dispute,” she said.
Sinai told me that the city has an ordinance (Berkeley Municipal Code 14.48.220.b), which states: “Other street vending is permitted from vehicles which are lawfully parked upon streets which are not regulated by parking meters or other posted parking time limits.”
Therefore, she added, Cupkates is not allowed to park in an metered space. She also said that Cupkates was not cited, nor fined, but rather was given a warning to not park in such spaces.
For the latest news, follow Cupkates on Twitter (@cupkatestruck) and Facebook and know they are seling at Modern Coffee, 411 13th Street, downtown Oakland.
They've managed to rack up 42 reviews on Yelp, and are part of a cupcake truck trend in the Bay Area.

photos via Cupkates on Flickr

s'mores cupcakes from Cupkates
In August of 2009, I was issued a permit to operate my cupcake truck in the city of Berkeley. During the permitting process, I submitted a route map and explained that I would be operating in commercial zones on public streets. A week after I opened, a code enforcement officer located me in a yellow parking zone and instructed me to park in a legal, metered space at all times—I complied. Two months later, on Friday, November 13th, the same code enforcement officer and his supervisor approached me in a legal, metered space and informed me that—according to a city municipal code—it is illegal to vend from a metered parking space and that I was to shut down immediately or be issued a $500 citation. I showed him my permits and documentation and referenced our earlier conversation, but he insisted I close.
On Monday, I met with two departments: one who assured me my permit is still valid and I am authorized to vend in legal parking spaces, and another who told me that it is against city law to do so. The deputy city manager assured me that she would resolve the discrepancy and get back to me on Tuesday. Today, I went to meet with her and was informed that she was too busy to see me; Berkeley Police then escorted me out of the building.
I stressed to the city that I quit my job and invested my life savings building a business that the City of Berkeley permitted and endorsed just three months ago. The city’s response to my crisis has been to continually ignore me and to have an armed officer escort me out of city hall.
Therefore, we will be operating tomorrow according to our normal, approved route. Please check our Facebookand Twitter pages for continued updates. We’re asking supporters to contact the Mayor’s office at 510-981-7102 or email Mayor@ci.berkeley.ca.us to voice their disapproval of the city’s actions.
Here's something from California Taco Trucks on Wednesday:
Update (2:11 pm, November 18):
I just got off the phone with Julie Sinai, chief of staff to Mayor Tom Bates to inquire as to the status of this dispute with Cupkates.
“According to us, we’re not in dispute,” she said.
Sinai told me that the city has an ordinance (Berkeley Municipal Code 14.48.220.b), which states: “Other street vending is permitted from vehicles which are lawfully parked upon streets which are not regulated by parking meters or other posted parking time limits.”
Therefore, she added, Cupkates is not allowed to park in an metered space. She also said that Cupkates was not cited, nor fined, but rather was given a warning to not park in such spaces.
For the latest news, follow Cupkates on Twitter (@cupkatestruck) and Facebook and know they are seling at Modern Coffee, 411 13th Street, downtown Oakland.
They've managed to rack up 42 reviews on Yelp, and are part of a cupcake truck trend in the Bay Area.
photos via Cupkates on Flickr
s'mores cupcakes from Cupkates
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