Rome News-Tribune

‘Discrimina­tory in nature’

San Jose looks to repeal decades-old cruising ban

- By Grace Hase

In the 1970s, the intricatel­y detailed cars with sleek paint jobs and lowered bodies cruised up and down Story and King in the heart of East San Jose. The largely Mexican-american neighborho­od had become an epicenter of lowrider culture, building off what had begun on Whittier Boulevard in East Los Angeles 30 years prior.

Robert Diaz remembers gathering with his friends as a young teen on Friday and Saturday nights, sitting at the bus stop or the old Shakey’s Pizza on Story Road, watching the cars cruise by and imagining the day he’d buy his own lowrider. When he finally turned 16, he made the purchase: a 1977 root beer-brown Cutlass Supreme Brougham with a tan vinyl top.

Years later Diaz, who is the vice president of the United Lowrider Council of San Jose, “continues to live the lowrider lifestyle.” He drives a 1964 red Chevy Impala Super Sport, and his wife, Yvonne, drives a 1962 gold Chevy Impala convertibl­e.

“It’s part of my culture, part of my life,” he said. “It’s deep-rooted in me.”

But while the lowrider community still has a place in San Jose, its favored activity of cruising has been banned in the city since 1986. At the time, the city cited traffic congestion, criminal activity, and the “environmen­t of fear” created by cruising as reasons for the ban.

That could soon change. Later this month, the San Jose City Council is slated to discuss whether to repeal the ban outright — a suggestion made by Councilmem­ber Raul Peralez.

It’s an issue the downtown councilman knows a

few things about, having grown up lowriding with his parents in San Jose.

When he was old enough to drive, the first car he bought was also a lowrider — a 1965 emerald green Chevy Impala Super Sport with a black vinyl hard top. The term lowrider typically refers to a vintage, customized car with a lowered body, sometimes employing hydraulics to move up and down.

But because of the type of car he drove and the ban on cruising, a teenage Peralez, who would later pursue a career in law enforcemen­t, was pulled over by the police “dozens and dozens of times.” He was made to sit on the curb, was searched and was suspected of being involved in gang activity or possessing drugs or weapons.

Peralez called the policy “discrimina­tory in nature” since the police department has historical­ly used it as a tool to monitor gangs and regulate other illegal activities such as sideshows and speed exhibition­s. But lowriders say it’s unfair to equate cruising with lawbreakin­g, arguing that it’s about community and showing off their cars, in which they invest sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars.

But since 2007, when the San Jose Police Department implemente­d its electronic citation system, no citations have been given out for cruising, according to Police Chief Anthony Mata. The department, however, doesn’t know how many handwritte­n tickets have been given out for cruising in the last decade or so.

“I don’t feel we’re losing anything,” Peralez said of the potential repeal. “I feel we’re actually gaining a lot by making it very clear that we have no intent on criminaliz­ing cruising and we’re going to be fully focused on criminaliz­ing the things that actually are inherently dangerous in our community.”

The police department, however, still has concerns about repealing the decadesold law. In a May 31 memo, Mata said that cruising leads to “quality-of-life issues and illegal activities.” Instead of repealing the ban, the department is proposing allowing cruising only during permitted or sanctioned events, or suspending the ban for six months to evaluate the impact it would have. The law defines cruising as “the repetitive driving of any motor vehicle past a traffic-control point in congested traffic at or near the traffic-control point.”

 ?? Ray Chavez/bay Area News Group/tns ?? Robert Diaz, vice president of the United Low Riders Council, poses with his lowrider car, a 1964 Chevy Impala Supersport, in front of a low riding mural in San Jose, Calif., on Friday.
Ray Chavez/bay Area News Group/tns Robert Diaz, vice president of the United Low Riders Council, poses with his lowrider car, a 1964 Chevy Impala Supersport, in front of a low riding mural in San Jose, Calif., on Friday.

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