Council Roundup: What’s your sign?

Adams Outdoor Advertising would like to put up billboards that change their message every six seconds. Right now, the zoning ordinance only allows billboard messages to change no more than once every hour. The Zoning Commission wanted to defer the request until March 1, 2007 — after the form-based codes are completed — because of staffing issues. The council thought that was too long to make a business wait for a hearing on this issue, so a recommendation will probably come back in December instead.

Electronic BillboardMy take: I’m not sure what kind of sign Adams Outdoor Advertising has in mind, but from the discussion on the council tonight I get the impression that it’s an electronic billboard similar to Proctor Hospital’s relatively new sign at their Knoxville entrance, or the Civic Center’s sign at the corner of Jefferson and Kumpf, or this generic one above that I found on the internet. Can you imagine billboards like that all around the city?

Councilman Spears half-joked that putting up such billboards around the city would eliminate the need for streetlights given the amount of light that would be emitted. Councilman Grayeb suggested writing into any new zoning ordinance a limit to how bright such signs can be. Not a bad idea. Although, I’d be just as happy if they outlawed all of them. Electronic billboards are a terrible source of light pollution and energy waste, and do we really want drivers — already distracted by their cell phones and other gadgets — having one more thing to arrest their interest while they’re supposed to be driving? I mean, we don’t allow television screens in the front seats of vehicles for this very reason; how are electronic billboards different, or any less of a distraction?

3 thoughts on “Council Roundup: What’s your sign?”

  1. Changing signs are immensely distracting. I would call them dangerous.

    Making a business wait untill 2007? Poo Poo. The city should implement a zoning change freeze until the code is finalized. This should be done to prevent a rush of people from getting grandfathered in.

  2. I agree that they’re distracting, especially when they change frequently. I also agree that they can be waaay too bright (almost blindingly so, at night). That’s based on what I’ve seen in Pittsburgh, though; I’ve never seen any of these newfangled thingies in Peoria.

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