storyhill.net,
Dec.13, 2006
Murphy
seeks veto of 30-second billboard messages
Alderman
asks constituents to contact mayor's office
Dec. 13
-- The mayor should veto a Common Council measure adopted this week
that will allow billboards to change their messages every 30 seconds,
Ald. Michael J. Murphy said Tuesday.
“I think it
really sets precedent in a situation where I know the (billboard) industry
is not going to be satisfied with 30 seconds,” Murphy said in
an interview.
Current ordinance
requires that billboard messages change no more frequently than every
60 seconds. The reduction to 30 seconds passed on a 8-7 vote.
The outdoor advertising
industry had backed a measure allowing billboard messages throughout
the city to change every six seconds, and Murphy said he expected the
industry to continue to push for more frequent message signs.
The ordinance change
could have especially negative impacts in neighborhoods like Story Hill,
which border freeways where billboards proliferate, he said.
"I haven't
really spoken to the impact of the light pollution that comes from this
signage," he said during Tuesday's debate on the council floor.
"It's a fairly significant impact to their neighborhoods. The light
pollution coming off theses LEDs flashing, in this case, every thirty
seconds, hasn't even been evaluated. They (will) have a neon light flashing
every 30 seconds into their living room -- I don't think people want
to particularly see that."
Murphy asked constituents
to contact the mayor's office at 286-2200 and ask Mayor Tom Barrett
to veto the measure.
Ald. Terry Witkowski
assured his colleagues on the council floor Tuesday that the changeable
billboards would not be the bright neon found on huge signs at State
Fair Park or Miller Park, Murphy said they very well could resemble
those structures.
“The city
will be like a Vegas in miniature,” he said.
Murphy and Ald.
Robert Bauman said the signs could prove to be a dangerous distraction
to drivers and that the issue should be evaluated before the ordinance
is changed.
Bauman said frequently-changing
signs would have exaggerated negative impact on Milwaukee, where freeways
cut through residential neighborhoods.
"I have people
who can practically reaqch out and touch the freeway lanes from their
back porches," he said. Billboards near 25th and Clybourn have
been so bright they light up the night like daytime, he said.
"It was, frankly,
obnoxious," he said.
One one hand, Murphy
said, some people want to regulate the use of cell phones while driving;
on the other, some governments are allowing frequently-changing message
signs.
"How does that
relate to what we were all taught in driver's ed?" he said. "
'Drive where you look, look where you drive' -- not 'pay attention to
advertising every six seconds.' There is some hypocrisy in our society
in terms of this issue.'"
Ald. Michael D'Amato,
a supporter of the six-second sign change, said he thought the current
60-second was adopted back when signs needed to be flipped to change
the message, and that current technology limited that need.
An e-mail from Deputy
DCD Commissioner Martha Brown, however, said the 60-second rule was
a compromise.
"Originally
the group working on the code revision a few years ago actually wanted
to ban changeable message signs altogether," she wrote in May.
D'Amato also told
his colleagues that six-second advertising sign changes "can be
of assistance to the public, flashing up Amber alerts and other crime
information."
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