L.A. billboards "perhaps worst in the nation' <http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2008/11/la_billboards_perhaps_wor.php>
8:22 PM Tuesday November 25, 2008
Kevin Fry, the president of Scenic America, was interviewed in The Planning Report <http://www.planningreport.com/tpr/?module=displaystory&story_id=1380&format=html> about the Los Angeles billboard situation. Excerpt:
The city of Los Angeles has surrendered its built environment to
advertising and sign companies. That's a terrible tragedy for L.A.
and the whole country, because what's playing out in L.A. is
happening on a smaller scale in other places....
Los Angeles probably has the worst billboard problem in the country.
No one knows exactly how many billboards there are in L.A. because
the industry has prevented the city from counting them, which was
the source of a series of lawsuits that were settled a couple of
years ago. There is a minimum of 10,000 to 11,000 billboards in the
city, of which probably a minimum of one-third are illegal. Signs
have been put up without permits, in the wrong place, and are of the
wrong size. The outdoor advertising companies, with the aid of
willfully blind or inept public officials, have allowed the outdoor
advertising industry to simply take over the street and put up signs
wherever it feels like....
The difference between Los Angeles and other cities is that other
places have taken the enforcement role seriously.
Ban Billboard Blight <http://banbillboardblight.org/> has been putting pressure on local politicians to try controlling signs for a change.
____________________________________
Will Wright, Director of Government & Public Affairs
American Institute of Architects / Los Angeles
3780 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 800, Los Angeles, CA 90010
(213) 639-0777 phone | (213)639-0767 fax
ΓΌ Please consider the environment before printing this email.
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