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Statewide Billboard Ban a Hard Sell State budget crisis has prompted the state to mull exploiting its own billboards for cash

By  TJ SULLIVAN

Updated 12:18 PM PDT, Tue, Jan 13, 2009

Related Topics: Los Angeles | Mike Feuer

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TJ Sullivan

Digital billboards have replaced existing billboards in Los Angeles by the hundreds during the past few years.

 

California State Assemblyman Mike Feuer, of Los Angeles, looks to be serious about battling the owners of those junior JumboTrons that have invaded Los Angeles by the hundreds in the past couple years.

Besides proposing a two-year statewide ban on digital billboards last Friday, Feuer was expected to present draft copies of a new, LA-city-planner-approved billboard ban ordinance on Tuesday, says LA Weekly.

All of this would appear to be building momentum, especially after the ruling released last week by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld a seven-year-old, city imposed ban on outdoor advertising.

Yet, despite all the movement, the chance of this going anywhere is slim.

Although Los Angeles was victorious defending its 2002 ban, officials remain largely ineffective in their battle against the conversion of existing billboards into digital ones. Feuer's proposed moratorium would supersede any local rules and rulings, but he's going to have to get past the California Legislature first.

Any proposal containing words like "ban" or "moratorium" are always greeted coldly by elected officials at any and every level of government. As much as elected officials have a hard time saying "no," it's even more difficult for them to say "not any more." And in this case, they're being asked to take on a partner, and a revenue source.

Besides California's consideration of selling advertising on its own highway-adjacent Amber Alert billboards, advertising companies have been working with the state to carry Amber Alert messages on commercial digital billboards.

It wouldn't be a surprise if the budget trumped this one.

-- TJ Sullivan

Copyright NBC Local Media

Comments (3)

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  • Joel Carnes Friday, Jan 23 at 3:18 PM FLAG COMMENT Digital billboards and super-sized wrapping of buildings are unsafe, unsightly, and unwelcome. Bring on the ban! Please...
  • Jason Wednesday, Jan 14 at 2:02 AM FLAG COMMENT Why the ban? Because the one I drove past in Oakland last month was so blaring bright at night, that I had trouble seeing the road in front of me. It was like having high beams on in front of me!! I actually could read it from across the bay. Take the remote, and turn the brightness down, then maybe people might not hate them so much.
  • Gary Tuesday, Jan 13 at 11:38 PM FLAG COMMENT I support a ban on the visual polution of the digital billboards. They are a distraction to drivers and a scar on the neighborhood. Nobody wants to look at these insults from there home windows. They cheapen any location.

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