Banner banter needs more research
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Eric Bever
With regard to the “banner ordinance,” I do support the Little
League’s long-standing practice of providing advertising banners to
generous league sponsors. I also support a request of area citizens
to have the banners installed and removed on game days rather than
leaving them up for the duration of the season to limit the visual
impact in our public parks and schoolyards.
Of greatest concern to me is the fact that the ordinance and
administrative regulation, which were crafted to address the issue,
were not well conceived, and represents a virtual Pandora’s box,
giving to 13 groups a privilege requested by only three.
Do the people of Costa Mesa really want more than a dozen groups
posting semi-permanent advertising banners in public parks and on
school grounds? Do we desire the commercialization of our residential
neighborhoods?
During the Planning Commission study session on this issue, I was
astounded to learn that my peers on the commission had no desire to
address the shortcomings in the language and mechanics of the “banner
ordinance” and the accompanying administrative regulation.
For example, despite the fact that many of these advertising
banners would be placed upon Newport-Mesa Unified School District
school grounds, there was no reference to the school district in the
ordinance or the administrative regulation.
A question regarding acceptable content came up, and we were told
that the Little League had “standards,” but again, strangely, there
was no reference to Little League standards in the ordinance. While
regulating content is clearly not the city’s job, any relevant and
applicable standard should be referenced in the ordinance.
At one point during the study session, I stated that since this is
new code we should be vigilant in making sure it addresses the issue
effectively. To this, another commissioner flatly stated that this
was in fact not new code at all. Staff subsequently confirmed that we
were dealing with new code. Oddly, my peers’ unwillingness to work
out the kinks within the ordinance remained unchanged.
While it appears that the sole intent of this new ordinance is to
legalize the long-standing display of advertising banners to raise
funds for Costa Mesa’s three Little League organizations, the true
effect is to legalize the public display of advertising banners on
public property by any of the current 13 “Group 1” organizations.
Additionally, the ordinance takes the issue out of the purview of the
Code Enforcement Department and places all management onto the Parks
and Recreation Department.
In closing, it is not in the best interest of our city to approve
the “banner ordinance,” as forwarded by the Planning Commission last
week. The rush seems to be to allow the Little Leagues to use banners
in their ongoing season, however; the process required to achieve
final approval of the ordinance will not be complete until the month
of June.
It hardly seems appropriate to fail to carefully craft these codes
when rushing the process yields a product of dubious quality, opens
the possibility of “banner blight” in residential areas, parks and
schoolyards, and fails to meet the current needs of the Little League
schedule.
* ERIC BEVER is a Costa Mesa Planning Commissioner
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