Candidates complain of campaign sign limits
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- They stand on stakes, promoting different candidates in
large, block letters.
They are campaign signs, which the City Council last month decided to
hold to the same public right of way standards as all other signs.
A 1999 ordinance allows signs to be posted on public property only
between 6 a.m. Friday and 6 p.m. Sunday.
Some candidates say it’s unfair.
“The ordinance benefits incumbents, and two of the [City Council
members who voted on the issue] are running for reelection,” said
candidate William Perkins. “Incumbents don’t need name recognition
because they already have it, but challengers who want to get name
recognition can’t put up signs to get it. The public needs to know who
they are electing and a lot of people vote based on signs.”
Perkins also said he thinks the ordinance is unevenly enforced.
Rick Brown, a building official for the city, said enforcement is
unbiased.
“I get the report about whose signs are picked up where and what made
it illegal, and I can tell you that no single candidate or group of
candidates are being singled out,” he said. “On any given day, a variety
of signs are picked up. We don’t look at whose sign it is, we look at
where it is posted. Our job is not to endorse any of the candidates, our
job is to make sure there is a level playing field and we take that very
seriously.”
Signs on private property are not restricted. On public parkways --
landscaped areas between streets and sidewalks -- signs must be a maximum
of three feet tall and five feet wide, and can be posted between 6 a.m.
Friday and 6 p.m. Sunday only.
Signs are not allowed in parks, landscape medians, community centers
and other public properties. They are also limited to 10 per candidate.
Candidate Dan Worthington said he disagrees with the 10-sign limit.
“I don’t think signs beautify the city, but I think they are part of
the First Amendment,” he said. “If you’re going to be a viable candidate,
you have to find a viable way to promote that and signs are one of the
more effective ways. And how in the world can we put signs up all over
the city when we’re only allowed 10?”
The ordinance -- initially passed to allow real estate open house
signs -- is actually more lenient than the previous law, which didn’t
allow any signs in the public right of way, said Councilwoman Heather
Somers.
Larry Weichman, a real estate broker and Costa Mesa resident, said he
supports prohibiting signs on public property.
“I actually put a sign up [to advertise open houses], but I would
still prefer not to have it,” Weichman said. “If we had a blanket law
that didn’t allow any signs, it would free up code enforcement to spend
time dealing with other problems in the city. I think it would save money
in the long run.”
Somers said she doesn’t think any signs should be allowed on public
property. Mayor Gary Monahan said he would have no problem with allowing
signs in the public right of way every day during election time.
City Council members Joe Erickson and Libby Cowan said the ordinance
is fair because it requires everybody to follow the same rules.
“I think anyone who runs for political office has to be involved in
the community,” Erickson said. “That’s how to get name recognition.
That’s where name recognition comes from, not from throwing signs on
public property.”
QUESTION
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