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Billboard Control is Good for Business
"Billboards contribute a minuscule amount to our economic well-being, but they impose a high cost. They detract from Colorado's attractiveness to tourists and from the pleasant surroundings for our residents." --The Honorable Richard Lamm, former Governor of Colorado More than 700 communities nationawide prohibit the contstruction of new billboards. Why? Because billboard control improves community character and quality of life -- both of which directly impact local economies. In fact, despite billboard industry claims to the contrary, communities and states that enact tough billboard controls enjoy strong ecnomic growth. While some signs are necessary to provide direction and index our surroundings, most billboards merely contribute to visual clutter. Fore example, on one section of road in Hampton, Virginia, there were so many signs that a driver going 45 miles per hour would need to read 1,363 words per minutes just to understand all the information. That is five times the normal reading speed of a stationary person! The billboard industry often claims that controlling oudoor advertising will turn even the most dynamic locale into an economic ghost town. In fact, the undeniable aesthetic improvements to a community that come from controlling billboards actually helps the eecnonomy. A five-year study of 35 cities by the Mississippi Research and Development Center concluded, "The way a community looks affects how both residents and visitors feel about it. An attractive community has a better chance at industry, including tourism." Moreover, billboards are both a symptom and a cause of urban blight. Pointing out the problems of a heavily traveled, low-income neighborhood, the Wilmington [North Carolina] Journal noted: "Nothing points out the lack of concern for Dawson Street and its citizens more than the numerous billboards that line both sides of the street. Billboards outnumber trees, and abut up against homes and churces...destroying the privacy of both..." Fewer Signs - It's a Sign of Growth Communities can thrive without billboards. Why? Because most billboards have no connection to the local economy. They advertise either national brands or out-of-state products and services. In addition, while billboard owners often pay little or no local taxes on the actual boards, they enjoy high profit margins of 15 - 50 percent on every billboard face they own. Billboard industry naysayers claim that businesses such as gas stations and eating and drinking establishments would be financially devastated by reducing or eliminating their outdoor adverstising. On the contrary, in cities and towns such as Williamsburg, VA, Raleigh, NC, and Houston, TX, the period following implementation of stricter billboard controls and/or bans on new billboard construction was marked by steady growth of sales in those industries.
Billboard Control is Good for Tourism Billboard control is especially important for communities that depend on tourism. According to the Travel Industry Association of America, travelers spent $541 billion nationwide in 1999. The President's Commission on Americans Outdoors reported that natural beauty was the most important criteria for adults choosing a site for outdoor recreation. The more a community does to enhance its unique natural, scenic, historic, and architectural assets, the more tourists it attracts. Consider the following:
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Background on Billboards
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