Normal version
HBA: Facts & Figures
Though the billboard lobby clings to the HBA, portraying it as "a law that works," the fact is, as the US Department of Transportation Inspector General said in 1984, the HBA "has been ineffective in improving highway beautification as the number of signs located adjacent to the nation's highways continues to increase... [It has] had little impact on enhancing the scenic and recreational value of highways."
 
Here's what's wrong...

Thousands of new billboards are constructed annually.
 

Rural and scenic areas are under siege from billboard blight.

Thousands of publicly owned trees are clearcut each year to improve the visibility of billboards on private property.

Few nonconforming billboards are removed, and virtually all conforming billboards remain from year to year.

 
Because of inadequate permit fees, public subsidies to billboard operators total more than $6 million each year.

 
Because of the lack of funds dedicated to the beautification program, state DOTs and the federal government often pay little more than lip service to billboard control efforts.