The Outdoor Advertising Act regulates the placement of advertising displays adjacent to and within specified distances of highways that are part of the national system of interstate and defense highways and federal-aid highways. The act defines relevant terms.
This bill would revise certain definitions of the act.
Existing law provides that the annual permit fee for each advertising sign or structure is $20.
This bill would instead require the Director of Transportation of the State of California to set the annual permit fee and would prohibit the fee from exceeding the department’s reasonable costs, including indirect costs, for providing services and enforcing regulations for which the fee is charged. The bill would prohibit the fee from exceeding $100, as adjusted.
Existing law provides that the permit fee for each advertising sign or structure that an applicant has placed or maintained without a valid, unrevoked, and unexpired permit is $95.
This bill would instead authorize penalties in the amount of $100 for an advertising display placed or maintained without a valid permit in a location that conforms to applicable provisions, and in the amount of $10,000 plus $100 per each day a display is placed or maintained after receiving notice if the advertising display is placed or maintained in a location that does not conform to applicable provisions and is not removed within 30 days of written notice from the department or the city or county with land use jurisdiction over the property on which the display is located.
Existing law requires that an applicant for a permit offer evidence that the owner or other person in control or possession of the property upon which the location is situated has consented to the placing of the advertising display.
This bill would require evidence of consent to be in writing and would also require an applicant to offer written evidence that the city or county with land use jurisdiction over the property has consented to the placing of the advertising display.
This bill would require the department, at the request of the city or county with land use jurisdiction over the property, to reserve a location for an applicant for a limited time in advance of receiving evidence of written consent. The bill would also authorize a city or county with land use jurisdiction over the property to adopt an ordinance that establishes standards for the spacing and sizes of advertising displays that are more restrictive than those imposed by the state.
A violation of the Outdoor Advertising Act is a misdemeanor. Because this bill would change the scope of a crime by changing the definition of a landscaped freeway, it would change the definition of a crime and would impose a state-mandated local program.
The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.