From Deseret News archives:

Billboard cap a step in the right direction

Published: Thursday, May 13, 2004 10:55 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
"There is a growing feeling abroad in this land today that ugliness has been allowed too long, that it is time to say 'enough' and act."
Lady Bird Johnson, the former first lady, used those words to launch an assault on some 700,000 billboards that were torn down after her husband, Lyndon Baines Johnson, exercised his clout as president of the United States and, as a gift to his wife, high-hurdled the Highway Beautification Act through the U.S. Congress in 1965.

There were more than a million billboards along the country's major highways pre-1965. Today, thanks to the Johnson Act, which tore out great chunks of billboards in noncommercial areas, there are fewer than 500,000. Four states — Hawaii, Alaska, Vermont and Maine — don't have any billboards along their roadways whatsoever.

Story continues below
I bring up Lady Bird Johnson's activism in light of the Salt Lake County Council's decision this week to throttle down the billboard industry in the county. By a 6-3 vote, the council agreed, pending final approval next week, to adopt something called a cap-and-bank system, and while it's true, not a single billboard will be toppled as a result, at least it's a start.

Cap-and-bank is a politician's term for capping billboard density at its present level and allowing any billboards torn down in the future to be replaced in another approved location within a three-year time limit. That means all existing billboards are similar to negotiable assets in a bank — available to be withdrawn and spent elsewhere.

Cap-and-bank might not reduce the billboard population, but it guarantees it will never get any bigger.

The council rejected an outright ban on new billboards. Some council members suggested a ban would give billboard companies no incentive to tear down any board they could not replace, no matter how offensive its location. Cap-and-bank, it was argued, if weakly, has the potential for not only better-placed signs but fewer overall signs in the long run.

That may explain why the council favored cap-and-bank — or it could have something to do with the fact that of nine members on the council, five admitted to receiving campaign contributions from the billboard industry, and all nine admitted to talking with billboard lobbyists.


So the Salt Lake County Council's punch is no Lady Bird punch. She took on the billboards like a Texas tornado. As she said in her memoirs, "I guess I'm no friend of the billboard folks." She didn't just get new billboard construction banned. She got a lot of billboards torn down.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Dito what max said. Couldn't have said it better.

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

Max Hall's comments were totally understandable considering how his family...

Hey, I just want to give all my money to the federal government and Al Gore....

Letters: Ignoring state law

So Gaylan is a tattle-tale? I am sure that the comment was made in fun, but...

Cougars honor 1984 champs

you are so clueless Washington AND Nebraska were both invited to play BYU...

Memo to Max Hall: You will go down as a mediocre quarterback for BYU, but...

Why the story about Whittingham's wife getting punched by a BYU fan is being...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

Max Hall was able to speak his opinion. Everyone has the right to an opinion...

Maynor for mayor Wes the enforcer. Fes guarding the rim. Boozer has hops,...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

Has been from day one. Max is not a team player. That is the reason BYU is...

Advertisements