North East debates sign law

NORTH EAST — The Town Board reviewed proposed zoning amendments to its town zoning codes regarding signs and billboards, which have been discussed at both the workshop and business meetings this month.

Some of the definitions and terms used in the sign regulations themselves are being tweaked, as well as the guidelines for what’s acceptable within the town limits.

Councilman Dan Briggs posed a question at last business meeting Thursday, March 12, regarding potential compliance.

“What percentage of signs in the town currently fit into the proposed standards?� he asked. “Because when I look at that, and if I really like the sign ordinance, I wonder how the town facilitates the change. How do we work with the businesses to make the changes?�

Briggs said the key measures he saw were that if the ordinance is passed then the zoning enforcement officer would have to go out and let the businesses know about the law and whether their signs are in compliance or not. Then the businesses would be given instructions on how to meet the new guidelines. If businesses have prohibited signs they would be required to remove them, Briggs said.

“You then start thinking in terms of how could you do a fee, or let’s get signs to conform and let’s not do a fee,� Briggs said, adding that some businesses may take a long time to comply while others may follow the letter of the law swiftly.

Town Supervisor Dave Sherman said that as far as he understands, if the town has to require a fee it could be a part of the normal process.

“But I didn’t know if you were thinking of generally waiving the fee or if the fee should be $5,� he said.

“I wouldn’t mind a small fee,� said Councilman Carl Stahovec. “There could be a small permit fee; $20 to $25 isn’t outlandish for anybody.�

Briggs stressed the importance of enacting a sign law as it could help unify the image of the town’s business district.

“If it’s a good sign law and we like the general provisions then we want to get more signs in that manner,� he said. “Good signage is one of the subtle messages of a community.�

Sherman said some business people will be surprised by the adoption of a new law.

“Somebody could be peacefully sitting there not looking to change their sign and suddenly be told they have a nonconforming sign,� he said.

Briggs said there’s another situation to consider.

“From a different perspective, if I were a business with a nonconforming sign, maybe if I didn’t have to pay a fee, maybe I would be more up to getting my sign up to code,� he said.

“That is another burden on them, that fee,� agreed Councilman Dave McGhee, who said the main objective is getting the signs up to code.

McGhee then said there are a number of billboards that will have to be considered by the town, too.

The board was encouraged to look at billboards and more when Henry Klimowicz and Sam Busselle, members of the Zoning Review Committee, attended the Town Board meeting held on March 5. At that time they presented their latest draft on the proposed zoning amendment on sign regulations in town.

“This is part of the overall process of re-looking at the zoning laws,� Klimowicz explained. Sign regulations are one of three issues that the committee is looking at, along with lighting and subdivision regulations.

One of the group’s goals was expanding the current sign regulations by including much of the language laid out in the Greenway Compact Programs document, including visual aids to assist both the Planning Board and potential applicants.

The document has three main uses, Klimowicz said. First, it will give zoning officers better tools to identify nonconformists.

“There are only two areas where we’re trying to eliminate signs,� Klimowicz said, “and that’s billboards and roof-mounted signs. Our intent is to have them depreciate out over a number of years.�

Next, the document hopes to provide clearer and more concise definitions that make it easier for everyone to understand the rules.

Finally, it “addresses changing aspects of what a sign could be,� Klimowicz explained, saying that the committee looked for the document to come to grips with changing technology and for the community to hold on to its rural character.

Busselle added he estimated approximately 150 hours had been put into the sign ordinance document itself.

“I believe it’s responsible and puts everything in the right perspective,� he said. “It doesn’t punish people with nonconforming signs.�

Under the document, six months would be provided for the zoning enforcement officer to provide information on whether a sign was conforming. Another six months is allocated for the sign-owner to respond. The method of grandfathering will also be accepted.

Both Klimowicz and Busselle mentioned Bill Kish as having taken on the task of editing the document, and that he deserved much credit for the document. The Zoning Review Committee has been working on the document for about a year.

By the end of the last week’s discussion it was decided that the issue would be tabled and then revisited in April, so that Stahovec, who just returned to town after a trip away, would have time to review the proposed ordinance.

Once the document is acceptable to the board, a public hearing will be held before it can be adopted as an amendment to the town’s zoning laws.

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