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09-10-07 Item 7D, Clear Channel
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09-10-07 Item 7D, Clear Channel
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9/6/2007 3:04:45 PM
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Item 7D, Clear Channel Signage
General - Type
Agenda Item
Date
9/10/2007
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<br />. No message may be displayed for less than one-half second; <br /> <br />. No message may be repeated at intervals ofless than two seconds; <br /> <br />. No segmented message may last longer than 10 seconds; <br /> <br />. No traveling message may travel at a rate slower than 16 light columns per second or <br />faster than 32 colurrms per second (light column defined as pixel colurrm); <br /> <br />. No variable message sign lamp may be illuminated to a degree of brightness that is <br />greater than necessary for adequate visibility, <br /> <br /> <br />mentioned in other sections of this report, the Wisconsin review did summanze <br />Wisconsin's regulations for electronic billboards. <br /> <br />National Alliance of Highway Beautification Agencies (1999) 27 <br /> <br />Although this survey is eight years old, it generated the following information related to <br />electronic billboards: <br /> <br />. Nine states had specific regulations governing signs, <br />. Nine states had regulations on tri-vision signs that were either being drafted or in <br />pending legislation, <br />. Fifteen states had regulations regarding moving parts and/or lights, <br />. Nine state had no regulations on tri-vision signs, and <br />. Six states and Washington, DC, prohibited tri-vision signs. <br /> <br />An investigation into state outdoor advertising regulations was also conducted, <br /> <br />. Thirty-six states had prohibitions on signs with red, flashing, intermittent, or moving <br />lights, <br /> <br />. Twenty-nine states prohibited signs that were so illuminated as to obscure or interfere <br />with traffic control devices, and <br /> <br />. Twenty-nine states prohibited signs located on interstate or primary highway outside <br />of the zoning authority of incorporated cities within 500 ft of an interchange or <br />intersection at grade or safety roadside area, <br /> <br />Parliament of Victoria, Australia, Report of the Road Safety Committee on the <br />Inquiry into Driver Distraction (2006) 28 <br /> <br />This report, cited earlier for its driver distraction opinions, identifies road signs and <br />advertising as one of the largest sources of driver distraction. VicRoads, the state's road <br />and traffic authority, has implemented the following regulations, <br /> <br />~20 <br />
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