So the issues will be openly discussed at least. I suspect the
meeting will be packed.
Ruth
From: Craig Kelley
[mailto:CraigKelley62@verizon.net]
Sent: Sunday, October 31, 2010 2:45 PM
To: Craig Kelley
Subject: Signs On Council's Monday Night Agenda
FYI, Folks.
The debate goes on.
And on.
As discussed in the MGR’s
response below, a special election to have the Citizens pass judgment directly
on the changes to the sign ordinance will cost an estimated $170,000. If
the City Council does not expressly revoke it, these changes will either be on
a ballot for a special election or will be on next November’s ballot, with the
changes held in abeyance until after then.
Feel free to join in the
discussion tomorrow night, I’m sure others on both sides of the issue will.
Happy (rest of) Halloween.
Craig
City Manager Letter
November 1, 2010
To the Honorable, the City
Council:
In response to Awaiting
Report Item Number 10-164, regarding a report on outlining the ordinance
changes to the Zoning Ordinance as it pertains to signs and the impact of
repealing Paragraph D3 and E of Ordinance #1335, please be advised of the
following:
On September 27, 2010 the
Cambridge City Council adopted a series of amendments to Article 7.000 of the
Zoning Ordinance that regulates signs in the city. Some of the changes
generated heated discussion and opposition during the deliberations leading up
to their adoption. Opposition has continued in the form of a citizen referendum
that requires the City Council to reconsider its vote. As the Council
reconsiders its vote, it is important to clarify the nature of the changes that
have been made. To date, the discussion has been dominated by misunderstanding
and exaggeration about the actions the City has taken. While there are
differing opinions about the wisdom of the policy changes that have been made,
those differences of opinion should be based on an accurate understanding of
what actually has been done.
At issue are two of the six
provisions that were recently adopted. The first would allow signs, on
the façade of buildings in a limited number of commercial districts in east and
west Cambridge, to be placed higher on a building than twenty feet above the
ground. Twenty feet was the maximum height allowed in the regulations prior to
the changes adopted in September. In addition, such higher signs -
if placed at the top of a six or seven story office building - would be
allowed to be 90 square feet in area, an increase from the maximum 60 square
feet previously permitted in the regulations for signs lower than 20 feet above
ground.
The recent amendments provide
that these signs may only be permitted after a hearing before the Planning
Board and only if a proposed sign (or signs) conforms to enumerated and
detailed limitations that ensure that the sign will not be visually intrusive
or dominant in its commercial neighborhood. Among those limitations: there can
be no more than two signs per building; the signs may only consist of
individual letters and symbols; may only be lighted from the outside (no bright
florescent-lit signs with plastic faces); and the areas of all signs on any
building, including any new higher signs, may not be increased beyond the total
area allowed since adoption of the current sign ordinance in 1991.
Signs permissible under the
new amendments cannot fairly be characterized as billboards; indeed, no
speculation is necessary to evaluate the impact of signs erected under the new
zoning provisions, as many such signs currently exist quite unobtrusively,
permitted in the past by a variance from the Board of Zoning Appeal: ADDRESSES
OF SUCH SIGNS/PICTURES. The real visual impact of such signs,
available for all to see, is much less unsettling than the exaggerations
currently circulating.
The second amendment
provision in contention is unrelated to the issue of signs high up on the
facade of a building. This provision allows the Planning Board to approve
a plan for all signs that will be allowed on a lot, after a public hearing on a
proposed plan. In order to approve such a proposed plan
the Planning Board must consider the building context and review the specific
dimensional and lighting limitations related to individual signs types (i.e.
wall signs or projecting signs or freestanding signs), which now are imposed
without regard to specific local circumstances. This new provision
recognizes that the current one-size-fits-all standards don't always serve the
best interests of individual store owners or the public. What might work well
for a large suburban-style shopping center differs from the needs of a series
of small stores on a narrow side street in Harvard Square. The new provision
would enable the City to respond to individual circumstances with considered
flexibility. And, for the first time, this provision provides leverage to
the City to encourage property owners to remove some large and garish signs,
erected decades ago, that continue to blight our landscape, in exchange for the
flexibility provided by this new regulation. Notably, this provision does not
allow more signs on a property than have been allowed since adoption of the
current ordinance in 1991, and the twenty foot height restriction continues to
apply.
Why propose these
changes? The prescriptive standards in place since 1991 generally
provided a reasonable balance of adequate visibility for the retail and
business enterprises that make Cambridge such a vibrant place, while at the
same time protecting the basic quality and harmony of our shared visual
environment. Nevertheless, over the twenty years of administering the
sign regulations, the Planning Board, Board of Zoning Appeals, and City staff
have found that the prescriptive nature of our current sign regulations can
produce odd, ill-fitting and sometimes bad results; at times resulting in
losing the opportunity for a much better sign design and a more engaging public
environment; often with the result that the legitimate needs of a Cambridge
business cannot be well-served. In the past, a property owner's
only route for approval of such signage was to seek a variance; but that approach
is bad public policy, as these matters seldom rise to the "hardship"
standards required for the grant of a variance. It is better to
acknowledge the positive benefits of limited flexibility and provide a process
by which good design and the legitimate interests of our business communities
can be served, without harming the visual quality of our public environment.
The City Council recognized this in adopting the sign ordinance changes, and
all Cambridge residents can be well served by these improvements to the sign
ordinance.
With respect to the question
of the cost taxpayers would incur as a result of holding a special election to
dispose of the referendum petition, I have determined that the cost would be
approximately $170,000.
The City Solicitor advises
that the options that the City Council has in responding to the referendum
petition are dictated by statute as follows. The referendum signatures
were certified to the City Council by the Election Commissioners on October 20,
2010. Upon that certification the protested measure or parts thereof are
suspended from taking effect. The City Council must reconsider the
protested provisions within twenty days of the certification (in this instance
City Council action must occur by no later than November 9, 2010). If the
City Council does not "entirely rescind" the protested provisions,
then the Election Commissioners must place a question on the ballot either at
the next regular City Election which is not less than thirty days after the
twentieth day following certification (which would be the November election for
2011), or at a special election which the City Council may, in its discretion,
call for the purpose. At that election a question must be placed on the
ballot by the Election Commission stating "Do you agree with the measure
summarized below?" followed by a fair, concise summary of the protested
measure or part thereof as determined by the City Solicitor. In this
instance, the voters would be asked if they agreed with the City Council's
ordination of Section 7.16.22 (D)(3) and Section 7.16.22 (E) of the Zoning
Ordinance, with a summary of those sections provided on the ballot.
Very truly yours,
You
can speak for up to three minutes on any topic on the Council's agenda at
Monday's Council's meeting. To see the complete agenda, follow the links
on the ride hand side of http://www.cambridgema.gov/ccouncil.cfm after
5 PM on the Thursday before a Council meeting.
To
speak at a Council meeting, call 349-4280 between 9 AM and 3 PM to sign up, or
show up at City Hall at 5:30 to speak. The speaker list is closed at 6
PM, so you need to sign up before then to be assured of a chance to speak.
You
may email the entire Council at Council@Cambridgema.gov
and the City Manager at RHealy@Cambridgema.gov.
You
can also check out archived Council meetings on line at http://www.cambridgema.gov/council-archive.cfm.