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Senior Planner Anderson commented that there will still be a limitation on the number of signs on <br /> any given property. He stated that if a business is allowed to have a sign on a property year-round, <br /> that would preclude another business from using that location. <br /> Planning Manager Larson commented that the benefit of a temporary sign is that it is a change in <br /> the vision. He stated that after 20 weeks, a driver would no longer notice a sign that has been there <br /> for that period of time. <br /> Commissioner Bauer asked if a business could have a temporary sign in one location for 20 weeks <br /> and then swap to another location for another 20 weeks. <br /> Senior Planner Anderson commented that temporary signage has been enforced per property. He <br /> stated that if a business wants to have an off-site sign, with the permission of the property owner, <br /> for four weeks that would leave 16 weeks for that property to have other temporary signs. He <br /> explained that the regulation applies per property, not per business. <br /> Commissioner Bauer stated that his interpretation was that the regulation was applied to the <br /> business rather than the property. <br /> Commissioner Peters asked if this would include the feather signs that say, "still open". <br /> Planning Manager Larson replied that this would apply to any temporary sign. He stated that this <br /> project is much more involved than the Armstrong project and includes an outreach team. He <br /> would hope that if a business were struggling, they would reach out to the outreach team in order <br /> to find a solution/strategy for their problem. <br /> Commissioner Van Scoy asked if there was consideration to allow signage for the duration of the <br /> construction rather than using time limits. <br /> Planning Manager Larson commented that if a sign stays out for two years, it will blend into the <br /> background and no longer catch the attention of passersby. <br /> Commissioner Heineman stated that while he understands the idea of having a time limit, he does <br /> think it would make sense to allow the temporary signs for the duration of construction. He noted <br /> that perhaps a fresh sign is required every 20 weeks to ensure that they are keeping attention of <br /> drivers rather than having the same sign. <br /> Chairperson Gengler commented that when there are multiple tenants at a property, she would <br /> want to ensure there is the ability for rotation as well. <br /> Commissioner Hunt stated that he also agrees it would be great to extend the timeline, as 20 weeks <br /> seems arbitrary. He stated that he would support allowing the temporary signage for the duration <br /> of construction and leave it up to the business as to whether the sign continues to provide benefit. <br /> Councilmember Woestehoff stated that the limitation helps to ensure the signs stay in good shape <br /> rather than someone placing a sign and forgetting about it. <br /> Planning Commission/November 30, 2023 <br /> Page 8 of 12 <br />