Of course, Illinois doesn't have a concealed carry law - yet. Maybe by the time the City of Woodstock or IDOT takes down these signs, we'll have such the law.
I think Woodstock ought to remove the signs and send the owner three separate notices of violation, with a fine for each. And for all the other illegal signs for this and any other business advertising in the right-of-way.
I wonder if the City of Woodstock would get all hung up on Due Process. Would it have to give notice first to the business or, worse, to the unknown person who stuck the sign in the ground, that it intended to remove the sign? Would the City be worried about liability for removing the sign?
Surely, the City Fathers thought through this problem; right? When they wrote the sign ordinance, did they think about enforcement?
Or will the City say, "Not me. That's a State highway" and point fingers at IDOT?
Will IDOT tell its road and traffic light maintenance workers and engineers just to grab any illegal signs they see? Will it authorize its contract workers to remove illegal signs? Or will it worry about Due Process?
In Florida the Department of Transportation trained and authorized volunteers to remove illegal signs. Yikes! The Sign Police! What a great idea. Well, IDOT? How about a little of that here?
2 comments:
Gus, the only issue with sending these people a fine for illegally placing their signs is that anyone could of placed it there. I think you would probably have to prove the company themselves put it there in order to actually fine them since anyone could have taken the signs out of the trash or something and stuck them in the ground.
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